Hello friends! I'm late to the party (as usual!) I've been feeling super nostalgic about my C64 days in the early 80's and stumbled onto The 8 Bit Guy's YT channel. Loved it from the first video and I binged on the whole channel over a week or so. I am so stoked about the Commander X16. I feel that giddiness that I haven't felt since 1983 when I first used the Apple II's at school and my Dad bought me the 101 BASIC Programs book to try on it. The programs weren't 100% compatible and I spent a lot of time learning BASIC and updating the programs so they would work. I begged and perhaps did a little crying until my parents met me halfway on the price of a new Commodore 64. I could not wait to get home from school every day to read the next chapter of the User's Guide and learn something new. Eventually I got the big Programmer's Reference Guide and it went everywhere with me. Being in a small town with no computer stores nor book stores, I didn't have a lot of resources so learning assembly was very challenging. My method was to draw vertical lines on paper, write what the ml routine should do in the first column, the assembly instructions in the second column, and figure out the values for DATA statements to be POKEd into memory. Not sure why, but that torture was so satisfying. I recall asking my Dad if people got paid money for writing programs. He said he didn't know anything about it. Well, it's given me 30+ years worth of a career so I guess it did pay
Again, I'm so excited to start coding on this thing (emulator for now, I'm going to wait for a surface mount version.) @mwiedmann, your
documentation and sample C code is absolute gold! Thank you for putting that together. Combined with the Programmer's Reference Guide, I am learning so much and quickly. I have some ideas for games and I'm getting my kids involved to help me design them. Maybe I can pique their interest in the coding as well. I wrote the classic Snake game for the C64 last week to get myself comfortable with 6502 asm again (this time with KickAssembler

) It felt great! Well, back to it...