I'm surprised there are no mention of techniques to create enough heat to cause a fire. I suppose that's a bit more than a killer poke. Got any links for a 'flaming' poke?
I'm pretty sure this would cause the PET's monitor to catch fire.
My friends and I (as kids) would dare each other to type this into any SuperPet we saw in a computer shop but thankfully we were all too sensible to give it a go.
Mostly we'd say we were going to and instead type
POKE 32768, 115
which (if I remember correctly) would put a love heart in the top left corner instead.
This just brought me back to HS and doing this on all the computer lab C64's (usually contained 3/4 of the way into some Basic program...) After a few weeks of this, there was a nice note posted to each monitor to kindly refrain from killing the machines...
Not quite the cool hack it might seem from the title. The TCP/IP stack is running on external hardware, exposing connections as file streams over the PET IEC interface.
Heh A lot of the modern commodore peripherals have more computing power than the computers they are plugged into. But then again they aren't usually as fun as the Commodore.
:-D
12 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 33.0 ms ] threadhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killer_poke
My friends and I (as kids) would dare each other to type this into any SuperPet we saw in a computer shop but thankfully we were all too sensible to give it a go.
Mostly we'd say we were going to and instead type
which (if I remember correctly) would put a love heart in the top left corner instead.http://www.6502.org/users/andre/petindex/poke/
https://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ietf/current/msg10705....
http://tuxgraphics.org/electronics/200905/embedded-tcp-ip-st...
https://www.sparkfun.com/products/8841 maybe
http://www.humanclock.com/webserver.php
source: http://static.humanclock.com/files/apachesrc.txt