He’s yet another one with too much testosterone between his ears. “NCommander” also gets a bit argumentative in his own comments about who is telling the whole truth. He claims to have done it first which can be true but he published last. (I forget if it was a DOS or Amiga or other port and I’m not watching it again to find out.) It looks like “NCommander” is a wet behind the ears trying to earn some rep with a reaction video. Some months ago I watched the video by the Microsoft programmer “Dave’s Garage” who did the Windows port from the original Maxis Full Tilt Pinball. At this point we seem to have a pretty complete picture of its entire history, but it too some serious digging to get there. This story and investigation into Space Cadet Pinball is wild. I was amazed at the level of thoroughness (and the fortitude it required to get those Itanium systems up and running, much less debug them), but there’s one version of 64-bit Windows that NCommander didn’t try out, and that’s the one that’s relevant to the story. Retrocomputing enthusiast NCommander even undertook a Zapruder-level analysis of all of the 64-bit versions of Windows he could find to prove or disprove my story. One point of contention is over my claim that I removed Pinball from Windows because I couldn’t get the 64-bit version to work. People keep asking if it can be brought back. My proudest achievement of Windows XP was fixing the game so it didn’t consume 100% CPU. A customer used their support contract to ask how to change among the three levels of play in Space Cadet Pinball. Space Cadet Pinball has a special place in the hearts of many Windows enthusiasts.
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