Dutch legend has been running his campsite since 1986 using an Atari ST:
If there's one thing YouTuber Viktor Bart likes, it's retro computers: his channel is dedicated to videos about building old machines, their functions, cool oddities, and just generally the joy of these beige things. Even Mr. Bart, however, was surprised by what he found in Koningsbosch, in the Dutch province of Limburg: a campsite that's been run since 1986 on an Atari ST.
[Ed note: Is there anybody here who has an Atari ST? Please share your experience in the comments.
I bought its predecessor, an Atari 800, in 1980. Even got an expansion cartridge to boost memory from the on-board 8 KB RAM. Yes, I spent countless hours playing Star Raiders. It was not as capable as the Atari ST, but it was a fun system that booted up instantly!]
(Score: 1) by ncc74656 on Monday October 04 2021, @08:20PM (1 child)
There's the Rock Pi X, with an Atom x5-Z8300. With 4 GB RAM, prices start at $65. (1 and 2 GB RAM configurations are also available.) The most expensive configuration is still under $100. I have one running as a Kodi box that (unlike the Raspberry Pi) can play video in a web browser. This makes sites like Rumble and Odysee usable on it, where a Raspberry Pi can only play YouTube, and only with the YouTube plugin for Kodi.
As for "modern games," wouldn't you just use any run-of-the-mill PC for those? Shoehorning them into running on an SBC seems pointless.
(Score: 2) by Freeman on Monday October 04 2021, @08:58PM
Ah, that was in reference to a $200-$300 computer.
The only Rock Pi X in stock that I could see was some random Amazon vendor for $126. E-bay wasn't much better, either. Whereas I can get a $55 Pi 4 4GB shipped from the USA.
This is what I was thinking of when I was thinking x86/x86-64 Single Board Computer. https://shop.udoo.org/en/bolt-boards/ [udoo.org]
Which kind of stretches that definition a bit as the RAM is sold separately, but uses standard RAM sticks.
I did eventually find this thing, though: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07N298F2B/ [amazon.com]
Too bad, you have to wire your own power supply and/or buy a breakout board to do so. Which is partly why I've never given it too much thought. I do have a soldering iron now, though.
Something like the UDOO Bolt would be awesome, but again, it's a $300-$400 computer. The go-to example Rock Pi X, I've never actually seen in stock or at the Pi4 price level.
Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"