←back to thread

286 points spzb | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
saltysalt ◴[] No.43533622[source]
I played games on a Commodore 64 from cassette tapes, in principal you could record games onto a blank cassette but it was very flaky. Good times though.
replies(1): >>43534064 #
1. HNDen21 ◴[] No.43534064[source]
I did this all the time... even used a double cassette deck to make copies... azimuth was the problem if the heads were aligned different.. so you used a small screwdriver and the top of the cassette had a small opening, this is where you had to align the heads by listening till it didn't sound distorted.. fun times

See also https://sqlservercode.blogspot.com/2016/11/what-was-first-co...

replies(3): >>43534121 #>>43534252 #>>43535815 #
2. saltysalt ◴[] No.43534121[source]
Oh nice, I never knew about that!
3. makeset ◴[] No.43534252[source]
Then came a nifty upgrade called "LED control" which installed a red LED next to that screw so all you had to do was turn until it was brightest, significantly reducing ?LOAD ERROR. Good times.
replies(1): >>43534296 #
4. HNDen21 ◴[] No.43534296[source]
Yep, there was also a program where a red line would be on your monitor and you had to turn the screw until the line was completely flat
5. j_french ◴[] No.43535815[source]
From what I remember I had a decent amount of success copying games using a twin tape deck for my amstrad 464. I ended up passing on the amstrad to a colleague over a decade ago, who since moved to the US and is almost certainly on here. If you see this Jim, I found the manual!