iAltair

Vintage computing made easy

Published by: Peter Schorn
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Description

iAltair pretends to be a MITS Altair 8800 computer. It allows you to get the feeling of really old software such as the CP/M 2 operating system. The system is fully self contained and does not allow you to remotely add any code but you can try out Basic to run Eliza.

Screenshots

iAltair FAQ

  • Is iAltair free?

    Yes, iAltair is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.

  • Is iAltair legit?

    Not enough reviews to make a reliable assessment. The app needs more user feedback.

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  • How much does iAltair cost?

    iAltair is free.

  • What is iAltair revenue?

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User Rating

5 out of 5

1 ratings in Sweden

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Ratings History

iAltair Reviews

Bad update crashes in ios5.1

Gregpi on

United States

Terrible update. Need to fix

Crashes in ios 6

Tcr50 on

United States

It worked fine until this latest update. Now it crashes just after launch, before even selecting a CP/M version.

Good Start

NotHome on

United States

Needs more!

Wow!

Wrmichael on

United States

A computer in my tablet! How cool is that? If you love classic computing you'll love this toy!

Cool

Emilx24 on

United States

Cool

iAltair

AnythingButNormal on

United States

Great emulator, could you add all of the disks, like the HD/iPad version? Maybe as an in app purchase, thanks for the great app!

how do I run Eliza?

jc8765asty on

United States

sorry, but how can I run Eliza? thanks

My first computer

nhaquer on

United States

The Altair 8800 from MITS of Albuquerque, NM, was my first computer. It came as a kit and was initially called a "minicomputer" in 1975. It had 256 BYTES of memory, which would not be enough to store this review. The front panel (the icon has the 8080B) had 2 rows of switches and 2 rows of LED's. In simple terms the top row of switches controlled the address and data registers (memory) and the buttom the cpu (run, single step, input/output, write/read, etc). After building the 8080, there was no operating system, no basic, no nothing. You would create your very simple "program" by flipping those switches and hoping to get a reaction, such as adding some binary numbers together. Eventually BASIC would become available along with 1k memory board. I had hooked this up to an ASR33 teletype machine and was able to finaly save and load programs using paper tape punched with holes. It would be another year before a floppy was added, and you had to write your own assembler programs to make them work. When Gary Kidall released CP/M, it still required a lot of hours to get it to work and you had to "roll your own" BIOS (Basic Input / Output System) or "drivers" to get anything to work. The first Apple computer would become available about a year and half later and also came in a kit. But it had BASIC built in and only had to be hooked up to a TV screen to make it work. Interacting with CP/M was done on a paper printing terminal rather then "glass" dispaly. Eventually I got an ADM display. When I first saw this I was hoping for a real simulator with functioning switches and controls, but, alas (as Jerry Pournellle would often say) it accomplished its goal of taking me down memory lane.

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Last 30 days

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