![]() MAME supports some of the Apple II clones, but they are listed as independent machines and each requires its own unique ROM set. AppleWin was originally written by Mike OBrien in 1994. These features are seldom being supported by most of the Apple II emulators. AppleWin is an open source software emulator for running Apple II programs in Microsoft Windows. Some Apple II clones feature special quirks, for example, Chinese characters display in CEC. There are many Apple II clone computers, such as Laser 128, CEC, Bell & Howell, etc. AppleWin was developed for Windows only, but a developer called beom beotiger has. The Apple IIc Plus was released in April of '88 and retailed for $675 and had a 65C02 CPU at 1MHz or 4MHz (it was user selectable for older programs), 8KB SRAM cache, same RAM, graphics modes, speaker as the Apple IIe Platinum, and a built in 800KB double sided 3.5-inch floppy drive. The emulators that are featured here do have the rom files included. Unlike other products in the line that features an 8-bit CPU, Apple IIGS is equipped with a 16-bit 65C816 CPU running at 2.8 MHz. ![]() The Apple IIGS was released on September 15, 1986. The Apple IIe Platinum was just an Apple IIe Enhanced but with a full numeric keypad and 128KB of RAM. ![]() The Apple IIe Enhanced was released in March of '85 and was a Apple IIe but with a 65C02 CPU at 1.023 MHz. The Apple IIc was released on Apand retailed for $1295 and had a 65C02 CPU at 1.023 MHz, 128KB of RAM, same graphics modes, speaker, as the Apple IIe, it had built-in storage, and a built in 140KB single sided 5.25-inch floppy drive. The Apple IIe was released in January of '83 and had the same CPU and expansion slots as the Apple II, 64KB of RAM, had a full ASCII keyboard, it introduced the double-low-resolution graphics mode which had a resolution of 80x48 in 16-color, and a double-high-resolution of 560×192 in 16 colors. The Apple II+ was released in June of '79 and retailed for $1195 and had the same 6502 CPU, 16KB of RAM, the same graphics modes, speaker, expansion slots, and keyboard as the original. Last edited by mpetra on Fri 3:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.The Apple II was released in June of '77 and retailed for $1298 and had a 6502 CPU at 1.023 MHz, 4KB of RAM, a cassette tape for storage, a 1-bit speaker, 7 expansion slots, it's keyboard was only uppercase, a low-res 40x48 16-color graphics mode, and a hi-res 280x192 6-color graphics mode. For all your curiosities I am available here. For this reason, if you want to use it as a real Apple 2 system, you must load the ROMs for which you have a license from configuration files. ![]() Original Apple ROMs were not included in the project for copyright reasons. Breakpoints can be entered, both linked to memory addresses or to the number of machine cycles. For those interested in the project I attach the link of the sources distributed on github under the open GNU license.Ī particularity of the project is that of being provided with a powerful shell, capable of performing a deep system debug. The sources were developed using the classic gcc compiler flanked by the SDL2 I/O access library. Latest stable version 1.30.13.0 (2 January 2023) Works on Windows 11, Windows 10 (32/64 bits) Emulates the Apple IIe Supports. At the moment the project has materialized in the creation of an emulator capable of running on Windows and Linux systems. AppleWin is the best Apple IIe emulator we have encountered so far to play Apple II and IIe games on a PC with Windows 11 or Windows 10. In the past two months I have decided to undertake the construction of an Apple 2 emulator with the aim of creating a protorype that can run on a microcontroller such as ESP32. AppleWin was originally written by Mike O'Brien in 1994 3 O'Brien himself announced an early version of the emulator in April 1995 just before the release of Windows 95. Like most of you, I'm a huge 6502 enthusiast. AppleWin (also known as Apple //e Emulator for Windows) is an open source software emulator for running Apple II programs in Microsoft Windows. the next task is finding ROMs, or special versions of the software that have been. I am new to this forum, although I have been following you for many years. easy, and loaded with features, such as AppleWin (Apple IIe).
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