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Mark Marlette: Difference between revisions

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Mark Lynn Marlette (May 1, 1963 - ) is a prolific designer of Color Computer hardware and proprieter of Cloud-9 (http://www.cloud9tech.com), a CoCo software and hardware company in Delano, Minnesota.  Though he bought his Color Computer in 1983, his first system was an RCA COSMAC ELF, based upon the 1802 microprocessor.
Mark Lynn Marlette (May 1, 1963 - ) is a prolific designer of Color Computer hardware and proprieter of Cloud-9 (http://www.cloud9tech.com), a CoCo software and hardware company in Delano, Minnesota.  Though he bought his Color Computer in 1983, his first system was an RCA COSMAC ELF, based upon the 1802 microprocessor.


Over the years, Mark's innovative designs have propelled the CoCo community into a new era of peripheral choice, with perhaps the most significant product being the SuperIDE, an IDE interface for the CoCo which also contains a CompactFlash socket and allows up to four DOS ROMs to be burned into flash.
Over the years, Mark's innovative designs have propelled the CoCo community into a new era of peripheral choice, with perhaps the most significant product being the SuperIDE, an IDE interface for the CoCo which also contains a CompactFlash socket and allows up to four DOS ROMs to be burned into flash.

Latest revision as of 08:45, 20 April 2008

WELCOME
Looking for CoCo help? If you are trying to do something with your old Color Computer, read this quick reference. Want to contribute to this wiki? Be sure to read this first. This CoCo wiki project was started on October 29, 2004. --OS-9 Al

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This page was last updated on 04/20/2008. Total Pages: 744. Total Files: 994.


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Mark Lynn Marlette (May 1, 1963 - ) is a prolific designer of Color Computer hardware and proprieter of Cloud-9 (http://www.cloud9tech.com), a CoCo software and hardware company in Delano, Minnesota. Though he bought his Color Computer in 1983, his first system was an RCA COSMAC ELF, based upon the 1802 microprocessor.

Over the years, Mark's innovative designs have propelled the CoCo community into a new era of peripheral choice, with perhaps the most significant product being the SuperIDE, an IDE interface for the CoCo which also contains a CompactFlash socket and allows up to four DOS ROMs to be burned into flash.