[Citponys] wanted to share their Altair 8800 clone with the world, and what better way to do so than by hooking it up to the Internet? This hack was pulled off by using a Linux computer which receives a Telnet connection and redirects it to a serial port. This serial port is connected to the Altair clone. In order to connect the serial port to the Internet using TCP, the ser2sock program was used. People can interact with the Altair on the webpage, where there is also a live camera feed showing the Altair’s Blinkenlights.
This is an ongoing project for [Citponys]. Zork 1-3 and Ladder are now available for play. You can interact with other people in the current session; play nice, or it’ll end up a Mad Libs version of ‘Twitch Plays Pokemon’. Most recently, [Citponys] updated the webpage with a HTML5-embedded terminal emulator. If you want to quit the current session displayed, enter “quit” and you will be redirected to the main menu where you can choose another game. [Citponys] has links to game walkthroughs on the top of the page. We have a soft spot for classic computers and games, especially the Altair. Take a trip down memory lane and play some Zork at the fork where the past meets the present!
Very cool!
I’ed love to see some computer museum do this with a PDP 8 or other classic mainframe.
Seconded! Fire them up and let them be used!
That does actually exists. at http://pdp8online.com/ You can connect to the real thing and fire it up!
Thanks for the heads up! Trying it now.
Now that’s what I call service, thanks.
I tried this earlier today… at least two others on there, and none of us knew how to play Zork (or were actively sabotaging it). I want more info about the Altair 8800 clone! It looks like the real thing in the webcam shots.
yay old software AND hardware