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Mystic BBS – written by James Coyle with versions for Windows/Linux/ARM Linux/OSX. Past versions: MS-DOS and OS/2. Synchronet – Windows/Linux/BSD, past versions: MS-DOS and OS/2. WWIV – WWIV v5.x is supported on both Windows 7+ 32bit as well as Linux 32bit and 64bit. [2] Written by Wayne Bell, included WWIVNet. Past versions: MS-DOS and OS/2.
Blue Board is a bulletin board system software created by Martin Sikes (1968–2007) for the Commodore 64 in the 1980s in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and sold worldwide. Due to optimized code and memory allocation , Blue Board boasted very fast performance for a BBS on that hardware platform.
C-Net DS2 (Developers System, Second Generation) was a full featured, single-line, bulletin board system (BBS) software system released in 1986 for the Commodore 64 microcomputer. The DS2 system was notable in that its authors proved that it was possible to perform significant and useful serious computing tasks on a hardware platform with such ...
Synchronet is a multiplatform BBS software package, with current ports for Microsoft Windows, Linux, and BSD variants. Past versions also ran on MS-DOS and OS/2 , but support for those platforms were dropped in version 3.0 (circa 2000).
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Ghostbusters by Activision, 1984.. By 1985, games were estimated to make up 60 to 70% of Commodore 64 software. [7] Due in part to its advanced sound and graphic hardware, and to the quality and quantity of games written for it, the C64 became better known as a gaming and home entertainment platform than as a serious business computer.
CCS64 is a shareware Commodore 64 emulator developed by Per Håkan Sundell of Sweden. It is an accurate [citation needed] and very popular [citation needed] Commodore 64 emulator which can play Commodore 64 formatted cartridges, demos, games, and music in Windows, and it has many modern software features. The emulator has had continuous ...
The Prlink is a software for data transfer between Commodore 8-bit computers and an Amiga (AmigaDOS) or a PC clone (Linux, MS-DOS). Prlink was developed in 1994–1996 by Marko Mäkelä and Olaf Seibert. It was succeeded by CBMLINK developed in 2001–2003 by Marko Mäkelä. [19] Tape transfer