Difference between revisions of "The Final Chesscard"
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[[FILE:fc_pcb.jpg|none|border|text-bottom|616px|link=http://www.cbmhardware.de/misc/fc_pcb.jpg]] | [[FILE:fc_pcb.jpg|none|border|text-bottom|616px|link=http://www.cbmhardware.de/misc/fc_pcb.jpg]] | ||
The Final Chesscard Circuit Board <ref>[http://www.cbmhardware.de/misc/c64parts.php C64 Zubehör | CBMHARDWARE.DE] (German)</ref> | The Final Chesscard Circuit Board <ref>[http://www.cbmhardware.de/misc/c64parts.php C64 Zubehör | CBMHARDWARE.DE] (German)</ref> | ||
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+ | =See also= | ||
+ | * [[ChessMachine]] | ||
+ | * [[Module]] | ||
=External Links= | =External Links= |
Revision as of 13:01, 10 June 2018
Home * Engines * The Final Chesscard
The Final Chesscard,
a chess playing entity by TASC, developed by Marc Derksen, and forerunner of the famous ChessMachine. As independent chess computer it ran at 5 MHz on a 65C02 processor with 64 Kib ROM and RAM each, inside an expansion-cartridge of a host home- or personal computer, as already realized in 1986 with the The Final Cartridge III by Riska B.V. with Wil Sparreboom and Marc Derksen involved [2] [3]. The Final Chesscard, first released in 1989 for Commodore 64 and Commodore 128 home computers, was also available as pluggable ISA card for the IBM PC. Rather than a dedicated board, it used a for that time sophisticated GUI with 2D Graphics Board of its host.
Circuit Board
The Final Chesscard Circuit Board [4]
See also
External Links
- Tasc The Final Chess Card Electronic Chess Computer Card For Commodore 64/128, The Spacious Mind
- The Final Chesscard for Commodore 64 (1989) - MobyGames
- Lemon - Commodore 64, C64 Games, Reviews & Music! | The Final Chesscard
- GB64.COM - C64 Games | The Final Chesscard
- ASC The Final ChessCard from Schachcomputer.info Wiki (German)
- RetroComputer - Eine Sammlung diverser Retro-Hardware ab den 70ern | Cartridge - The Final Chesscard (German)