I admit I haven not seen the code to figure out what’s happening in the background, but I certainly hope Apple changes its decision on this cool Commodore emulator. How come some emulators are allowed on iPhone and some aren’t. Plain and simple! It goes on to show the double standard that Apple is applying to some of its apps. This is truly a terrible decision by Apple. Here is the reason that was given:Īn Application may not itself install or launch other executable code by any means, including without limitation through the use of a plug-in architecture, calling other frameworks, other APIs or otherwise. Supports the Sinclair ZX81, ZX Spectrum, Commodore Vic 20, 64, Commodore. In a move that stunned a few in the geek community, Apple rejected the Commodore 64 application for iPhone. dragon 32 emulator, XRoar is a Dragon emulator for Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, GP32. But it was exciting to hear about the Commodore 64 emulator that was going to be released for iPhone. Unfortunately, these machines are not around these days and quite frankly not worth playing with (unless you are a hardcore geek). It allowed its users to write BASIC code for it and develop innovative (but simple) programs. Commodore 64 was more than a gaming console.
These machines used to rule in the 90s, but now only have historic value. Looks familiar, doesn’t it? If you have been around for a while, you have probably seen one of these cool Commodore 64 machines. The only one I can think of is VICE, as its pretty much the gold standard for C64 emulation on any operating system, be that Windows, Linux, Mac OS.