About...

Many people have partecipated to this site. Credits were due to:

Davide Bucci
Webmaster
http://davbucci.chez-alice.fr/index.php?argument=home.inc
Dwight K. Elvey


Christian Groessler

Chris' FTP site
Andreas Senk


Carlo Merlano

Carlo's site about retrocomputing
Tix

1000bit site
Dino Molli

Dino's home page
Antonio Busi

Luigi Serrantoni

www.retrocomputing.tk
Massimiliano Sibilio
Giorgio
Matteo
Benjamin Eberhardt
Vincenzo "Pevalcas"
Roberto Bazzano http://www.z80ne.com
Heiko Schumann https://olivrea.de/olivetti-m20/

This site should be usable with any reasonable screen resolution and any browser.

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A few words about the history of this site

This website has been first published by Davide Bucci in the summer and winter 2005. The idea was to put together an archive of the main resources dedicated to the Olivetti M20 computer, that at the time were scattered among different websites and FTP servers.

Born in an era that predates the ubiquitous presence of social network, this website has grown since then, providing manually curated contents and articles dedicated to this amazing computer.

From the technical standpoint, the core of the website is built around a very simple hand-written PHP content manager. As a result, the generated HTML code is very simple and compact. Built from the scratch using CSS, the graphical aspect of the site has been finely tuned in the years, keeping an undeniably vintage look that seemed to have been appreciated by the visitors. After all, the M20 is a vintage computer and it should not be strange that a website dedicated to it has an adequately vintage vibe.

The "page log" under each page (well, almost) is also manually curated and reflects when the page has been updated. It should not be strange to see pages that have been updated since 2005, while keeping their original intent, while others have been added and changed more deeply.

This website does not contain any cookie, except for those that may be related to the advertisement banner that we needed to add to cover up the expenses of the server.

In November 2024, a restructuration of the HTML and CSS code leaded to a more modern organization that should allow an easier fruition on the website on mobile devices and small screens. That was about time!

Up to December 24, 2022, the updates were notified by RSS. However, this technology is being dropped by all the major browsers. We decided to still use a very similar xml file that is processed in a very simple way to list all the website changes. A log for each page tells when the page has been written and updated.

Page log