1-Nov-90 10:25:56-MST,14999;000000000000 Mail-From: KPETERSEN created at 1-Nov-90 10:20:54 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 1 Nov 90 10:20:53 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #168 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901101102054.V90N168@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 1 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 168 Today's Topics: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching? CP/M emulator posted File Server -- failure INFO-CPM Digest V90 #165 Joan Riff and Z80M (2 msgs) pallio RNA server at harlie is online. Wanted: Oasys for Digital Group system ZMP Osborne 1 overlays ZMP request for new features/mods . . . ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 31 Oct 90 18:17:42 GMT From: D M Pickles Subject: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching? Message-ID: <4488.9010311817@np1a.bristol.ac.uk> Does anyone know of a Crunching/Squeezing/Zipping-type method of compressing ascii files, that would work under CP/M as well as either MSDOS or UNIX? If so, is the relevant software available in the public domain? The reason for my inquiry is that I have an occasional need for transferring textfiles created on my Amstrad CP/M machine at home, on 3-inch (*not* 3.5-inch!) diskettes, to an IBM-PC machine at work. I achieve this via modem+kermit to the University mainframe, at 300 baud, which which takes forever and costs lots. (I subsequently download from the mainframe to a PC, at 9600 baud, which is fast and free, so that step is trivial). Any way of reducing the file size for the modem transfer would obviously be very beneficial! My only other options are to buy expensive auxillary hardware and transport disks to and from work, or to take up weight-training and carry one of the computers instead... Any help would be much appreciated. David Pickles andmp@uk.ac.bristol.np1a ------------------------------ Date: 31 Oct 90 19:33:26 GMT From: uop!quack!mrapple@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Nick Sayer) Subject: CP/M emulator posted Message-ID: I've posted it to comp.sources.misc. I sure wish there had been this much interest SIX MONTHS AGO when I posted a call for alpha-testers! -- Nick Sayer | Disclaimer: "Don't try this at home, | RIP: Mel Blanc mrapple@quack.sac.ca.us | kids. This should only be done by | 1908-1989 N6QQQ [44.2.1.17] | trained, professional idiots." | May he never 209-952-5347 (Telebit) | --Plucky Duck | be silenced. ------------------------------ Date: 30 Oct 90 05:41:39 GMT From: att!ima!mirror!pallio!dg@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (David Goodenough) Subject: File Server -- failure Message-ID: ewen@actrix.co.nz (Ewen McNeill) sez: > I have been trying to contact the CP/M File Server at pallio!rna. > The address I have been using is rna%pallio.uucp@xait.xerox.com. I > have tried a few times, and each time it has bounced. Apparently xait don't like % signs in addresses that arrive over the Internet. Try ....!xait.xerox.com!pallio!rna Unfortunately, this is quickly going to become somewhat academic, since in about two weeks, pallio will be going off line. This is only a temporary hiatus, since I'm moving from Boston to San Francisco. I'll get pallio back on line as soon as I get set up, but it may be a while before the server is on line, since I'll have to be sure I won't swamp my feed. I'll post here once I'm connected again, and when the rna server is running. -- dg@pallio.UUCP - David Goodenough +---+ IHS | +-+-+ ..... !harvard!xait!pallio!dg +-+-+ | AKA: dg%pallio.uucp@xait.xerox.com +---+ ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 30 Oct 90 15:34 CDT From: "arun baheti " Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #165 Re: Bondwell Terminal Emulation Nick-- You might try checking on SIMTEL20 for some MEX overlays. I recall that seeing at least an overlay for IMP and MEX for the Bondwell-12s (and maybe even MDM7, but don't quote me...). If you can't track one down, I can hunt in my archives for a copy. Also, there (was/is?) a Bondwell BBS in Southern California; you might try checking the RCPM listing. --ab ------------------------------ Date: 30 Oct 90 18:41:38 GMT From: vsi1!zorch!ditka!qiclab!techbook!fzsitvay@apple.com (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: Joan Riff and Z80M Message-ID: <1990Oct30.184138.23537@techbook.com> In article <22875@grebyn.com> bob@grebyn.com (Robert A. Baumann) writes: >In article <1990Oct24.233232.11580@mthvax.cs.miami.edu>, max@mthvax.cs.miami.edu (Max Southall) writes: > >Er... This is a fascinating discussion. What's intriguing to me is that >Z80MU *DOES* support the "set DMA" call perfectly well! Furthermore, >every assembler and compiler and loader that we've come across works >perfectly well under Z80MU. At least, they work perfectly well under >LEGITIMATE copies of Z80MU. > >I'm setting the record straight because I own Z80MU. Not a copy of it. The >*REAL* Z80MU that Joan Riff wrote for me 4 years ago and that I rewrote >myself. That's how I know that a *REAL* copy supports CP/M 2.2 perfectly >well, even down to redirecting hardware I/O port addresses to 16-bit >IBM PC port addresses for you fanatics who *REALLY* want to run a CP/M >version of KERMIT or whatever. > another beef... z80mu 3.10 does not support parameters in a submit command. i.e. simple submit files work, but when you have any parameters after the sub filename, it gives you an invocation summary, and does not run the command. this is a big problem for me since i use submit files to automate program assembly and compilation. this requires specifying the source filename after the subfile name. > > Bob Baumann > Computerwise Consulting Services > P.O. Box 813, McLean, VA 22101 > (703) 450-7175 -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ Date: 31 Oct 90 07:28:47 GMT From: pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucsd.edu (Ian Justman) Subject: Joan Riff and Z80M Message-ID: fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: > the z80 emulation is fine, but if it can't run cp/m then it's > REALLY an orphan. I personally don't use Z80MU or even 22NICE all that much. My hard disk space is currently devoted to other tasks. When I do need to run a Z80-based application on an oddball setup, I go to my CompuPro System 8/16 running Concurrent DOS 8/16. I can run a few well-behaved MS-DOS programs on it, like PKARC (PKZIP isn't that well-behaved with CDOS). Plus with SPUZ board, that thing can run Z80-based applications like a bat out of hell with a Z80H processor on it! Also I have gobs of TPA space because "BDOS" and "BIOS" (actually, the bulk thereof) are located outside of the SPUZ's memory area (what IS in there is some code to prepare to jump to the 86 XIOS code), so I can do some memory-intensive stuff. As for software emulation of a Z80, I have heard that the 68K would be a better candidate for the job than, say, the 8088, or even the 80286. ------------------------------ Date: 30 Oct 90 17:18:00 GMT From: astroatc!nicmad!madnix!deety!rat@speedy.wisc.edu (David Douthitt) Subject: pallio Message-ID: Pallio is moving .... CROSS-COUNTRY!! (phew!) So he may be out of touch for a while. I expect he will probably be back (or at least in Human Form :-) on the Net by the 15th of November. When pallio returns depends on when he finds a feed. I mean, after all, who can find a feed on the West Coast :-) Hang in there! -- ====== David Douthitt ======== aka "The Stainless Steel Rat" ==== UUCP: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!deety!rat InterNet: deety%rat@spool.cs.wisc.edu <<< Home of Mad Apple Forth and the Tiger Toolbox -- Apple II Forever! <<< If my next computer isn't an Apple II, it won't be a Macintosh. ------------------------------ Date: 30 Oct 90 03:29:56 GMT From: julius.cs.uiuc.edu!wuarchive!cs.utexas.edu!execu!sequoia!uudell!bigtex!texsun!digi.lonestar.org!harlie!mitch@apple.com (Mitch Mitchell) Subject: RNA server at harlie is online. Message-ID: There is now an archive server online at harlie. For the most part the current archives duplicate those available from the server at pallio. Most of the files from pallio's archives are now in place, and more are enroute. Also, as time and space permit, additional CP/M files will be made available. To access the archive server, send a mail message to rna@harlie.lonestar.org. The body of the message should contain the commands to retrieve files. To get a listing of the files avaliable, send a message containing the following: /send index to
To get help: /send help to
The "/" *must* be flush against the left margin. Any questions, send E-mail to rna-help@harlie.lonestar.org Mitch Mitchell (CP/M Archive Manager) ************************************************************************** * mitch@harlie.lonestar.org Mitch Mitchell "Virago Rider" * * {uunet | texsun | sulaco}!digi!mmitchel Voice Mail (214) 519-3257 * * {letni | supernet | egsner | mic}!harlie!mitch FidoNet: 1:124/4115.224 * ************************************************************************** ------------------------------ Date: 31 Oct 90 17:55:57 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!ub!dsinc!bagate!cbmvax!atha!aupair.cs.athabascau.ca!lyndon@ucsd.edu (Lyndon Nerenberg) Subject: Wanted: Oasys for Digital Group system Message-ID: <401@aupair.cs.athabascau.ca> I've *finally* purchased a personal computer :-) It's a system from Digital Group with the standard assortment of 8 inch flops, serial and parallel ports, 128K bank select RAM, etc. I would like to know if Oasys was ever known to run on this system. If so, is there anyone out there who would be willing to part with their copy + documentation? -- Lyndon Nerenberg VE6BBM / Computing Services / Athabasca University {alberta,cbmvax,mips}!atha!lyndon || lyndon@cs.athabascau.ca The only thing open about OSF is their mouth. --Chuck Musciano ------------------------------ Date: 31 Oct 90 05:58:23 GMT From: usc!samsung!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!vax7!nmurrayr@ucsd.edu Subject: ZMP Osborne 1 overlays Message-ID: <4255.272ed87f@cc.curtin.edu.au> In article <6085@balu.UUCP>, schauerd@cosmo.UUCP (Klaus Schauer) writes: >> Has anyone gotten Zmp or Qterm running on an Osborne 1? I haven't been >> able to find overlays for either one for the Osborne 1. Any help would >> be appreciated. > > I wrote ZMP V1.5 and MEX V1.14 modem programm overlays for the > OSBORNE 1. Both supported most of the needed functions - baud > rate switch, bits, modem init, break, disconnect, etc. The MEX > overlay also emulate an VT100 (ANSI) terminal. Somebody here asked me if we had a ZMP overlay for the Osborne 1 some time ago, and I had a look into it. I gave up, mainly because there seemed to be a bewildering array of different RS232 interfaces for the things, and also because I didn't actually have one of the beasties to work on (which makes it much harder!). I would appreciate a copy of your ZMP overlay if possible. While I'm at it, I'm taking suggestions for the next version(s) of ZMP and RZMP. Anyone got anything they'd like to see included? .... Ron Murray (ZMP author and bar) -- Internet: Murray_RJ@cc.curtin.edu.au ACSnet: Murray_RJ@cc.cut.oz.au Bitnet: Murray_RJ%cc.curtin.edu.au@cunyvm.bitnet UUCP : uunet!munnari.oz!cc.curtin.edu.au!Murray_RJ ------------------------------ Date: 1 Nov 90 17:05:02 GMT From: elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!samsung!munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@decwrl.dec.com Subject: ZMP request for new features/mods . . . Message-ID: <15590.273055be@levels.sait.edu.au> > While I'm at it, I'm taking suggestions for the next version(s) of >ZMP and RZMP. Anyone got anything they'd like to see included? > >.... Ron Murray (ZMP author and bar) Thanks for asking 1) Please check out the new "standard" for tracking & logging phone call connect times and charges. I read about it in a recent SHAREWARE Mag. My reason for this is: I just got my 3 month Telecom Bill for A$600!! It would be nice to control costs if I knew how much I was on-line as I went along thru my BBSing. . . The "standard" uses a file format & data sequence to accomplish this goal. Time is taken from the micro and all the user has to enter is the rates & the off peak times. It's hard for me to remember since in the US (I'm a Yank) the bills are monthly. . . 2) The BAUD mem location (3C?) always contains a value for 450 baud, which is of course useless to me & my modem. Since this "Valid" value is in there, ZMP does not initialize the modem, so I must do it manually. (annoying) Maybe do an ESC L I and just leave the Baud alone? 3) An alternate dialler directory, with a script for each # after connect? I've run out of room in the one ESC I directory. . . The delay between pressing ESC I and seeing the directory is a little too long for my tastes. Maybe you could put that in the config file too? The delay that is . . . 4) VT terminal emulation, with Kermit Xfer protocol capabilities. .. I tend to use Kermit-80 for the links to the VAX at work, but would like to use ZMP all the time!! (Much nicer :-) ) BTW, Is there a ZMP overlay for a computer using a Z80-SIO that has implemented the interrupt driven capabilities? I have 3 Kaypros, and put the 884 MAXROM from Microcornucopia in 'em, so I've rewritten alot of the KP overlays, screen dump & other neat stuff. But I want to steal the code for the SIO interrupt routines from another overlay, if possible. . . Any ideas? I'll have to get them from this other program other wise. It uses queues and pointers & alot of work basically. If I can avoid this, I will! Thanks for your ear. . I know that's alot to ask for, but ZMP can be head & shoulders above the rest! Ronn ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #168 ************************************* 1-Nov-90 19:42:26-MST,23589;000000000000 Mail-From: KPETERSEN created at 1-Nov-90 19:30:31 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 1 Nov 90 19:30:30 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #169 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901101193031.V90N169@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 1 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 169 Today's Topics: Zen and the art of CP/M ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 1 Nov 90 05:30:59 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!think.com!mintaka!spdcc!mirror!pallio!dg@ucsd.edu (David Goodenough) Subject: Zen and the art of CP/M Message-ID: The following article appeared in the PIPMAG online magazine on GEnie. I found it interesting because of the history it contains, but also because it explains why I spend my time beating my head against a 14" green phosphor tube, covered with the Z80 assembler neumonics that make up QTERM, when I could do it in C on the 386 UNIX crate at work, and get it written much quicker. It is reproduced with permission of the author. -- dg@pallio.UUCP - David Goodenough +---+ IHS | +-+-+ ..... !harvard!xait!pallio!dg +-+-+ | AKA: dg%pallio.uucp@xait.xerox.com +---+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Zen and the Art of CP/M by Robert Coleman (R.COLEMAN3) It was late. Maybe midnight, and quiet in the house. Upstairs, my wife and son were probably asleep. I could hear the faint sound of the TV droning; that and the soft breeze outside my opened window. Whoosh! Drive A on my computer was busy at work. I was backing up some files and doing general housekeeping after a long session at the keyboard. Tic-tic, whoosh, tic-tic! Drive B kicked in. I watched. I had to smile. It was noisier than drive A -- always was (I could close my eyes and tell which of my drives were running, just by the sounds they made). Drive B was perhaps the better of the two. It was newer. But they were both slow; just as slow and tired as I was now. I looked up at the window and felt the cool breeze on my skin. No, they weren't the fastest drives. Not like the 1.2 Meg on my 386 at work. That was much faster; faster by a country mile. And I pushed it too -- pushed the hell out of it. But that was work. Now, just being here late at night with this old CP/M computer, it was somehow different... Zen and the Art of CP/M? (...like Motorcycle Maintenance? [1]) Crazy? Hey, I'm not the first to get this feeling of religious fervor over a computer operating system. How about 'The SOUL of CP/M' and 'The CP/M BIBLE' [2,3]. Mr. Waite and associates, they too had reverence for this IDEA. In spite of MS-DOS, countless thousands still cling to CP/M. Why? Good question. Perhaps it has more to do with the intangibles -- faith, acceptance, quiet devotion, and a brand of grass-roots, seat-of-the-pants wisdom. The CP/Mer assumes a tongue-in-cheek posture; all the while, watching the rest of the computer world spin its wheels in a deluge of glitter, gloss and Madison Avenue hype. It appears that regardless of the odds, in an era of disposable widgets and planned obsolescence, in the face of such staunch and resolute adversity, CP/M is here to stay. In the words of one PIPMAG author, Jim Taylor, CP/M is 'the peoples operating system'. It is interesting that in spite of CP/M's continued popularity, the name 'CP/M' has been interpreted to mean several things: The CP/M Bible refers to it as 'control program for microprocessor'. In one Digital Research, Inc. CP/M Users Manual dated 1979, it is referred to as 'control program for microcomputer'. Still, I have heard it referred to as 'control program monitor'. These discrepancies of course only add to the mystique. I guess any CP/Mer worth his salt has read the basics, but just where DID CP/M come from? Where does it fit into the computer world as we enter the 1990s? Perhaps the largest MAINFRAME computer, and the grand-daddy of them all, was the UNIVAC computer of 1950. Built entirely of vacuum tubes, it was so big it filled a large room. And the PDP-8 MINICOMPUTER, costing a mere $50,000, brought computing to corporate business in the mid-60s. But it was the advent of the microprocessor that made the MICROCOMPUTER a reality. In 1969, engineers at Datapoint Corporation of San Antonio, Texas, designed a simple central processing unit and contracted both Intel and Texas Instruments to implement the design on a single piece of silicon. Intel succeeded, but the product ran ten times slower than had been agreed upon, so Datapoint backed out of the deal. Intel decided to go ahead and market the device and called it the 8008 microcomputer [4]. Little did they know that this humble device signaled the beginning of the microcomputer revolution. The 8008 was truly limited, and was used as a controller such as in robot stepper motors and push button TVs. The 8080, more-or-less its direct descendent, was the first microprocessor with an instruction set powerful enough to do real data processing. But these were still humble beginnings. In 1974, a microcomputer kit was sold to hobbyists called the Altair 8800. It featured switches to enter data, and LEDs as a monitor device. There was no keyboard, no CRT, and no floppy drives, which meant no stored programs. All programs had to be tediously entered by hand, byte by byte. This was indeed the stone age of microcomputing. They say that necessity is the mother of invention -- thus the birth of an operating system. CP/M was originally developed by Gary Kildall in 1973 for testing 8" Shugart disk drives. Later, in 1976, he founded Digital Research, Inc. and released CP/M, targeted at 8080 microcomputer hobbyists [5]. But the 8080 was slow, and needed three different voltage levels and several support ICs to operate. It was soon replaced by the 8085 which required only +5 volts to run. Then, later came the Z80. It was not only 8080/8085 software compatible, but included many additional, more powerful instructions. By 1980, with the Z80, CP/M had truly become the industry standard. This is where Big Blue enters the picture. Microcomputers by this time were starting to find use in the business world. IBM realized the vast commercial potential and was gearing up for a major onslaught. They had been associated with quality mainframe computers, and most experts agreed that they would become the leader in the microcomputer field -- in essence, they would decide the future of microcomputing. IBM chose the 8088 microprocessor by Intel, and with Microsoft, they developed a new operating system called PC-DOS (essentially the same as MS-DOS -- Microsoft's stand alone version). Today, PC doesn't just mean personal computer -- it means IBM compatible. For the uninitiated, let's take a look inside these machines and see what all the fuss is about. The 8088/8086 microprocessor, which is used in the PC-XT and its clones, is vaguely similar to our 8080 (the NEC V20 version can run 8080 instructions). It has an 8-bit data bus but 16-bit internal architecture and is considered a 16-bit microprocessor. The 8086 is an upgrade with a full 16-bit data bus. The major feature of the 8088/8086 is the ability to address up to 1M of RAM using 'segment address-extension' registers. This method is similar to CP/M 3.0's method of using multiple banks, only in the 8088/8086, this technique is used to the fullest. Much like the 8080, the 8086 can only use 64K at a time, but it has 10 banks of 64K each. This makes a total of 640K of RAM. By using other tricks it can access many megabytes of additional memory. Another member of the 8086 family is the 80286. It provides 12 Mhz operation, a crude form of multi-tasking (running several SMALL programs at once) and is used in the PC-AT and its clones. The 80386 is another upgrade which provides up to 33 Mhz operation, a full 32- bit bus and addressing up to 4 Gigabytes of memory. And the 80486 is yet the latest upgrade, which provides further streamlining with a built-in cache memory controller and a coprocessor to speed up floating point calculations. These microprocessors are currently considered the 'leading edge technology' and are the darlings of the micro world [6]. But even now, there is talk of MS-DOS being replaced in the 1990s with UNIX, a true multi-user/multi-tasking operating system. There is another class of super microprocessors, such as the Motorola 88000. These new devices use RISC technology (RISC -- 'Reduced Instruction Set Computer'). They provide even faster execution by implementing a more efficient set of instructions and executing these within one machine cycle. Whew! Okay, so what does this mean for CP/M? The microcomputer, which started out as an experiment and a boon for hobbyists has now become the workhorse of the corporate business establishment. The 80286-386- 486 explosion is being fueled by big business, where money is no object and there is a constant demand for ever more speed and efficiency. Through CAD (Computer Aided Design), these powerful microcomputers are now being used by scientists and engineers. By connecting them together with LANs (Local Area Networks), some experts predict microcomputers will be direct competition for the minicomputer market which has already taken a beating in recent times. But while these advances are impressive, it leaves one piece of the puzzle missing. What about the consumer? It is true, most people can afford a simple XT. What does that mean really? Today, most GOOD software written for MS-DOS is expensive. And to enjoy the fruits of the leading edge, you have to constantly upgrade your equipment. The latest software offerings for PCs aren't designed to run on two floppies -- a hard drive is MANDATORY. A VGA monitor alone can cost more than an entire monochrome XT package. Getting caught up in this spiraling staircase of madness is frightening and can lead to gross over-spending and perhaps even what I like to call 'PC-phobia' -- the fear of owning an inferior computer. In reality, the PC revolution could be thought of as a plush banquet, where Big Business is picking up the tab, and the gamers are picking up the crumbs, hanging on to Sugar Daddy's coat tails. The dream among countless, now defunct computer manufacturers in the early 80s of fully automated lifestyles with a computer in every home was just that, a dream, and one that I fear will not soon be realized. Let's face it, using a computer requires some effort, some learning on the part of the user. You can't just turn it on like a VCR or a Nintendo. Even the 'point and click' fad is too strenuous for most of the general public. I venture to say that there is NO well defined home computer market. All the non-IBM/clone platforms are beginning to fall away; ie: Commodore C-series, Atari, even some Apple II-series. The only true home computer market is really the COMPUTER HOBBYIST, and CP/M is still the ideal operating system for such a phenomenon. It is conceivable that a CP/M supercomputer could be designed to have many of the bells and whistles of MS-DOS. The HD64180 is an integrated Z80 microcontroller with several built-in features: 10 Mhz operation, two DMA controllers, two serial ports, and a programmable timer. But the most notable feature is the ability to address up to 1 Meg of memory using a built-in MMU (Memory Management Unit -- similar to the 'segment address-extension registers' in the 8086 family, previously mentioned). A SCSI bus (Small Computer System Interface) could be used to interface up to eight devices; ie: hard drives, floppy drives, tape drives, printers, etc. This system could have high-resolution bit-mapped graphics, and perhaps even some form of multi-tasking (MP/M-II). The only problem is that CP/M as we know it has no provisions for handling graphics, let alone 1 Meg of memory! Alas, I have found myself fantasizing at times about such a machine. I have personally designed several 68000 microprocessor-driven systems, and it would not be exceptionally difficult to implement the 64180. Of course, outside of a few crazies like myself, such a machine would have no commercial value in light of the current technologies. It would merely be one CP/Mers dream of power and glory. (NOTE: anyone out there who has similar ideas of building a CP/M supercomputer or who knows of such a beast, please drop me a line via GEnie mail. [Note - I posted asking about that large multi-user CP/M system in the Netherlands a few days ago, I'd like to pass that information on to Rob Coleman -- dg] Anyway, what makes CP/M so special? Well, to begin with, it was the first successful disk operating system. Living life as a microcomputerist before CP/M was akin to living without indoor plumbing. And to think that a boni fide computer system like the UNIVAC, that once filled an entire room, could now sit on a table top, I find astonishing. And further, the BDOS/BIOS concept is ingenious. The compatablitily of CP/M operated systems allows the user to share the experience with dissimilar hardware platforms -- thus a whole computing community is enriched. And even more, anyone who lives in the MS-DOS world can feel comfortable with CP/M. After all, MS-DOS really grew out of CP/M; many of the commands and file handling schemes are similar. But more than anything else, maybe SIMPLICITY is what makes CP/M so appealing. As in Art, there is a beauty in simplicity and symmetry, combined with functionality. And CP/M is just that, a simple, straight-forward solution to operating a personal microcomputer system. I guess personal computing is different for others. There's Dan- the-man, my snippidy next door neighbor, the one with the super AT with VGA. I have been to his house to marvel over his computer before, and it IS a remarkable machine. It would be ridiculous to ignore the fact that this is no doubt a far superior machine to anything in the CP/M world. The speed is overwhelming, the graphics dazzling. It is awe inspiring, the shear, unbridled power! (Excuse me, I get excited about computers -- any flavor.) Dan-the-man is indeed one happy camper, as well he should be. But I am baffled. What I find unsettling is the way he PERCEIVES personal computing. Case in point: No sooner did he get this amazing machine, then he was planning to buy another, more powerful one. Why? I'm not sure. Is it the 'first on the block' syndrome, or is it that he really needs that kind of computing power? Dan-the-man plays many computer games and experiments with various software packages. Now six months later, he's ready for a new machine. He hasn't even learned how to use THIS one yet. Speaking of falling in love with one's computer; Dan-the-man not only has no loyalty, he is a technological flirt! In this relationship, there seems to be something missing. Hmmm... Anyone who would care to notice, would be astounded at the longevity of the Commodore 64 computer. True, this little machine is edging its way to obsolescence, but what a journey it has seen! Nearly eight years after its debut, there is still a large group of devotees. There are, as a rough guesstimate, about seven or eight million of these machines around the world. Not all gamers either I remind you; there are multitudes of application programs that have been written for it. With its handful of ROM-based kernel calls and its graphics capabilities, the C64 is a veritable programmer/hacker's delight. How many imaginations have been stirred by these 8-bit wonders? How many computer software careers do you suppose have been launched by these little 'toy' computers? I have read articles in some trade magazines by professional programmers who STILL enjoy hacking on them. These people really love the little computer. In this relationship, there seems a great deal of dedication. Obviously, personal computing means different things to different people. Meanwhile, back in my den, whoosh-tic! Both drives came to a halt. I read the directory of the backed-up floppy. Everything looked good. I wondered, should I check for bad sectors? But then again, the format command should have detected any of these. I yawned. Now I yearned for sleep. Inadvertently, I ran scan.com to look for a bad sector, only I entered the A drive by mistake. I cringed as I realized that my boot disk was now being scanned for bad sectors. This is NOT what I had intended. So much for working when I was tired. But behold! There was a bad sector detected on my boot floppy! I glared at the message on the monitor with disbelief. I thought to myself, maybe the A drive was overheating. That had to be it. I ran scan.com again with the boot disk in the B drive. Again -- a bad sector -- the same one. I decided to fix the problem NOW. No matter how tired I was, I couldn't go to sleep having my boot disk corrupted. No way. That would be sacrilege. I pulled out my back-up boot disk (yes, I had a back-up, but that is a different story!). I pip'd the contents to my RAM drive and then reformatted the corrupted boot disk. Outside my window, I heard a bird call, close in, near the house. I looked briefly to the open window, then back to the task at hand. Once again, I ran scan.com. Good! No bad sectors. Patiently, I waited as the RAM disk contents were copied back onto the boot floppy. 'Booting' -- what an odd term. In the early 1970s, practically all memories were magnetic core types. These memories had tiny toroid- shaped magnets spaced between a lattice-work of wires. The direction of the current through one wire determined the logic value, and current through the other determined whether that value was read or written into the magnet-element. These devices were non-volatile, and held their contents even when the power was removed. But when this data was corrupted, a small program had to be entered to load the system code. This was a tedious process in those days -- done either with switches or paper tape input. The solution? A small loader program was entered manually which loaded another program which actually loaded the system code. This small loader program was called a 'bootstrap' loader. The system was loaded, or pulled up by its own bootstraps. Hence the term -- 'boot' [7]. Whoosh-tic! The A drive came to a stop. I then rebooted. It was done. All was fine in the world. Again, there was the bird outside my window. I got up and walked over to have a look. Again, I heard the cooing. It came from the bushes near the tree out front. It was really too dark to see. Up in the sky, I could see the crescent moon hanging lazily in the heavens, amidst a slight veil of wispy cloud. I listened and heard silence. In the dim light, I glanced back at my computer; my reconditioned boot disk. Yes... all WAS fine in the world. I was ready for sleep. It has been said that perhaps the true delight is not in arriving at the destination, but in the journey itself; to occasionally stop and enjoy the view. If even just to simply smell the fragrance of flowers, or ponder over a private thought. I, myself, find the personal computing experience to be just that -- PERSONAL. It is a quiet time alone, away from the stress and strain of everyday life. And it is during these times that I learn about strength and weakness, success and failure; the value of work; and play for the sake of play; and ways of acceptance. Perhaps it is in this process of DOING that I find the real reward. Knowing the joy of getting a five page, hand typed program to finally run. Learning to accept that slow, noisy drive. Learning that there is always another corner to turn, another page to read. Learning that maybe there is wisdom in discovering even just one little, simple thing each day. If only for this, it has been worth the while. Oh yes, it could be model cars, or stamp collecting, or flower arranging. But it is when these things cease to be mere objects and become vehicles, taking us someplace else, to some secret, private place, they bring us closer to the inner self. By pouring over the tired guts of my old CP/M computer, cursing myself for having misplaced my screw driver AGAIN, perhaps I learn a little more about myself. References / Odds and Ends 1. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Robert M. Pirsig, Bantam. This book is not about fixing motorcycles, or even CP/M, but I strongly recommend it. 2. The Soul of CP/M, The Waite group, Howard Sams. Out of print, but a real gem for programmers. I have read excerpts from some old copies of Computers and Electronics magazine, but I don't own a copy myself. I'm still looking but to no avail. (If anyone knows of an available copy please let me know.) 3. The CP/M Bible, Waite and Angermeyer, Howard Sams. Out of print. This book is useful for someone running several versions of CP/M. It includes a handy cross reference section for 1.X, 2.X, and 3.X systems. I found a NEW hard-bound copy in a used book shop for $4. Note: Many CP/M computer books are now out of print but can be found at 'fire-sale' prices in used book stores. With little money, you can build an impressive CP/M library. 4. An Introduction to Microcomputers, Vol. 1 Basic Concepts, Adam Osborne, Osborne/Mcgraw Hill. A good book for newcomers or anyone who wants to know generally how a microcomputer works. 5. TC128 Compendium #1, Issue #2, CP/M Update, by Todd Madson. Any one who uses a C128 should subscribe to Twin Cities 128 magazine. It deals ONLY with the Commodore 128. But I must say, I wish there was more CP/M coverage. 6. EDN magazine, #24, Nov. 23, 1989. The Annual uP/uC directory. This magazine is written for professional electronic design engineers and is a good source of info on new technology. 7. CP/M Assembly Language Programming, Ken Barbier, Prentice Hall. As far as I know, this book is out of print. However, it is an excellent tutorial on CP/M system programming with the 8080 instruction set. ----- About the Author ----- Robert Coleman is an electronics engineer for Data General, Telecommunication Products Division. Besides designing microprocessor-based electronic circuits, and fiddling around with CP/M in his spare time, he enjoys reading, writing and playing bass in a part-time rock 'n' roll band. ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #169 ************************************* 1-Nov-90 22:22:17-MST,10250;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 1 Nov 90 22:15:07 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #170 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901101221508.V90N170@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 1 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 170 Today's Topics: ECBplus Master Joan Riff and Z80M Xerox 820-II Cards Z80 emulators ZMP Osborne 1 overlays (2 msgs) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 1 Nov 90 21:45:16 GMT From: eru!hagbard!sunic!kth.se!news@bloom-beacon.mit.edu Subject: ECBplus Master Message-ID: <0093F153.F2BB30C0@lne.kth.se> Hi: I have an ECBplus Master, which is a processor card for the ECB-bus and with a Z80H processor. It runs under CP/M 2.2+ and it's made by a German company called miro Datensysteme. Is there anyone who has got Kermit running on this computer? I could also use a program that can read MS-DOS disks or a MS-DOS program that can read disks formatted with the ECBplus Master. Please, send me an e-mail if you know where to find these programs! Thanks, Thomas Thor Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm, Sweden Internet: thor@lne.kth.se ------------------------------ Date: 1 Nov 90 17:44:51 GMT From: zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!techbook!fzsitvay@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: Joan Riff and Z80M Message-ID: <1990Nov1.174451.28750@techbook.com> In article ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: >fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: > >> the z80 emulation is fine, but if it can't run cp/m then it's >> REALLY an orphan. > >I personally don't use Z80MU or even 22NICE all that much. My >hard disk space is currently devoted to other tasks. When I do >need to run a Z80-based application on an oddball setup, I go to >my CompuPro System 8/16 running Concurrent DOS 8/16. I can run a >few well-behaved MS-DOS programs on it, like PKARC (PKZIP isn't >that well-behaved with CDOS). Plus with SPUZ board, that thing >can run Z80-based applications like a bat out of hell with a Z80H >processor on it! ^^^^ i heard a little about that version of the z80 some years back, but never could get any information about whether it's available in single piece quantities. i have a trs 2 that i jacked up to 6 mhz, if i could get the H chip i'd be able to go all the way to 10 mhz. what i really want is a 12 to 16 mhz z80 code compatible processor. does anyone know if such a beast exists?? -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 1 Nov 1990 13:40:57 PST From: Sprague.Wbst311@xerox.com Subject: Xerox 820-II Cards Message-ID: <" 1-Nov-90 16:40:57 EST".*.Michael_D._Sprague.wbst311@Xerox.com> I am forwarding this message for a friend. I too am interested in the answer though. ~ Mike (Sprague.Wbst311@Xerox.Com) ---------------------------------------- > There were a number of third-party controllers for the > Xerox 820-II made as well, which used easier to find/cheaper > components than Xerox supplied....For the 820-I and 820-II, > there are also hard disk SASI adapter cards that plug into > the parallel port (Z80-PIO ports) allowing use of a SASI/SCSI > hard disk controller and appropriate hard drives Could someone enlighten me on this market? I'm currently running a BBS with an 820-II and would love to 'downsize' the rigid (currently 8") and increase capacity (currently 10 meg). Thanx, Tom (TGene.Dloslv300@Xerox.Com) ---------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: 1 Nov 90 03:30:26 GMT From: usc!cs.utexas.edu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!utzoo!telly!problem!druid!darcy@ucsd.edu (D'Arcy J.M. Cain) Subject: Z80 emulators Message-ID: <1990Nov1.033026.25743@druid.uucp> In article mrapple@quack.sac.ca.us (Nick Sayer) writes: >If anyone cares, I also have written a Z-80 interpreter and CP/M >system for unix, and it's currently in beta-test. It is painfully >slow, but that's to be expected, really. The BIOS is written in >C, but the BIOS table can be played with, if you want, and BIOS >can be moved "down" to make himem space available. The sudden interest here in CP/M emulators has got me back to work on mine. Perhaps everyone who has one in the works should get together and get something finished. Anyway, since everyone is describing the features of their stuff here is mine. --------------------- Canned speech starts here ------------------------- This is a quick overview of my CP/M emulator for Unix. I wrote a decoder for the 8080 instruction set. Eventually I will upgrade it to a full Z80 decoder. Whenever the PC is >= 0xfec0 it executes a return no matter what is in RAM at that location. Before calling the routine for each instruction I look at the PC and end the program if it is zero or perform a BDOS function if it is 0xfec0 or BIOS if it is >= 0xff00. Since the emulator ignores the contents of memory as far as instruction decoding is concerned, The system has the interesting property of being able to use all of memory except the first 0x100 bytes for user programs by putting the stack at 0xfffe. In fact the default stack when a program is run is set to 0xfff0. I use Unix commands to simulate some CP/M commands such as DIR, REN, TYPE and handle things such as SAVE internally. I use the Unix file system for drives. The user defines Unix directories to CP/M drive mappings. This allows CP/M to use the same file system as the Unix but does force CP/M conventions on the file names such as upper case, must have 1 and only 1 period, etc. It is easy to handle though since one can always link files as necessary, even from CP/M since I also include a '!' command to do Unix commands from within CP/M. Programs that use IN and OUT opcodes will fail. All I/O must go through the BDOS or the BIOS. The user can set up the following devices: Screen (CON out), keyboard (CON in), RDR, PUN and LST. The default for screen and keyboard is stdout and stdin. The user can set up Unix files for any of these devices. The file of course can be an actual file, a device or even a pipe to a command, even another CP/M command that has the keyboard reading from the same pipe. It's not quite finished yet but I am running simple programs with it now. All the 8080 opcodes are being emulated and some of the Z80. --------------------- End of canned speech -------------------------------- It is running programs now but it is just so slow that I am trying to improve the decoder. If I ever get it finished I will be sure to post it. -- D'Arcy J.M. Cain (darcy@druid) | D'Arcy Cain Consulting | I support gun control. West Hill, Ontario, Canada | Let's start with the government! + 416 281 6094 | ------------------------------ Date: 1 Nov 90 15:46:56 GMT From: crash!mwilson@nosc.mil (Marc Wilson) Subject: ZMP Osborne 1 overlays Message-ID: <5396@crash.cts.com> In article <4255.272ed87f@cc.curtin.edu.au> Murray_RJ@cc.curtin.edu.au writes: > While I'm at it, I'm taking suggestions for the next version(s) of >ZMP and RZMP. Anyone got anything they'd like to see included? > >.... Ron Murray (ZMP author and bar) One thing *I'd* like to see is the ability to include a long-distance code in the phone library. Right now, you HAVE to wait until the library displays on the screen, then hit either '+' or '-', then your # selection. And if you forget, well.... Then again, I'd also like to see that delay after ESC-I go away.... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------ Date: 1 Nov 90 18:54:44 GMT From: olivea!orc!inews!cadev1!dbraun@apple.com (Doug Braun ~) Subject: ZMP Osborne 1 overlays Message-ID: <756@inews.intel.com> In article <4255.272ed87f@cc.curtin.edu.au> Murray_RJ@cc.curtin.edu.au writes: > > While I'm at it, I'm taking suggestions for the next version(s) of >ZMP and RZMP. Anyone got anything they'd like to see included? > >.... Ron Murray (ZMP author and bar) > Here is my feedback. I have used it to transfer stuff to/from a PC running ZCOMM via a serial cable. It runs real fast. 1: You need to be able to have it find the overlays on a drive/user area different than where you keep the .com or your current directory. The drive and user area could be specified in the overlay? 2: When sending ASCII files from the PC to CP/M, they ended up padded with up to 127 bytes of junk. I can't say if this is a bug in ZCOMM or ZMP. Perhaps ZMP forgets to add the ctrl-Z? Sorry, I can't remember more. I also don't know the versions of the software. Mail me if you need more info. Doug Braun Intel Corp CAD 408 765-4279 dbraun@scdt.intel.com or maybe: / decwrl \ | hplabs | -| oliveb |- !intelca!mipos3!cadev6!dbraun | amd | \ qantel / ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #170 ************************************* 2-Nov-90 15:24:20-MST,9703;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Fri, 2 Nov 90 15:15:17 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #171 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901102151523.V90N171@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Fri, 2 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 171 Today's Topics: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching? Does Zilog have a *** 20MHz *** Z80? INFO-CPM Digest V90 #169 Irv Hoff Z80 emulators Zmp and Qterm ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 2 Nov 90 08:44:32 GMT From: swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!lobster!mwk!pittman@ucsd.edu (V. Darrell Pittman, M.W. Kellogg, KT26, 713-753-4410) Subject: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching? Message-ID: <5911@mwk.uucp> In article <4488.9010311817@np1a.bristol.ac.uk>, andmp@np1a.bristol.ac.uk (D M Pickles) writes: > Does anyone know of a Crunching/Squeezing/Zipping-type method of > compressing ascii files, that would work under CP/M as well as either > MSDOS or UNIX? If so, is the relevant software available in the > public domain? I don't know about Unix, but you could use the ARK utility for CP/M, which is compatible with MS-DOS's ARC. Hope this helps... Darrell -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- V. Darrell Pittman The M. W. Kellogg Co. Internet: pittman@mwk.uucp Sr. Systems Programmer 601 Jefferson Ave, KT26 CompuServe: 72277,3146 Houston, TX 77002 Phone: (713) 753-4410 Fax: (713) 753-5353 The opinions expressed herein are my own, not necessarily those of my employer or any other third party. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: 2 Nov 90 14:25:35 GMT From: dino!sharkey!bnlux0!solids.phy.bnl.gov!scott@uunet.uu.net (david scott coburn) Subject: Does Zilog have a *** 20MHz *** Z80? Message-ID: <2288@bnlux0.bnl.gov> In article <1990Nov1.174451.28750@techbook.com> fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: >what i really want is a 12 to 16 mhz z80 code compatible processor. >does anyone know if such a beast exists?? > I have a ZILOG Literature Guide from an Electronic Engineering Times Special Issue "Microprocessor Design Guide". I recieved it in the mail last week. One of the available pieces of literature from Zilog is "Z84C00 20MHz Z80 CPU", part number DC-2523-01. I was a bit surprized to see it... I was planning to write to them to get a copy, it says here that it is free. The address given is: Zilog 210 Hacienda Ave. M/S C1-0 Cambell, CA 95008-6609 They also give a phone number (408)370-8016. Now let's see... 20Mhz cpu, a couple of 128k x 8 fast static rams... scott coburn brookhaven national laboratory scottc@solids.phy.bnl.gov [130.199.128.73] upton, ny, usa .....q.. ...q.... ......q. q....... .......q .q...... ....q... ..q...... ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Nov 90 11:19 CDT From: "Arun Baheti " Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #169 RE: Xerox Hard Rive Expansions Anyone looking for extra rigid space on the 820-II or 16/8 might try calling Holly Park RCP/M in NJ, or Socrates RCP/M (also in NJ?). Both sysops have put together packages for expanding rigid space and also ataching extra drives. There is also a package availabe for chaining multiple 8" sa1004's up to the 820-II (written by Russ Pencin many moons ago, before he left CP/M and Texas!). I have information on all the above if anyone is interested please message me. --Arun Baheti Arun_Baheti.ElSegundo@Xerox.COM SABahe@Macalstr.EDU ------------------------------ Date: 1 Nov 90 22:33:58 GMT From: mintaka!spdcc!mirror!pallio!dg@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (David Goodenough) Subject: Irv Hoff Message-ID: Tom McEnroe on GEnie posted the following. With a very heavy heart I relay it on. ------------------------------------------------------- Category 1, Topic 8 Message 1 Sun Oct 28, 1990 T.MCENROE1 [Tom] at 20:58 PST Users of IMP, MODEM7, etc. will be saddened by the following news about Irv Hoff dying of cancer. Just today (Sunday, Oct. 28, 1990) I captured the following message from Fog's BB #1 in Daly City, CA, and am posting it here for your information. I'm sure that users of both MODEM7 and IMP (and I'm one of thousands) would want to know about his fatal illness. No later word about Irv appeared on Fog's BB, so I don't know whether he is still alive. = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = [Message #17896 on Fog's BB #1] Posted: 09/11/90 at 10:43 pm From: JIM SWITZ To: ALL USERS About: Irv Hoff To Whom It May Concern: I just saw an old friend of mine tonight - Irv Hoff. For those of you who've known Irv, you know that he's meant a lot to our BBS hobbies and addictions. From the earliest days of CP/M teleommunications, Irv was there, with MDM740, IMP, BYE5, KMD and so many other applications and utilities vital to us in those days. Some were original, others were built from the work of others. And, like many of the pioneers of shared software (NOT shareware software), Irv released his source code freely, with comments and assistance. Although he took fierce pride in his work, and was occasionally the focus of some controversy, he was always wiling to help others and to learn from others how to improve his own work. Moreover, Irv actually *encouraged* voice contact at almost any hour - an extreme rarity among hackers. Much of what Irv has done has survived to today - buried in countless DOS applications and utilities as algorithms. Anyway, it appears that Irv is not long for this world, quite frankly, and is suffering from advanced colon cancer. I was shocked, actually, to see him show up to tonight's PRACSA meeting. Judging from his recent messages on the PRACSA board, I didn't expect to see him again, ever. He's looking mighty weak and thin these days, but seemed in relatively good shape, considering, and brought his wife to meet us. Recent messages from Irv indicated he thought he might not see October, much less Christmas, but maybe he's got a few weeks' reprieve. So, for those who know or know of Irv, I thought you should be aware of the current situation. I'm sure that some contact from his friends would be most appreciated now, while he can still deal with the outside world. He finds it very hard to even get to his BBS out in the radio room these days, but DOES check in when he can. Let's use the communication pathways that Irv pioneered to get in touch, at least once, and let him know we're here, and that he's remembered and appreciated, ok? His BBS number (PRACSA) is 415-948-2513 in Los Atos Hills, CA, and can be reached via CAPAL if you use PC Pursuit. Regards, Jim ------------------------------------------------------- The CP/M community will surely miss Irv, who has produced a vast collection of excellent Public Domain software. I hope and pray that the work he has done will be with us for many years, and that his memory never fades away. dg -- Our hope is in the name of the LORD, who hath made Heaven and Earth. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 2 Nov 90 14:56:21 -0500 From: Mark W. Eichin Subject: Z80 emulators Message-ID: <9011021956.AA19611@E40-008-11.MIT.EDU> So how many people are interested in collaborating on CP/M or Z80 emulator development? I had a Z80 emulator on my todo list for years, and then Nick Sayer came along and announced his, so I went and helped him test and debug it, rather than duplicate effort; however, there are a number of different strategies one might use, and there's room for many other designs (in its current form, with all of my additions, Nick's is quite useful for debugging, but it is dismayingly slow. A faster implementation might use a different strategy but not be as good at debugging.) If you're interested in actively coding or designing and discussing strategies for particular instructions or for the overall implementation, send me email (eichin@athena.mit.edu) and if there is enough interest, I'll set up the list. _Mark_ MIT SIPB Member/N1DPU/Z88 Hacker ps. My motivation includes possibly doing a simulator of the Z88, for development there too. If you're interested in that, consider joining the z88-hackers list . ------------------------------ Date: 30 Oct 90 03:23:03 GMT From: wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!lobster!urchin!Charles.Cotham@decwrl.dec.com (Charles Cotham) Subject: Zmp and Qterm Message-ID: <3201.272FC372@urchin.fidonet.org> Klaus, I was the one who sent the original request for the overlays, I will try to get a letter off to you tommorrw if possible, thanks for the reply, I will try to send a mailer and such if you would be so kind as to send me the ovelays and schematics, Thanks again Charles Cotham ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #171 ************************************* 5-Nov-90 07:23:11-MST,8980;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Mon, 5 Nov 90 07:15:07 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #172 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901105071508.V90N172@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Mon, 5 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 172 Today's Topics: Antique Systems (was Re: Need info for an S-100 bus system) CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching? CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching?y looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 OASIS for Digital Group system Qterm server at pallio!rna going offline Software for INFO-LOOK or PRODIGY? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 5 Nov 90 02:03:55 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!metro!ipso!stca77!peter@uunet.uu.net (Peter Jeremy) Subject: Antique Systems (was Re: Need info for an S-100 bus system) Message-ID: <1112@stca77.stc.oz> In article <11566@spool.cs.wisc.edu> tonyrich@titanic.cs.wisc.edu (Anthony Rich) writes: >Here's a blurb about Z80 Cromix from an old Cromemco product catalog: [ deleted ] >Not too bad for a cut-down UNIX-like OS that ran on a Z80 and floppies. >I wonder if there are any surviving copies out there? The Wireless Institure of Australia (the Australian Amateur Radio organisation) maintained its membership records on a Z80 Cromemco system until recently (at least, I hope they have the replacement system - an AT-clone running MS-DOG - on-line by now). The major reason for replacement was problems with spare parts availability. -- Peter Jeremy (VK2PJ) peter@stca77.stc.oz.AU Alcatel STC Australia ...!uunet!stca77.stc.oz!peter 240 Wyndham St peter%stca77.stc.oz@uunet.UU.NET ALEXANDRIA NSW 2015 ------------------------------ Date: 3 Nov 90 01:56:45 GMT From: swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!dali.cs.montana.edu!ogicse!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!techbook!fzsitvay@ucsd.edu (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching? Message-ID: <1990Nov3.015645.16945@techbook.com> In article <4488.9010311817@np1a.bristol.ac.uk> andmp@np1a.bristol.ac.uk (D M Pickles) writes: >Does anyone know of a Crunching/Squeezing/Zipping-type method of >compressing ascii files, that would work under CP/M as well as either >MSDOS or UNIX? If so, is the relevant software available in the >public domain? The reason for my inquiry is that I have an occasional >need for transferring textfiles created on my Amstrad CP/M machine at >home, on 3-inch (*not* 3.5-inch!) diskettes, to an IBM-PC machine at >work. I achieve this via modem+kermit to the University mainframe, at >300 baud, which which takes forever and costs lots. (I subsequently >download from the mainframe to a PC, at 9600 baud, which is fast and >free, so that step is trivial). Any way of reducing the file size for >the modem transfer would obviously be very beneficial! My only other >options are to buy expensive auxillary hardware and transport disks to >and from work, or to take up weight-training and carry one of the >computers instead... > there is a version of arc for both machines, that will build and dismember archives. the cp/m version is kinda slow, but at least it does work. if you don't need to batch files together, there is a verison of crunch/uncrunch for msdos, but it's kinda hard to find. hope that helps... -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ Date: 5 Nov 90 14:03:46 GMT From: usc!samsung!munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@ucsd.edu Subject: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching?y Message-ID: <15649.27357142@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <4488.9010311817@np1a.bristol.ac.uk>, andmp@np1a.bristol.ac.uk (D M Pickles) writes: > Does anyone know of a Crunching/Squeezing/Zipping-type method of > compressing ascii files, that would work under CP/M as well as either > 300 baud yuk > Any way of reducing the file size for > the modem transfer would obviously be very beneficial! I'm very happy with ARK11. I can get it to you, if it's not in SIMTEL. The size saved is usually at least half of the space previously used. ARC is not as efficient as ARK. I found that it's faster. (Assembly coded) Both are basically compatible I think. I believe I have a version of ZIP for CP/M too, but haven't tried it yet. Actually just found it after searching for a while thru my collection. ZIP099 ?? Is there something newer or has someone used this? > Any help would be much appreciated. > There you go. > David Pickles andmp@uk.ac.bristol.np1a Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 5 Nov 90 00:15:29 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!labtam!eyrie!gtw@uunet.uu.net (Grant Waldram) Subject: looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 Message-ID: <1988@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au> I'm currently trying to track down a cross compiler for the HD64180. As most of you would know, this is Hitachi's version of the Z180. The thing we've got at the moment (IAR Systems ICCZ80 V2.22C/MD2) is a DOG to put it politely, managing to fall in an undignified heap whenever we want to compile more than 30K of C source. We're using the CPU as a device controller, if it is any help. Oh, we're currently cross-compiling from a PC, but it would be possible to work from a microVAX. UNIX would be difficult to arrange, but we'd probably be happy to do it just for a new compiler :) Thanx in anticipation... ___________________________________________________________________________ Grant Waldram (Atom Smash), ACSnet: atom%eyrie@labtam.oz.au img Consultants, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ G.P.O. Box 3304GG, Melbourne, - DON'T TRUST THE MAIL HEADER - Australia 3001 bang as appropriate in order to route ps: also available at 's884764@otto.bf.rmit.oz.au' ------------------------------ Date: 2 Nov 90 19:05:04 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@decwrl.dec.com (Don Maslin) Subject: OASIS for Digital Group system Message-ID: <1990Nov2.190504.18410@simasd.uucp> According to the 'THEOS/OASIS User's Handbook' by Walter C. Stagner Jr., published by Weber Systems Inc., ISBN 0-938862-00-6, Digital Group *was* one of the implementors of OASIS (THEOS). In a similar request to Mr Nerenberg's, I would like to get a copy of the documentation for OASIS as implemented on the NNC (No Name Computer) Electronics machine. Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 4 Nov 90 08:23:43 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!lobster!urchin!Charles.Cotham@ucsd.edu (Charles Cotham) Subject: Qterm Message-ID: <3260.2733EC2B@urchin.fidonet.org> David, Thanks for the reply, Please send the O-1 overlay to : Charles Cotham 2205 Lilac St. Nederland, Tx 77627 Let me know how much you need to cover the costs. Thanks Again.. ------------------------------ Date: 3 Nov 90 05:02:43 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!think.com!mintaka!spdcc!mirror!pallio!dg@ucsd.edu (David Goodenough) Subject: server at pallio!rna going offline Message-ID: Please note the following. As of November 9th. pallio.UUCP will be offline. This is only temporary, since I am moving from Boston to San Francisco. However, until I get set up in San Francisco, and the maps reflect my new address, it may be very hard to reach the server. I will post again to comp.os.cpm once I have an address in San Francisco, advising how to reach the server, and what form of addresses should be used. -- dg@pallio.UUCP - David Goodenough +---+ IHS | +-+-+ ..... !harvard!xait!pallio!dg +-+-+ | AKA: dg%pallio.uucp@xait.xerox.com +---+ ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 04 Nov 90 14:36:42 -0500 From: mooers@SH.CS.NET Subject: Software for INFO-LOOK or PRODIGY? Does anyone know whether there is software that allows someone with a CPM to use INFO-LOOK or PRODIGY? Please reply directly to me. I am not on the INFO-CPM list. ---Charlotte Mooers ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #172 ************************************* 6-Nov-90 22:25:58-MST,8116;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Tue, 6 Nov 90 22:15:27 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #173 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901106221529.V90N173@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Tue, 6 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 173 Today's Topics: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching?y CPM Viri Early microcomputer networks Kaypro disk with unix dd command (3 msgs) Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change pallio.UUCP ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 5 Nov 90 22:25:33 GMT From: pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucsd.edu (Ian Justman) Subject: CP/M- and MSDOS-compatible file-crunching?y Message-ID: etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au writes: > I believe I have a version of ZIP for CP/M too, but haven't tried it yet. > Actually just found it after searching for a while thru my collection. > ZIP099 ?? Is there something newer or has someone used this? That is an UNZIP-only program. There are no ZIP programs that I know of. If there are any, I'm fiercely interested. ------------------------------ Date: 5 Nov 90 23:40:02 GMT From: mcsun!ukc!axion!tharr!pm111@uunet.uu.net (Paul Martin) Subject: CPM Viri Message-ID: <1392@tharr.UUCP> Would it surprise the net if I said that CPM Plus is not immune to viruses? The main thing in its favour/susceptibility is its control over error messages. I see some questions forming... Yes, I have written one -- it's about 3/4 K in length, and it's not leaving my write-protected floppy. -- If life is just a bowl of cherries, you'd better watch out for the stones. Paul Martin. pm111@tharr.uucp INTERNET: pm111%tharr.uucp@ukc.ac.uk <-- tharr *free* public access to Usenet in the UK 0234 261804 --> ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 21:11:35 GMT From: bu.edu!shelby!helens!news@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (news) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: Back in the late 70's and early 80's, the Physics department at Washington University (St. Louis) had a primitive (by today's standards) network of 8 to 10 diskless PDP-11's running a modified RT-11 hanging off of a dedicated PDP-11 disk server. Each client had it's own coax link to the server. (Good thing they had separate lines too, since nearly every thunderstorm blew the transceiver chips at both ends of the long line out to the cyclotron building.) Around 1980, with the proliferation of micros like the Apple II and S-100 CPM boxes, the architect of the system, Prof. Scandrett, extended the network so that micros could all share the same cable. He had it working on the Apple II's. In 1981, I hacked up CPM's BIOS to make the disk server look like a (rather large) CPM drive. Disk storage (other than floppies) was quite expensive at the time, so I'm sure there were similar ad-hoc networks elsewhere. Everyone knows about ethernet, which was by then, I believe, common at most large universities. But what about networks that became extinct, the network dinosaurs? What was happening with other mini/microcomputer networks around that time? Jim Helman Department of Applied Physics Durand 012 Stanford University FAX: (415) 725-3377 (jim@KAOS.stanford.edu) Work: (415) 723-9127 ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 00:16:41 GMT From: fluke!alz@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Al Weiss) Subject: Kaypro disk with unix dd command Message-ID: <1990Nov6.001641.20927@tc.fluke.COM> >The only Kaypros that used single-density system tracks were the original >Kaycomp II's -- they had single-density drives. As a Kaycomp owner, I disagree. Single sided, double density on the original Kaycomp/Kaypro II's. But at least one of the Osbornes had single sided, single density on the whole floppy. -- Al Weiss alz@tc.fluke.com 206-356-5252 John Fluke Mfg. Co., Inc. MS-269E PO Box 9090 Everett, WA 98206-9090 USA ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 15:43:31 GMT From: pacbell.com!pacbell!pbhyf!blh@ucsd.edu (Brian Holliday) Subject: Kaypro disk with unix dd command Message-ID: <8257@pbhyf.PacBell.COM> In article <1990Nov6.001641.20927@tc.fluke.COM> alz@tc.fluke.COM (Al Weiss) writes: >>The only Kaypros that used single-density system tracks were the original >>Kaycomp II's -- they had single-density drives. > >As a Kaycomp owner, I disagree. Single sided, double density on the >original Kaycomp/Kaypro II's. But at least one of the Osbornes had >single sided, single density on the whole floppy. Non-Linear Systems demonstrated the Kaycomp II at a computer faire in San Francisco in 1981. It had single-sided single-density floppies -- for about 90K of data. This was similar to the Osborne. But when the computer started to be sold a few months later, the computer box had a different look, and the floppies were single-sided double-density -- for about 180K of data. Brian Holliday (...!pacbell!pbhyf!blh) ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 17:06:12 GMT From: usc!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!ea.ecn.purdue.edu!wieland@ucsd.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) Subject: Kaypro disk with unix dd command Message-ID: <1990Nov6.170612.5747@ecn.purdue.edu> In article <1990Nov6.001641.20927@tc.fluke.COM> alz@tc.fluke.COM (Al Weiss) writes: >As a Kaycomp owner, I disagree. Single sided, double density on the >original Kaycomp/Kaypro II's. But at least one of the Osbornes had >single sided, single density on the whole floppy. I have a sales brochure from Non-Linear Systems for the Kaycomp -- it talks about the "big" 90 kilobyte disk drives. The machine pictured has two full-height drives, mounted vertically on either side of the crt. Also, the power switch and crt brightness control are on the front of the machine -- where they belong! -- Jeff Wieland wieland@acn.purdue.edu ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 16:35:17 GMT From: hpl-opus!hpnmdla!donm@hplabs.hpl.hp.com (Don Montgomery) Subject: Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change Message-ID: <4060001@hpnmdla.HP.COM> This may have been asked many times previously, but I missed it- I have a "stock" Kaypro II-84 with 191K SSDD drives. What do I need to convert to DSDD drives besides the drives themselves? (The originals are indeed single- sided, one head with a rubbing block on the other side.) Does anyone have the code for the monitor ROM changes? What other hardware changes are required, if any? With the demise of MICROCORNUCOPIA magazine and the advent of MS/DOS, all the advertisers for this sort of thing have disappeared. Can anyone offer any help? Thanks Don Montgomery donm@hpnmdla.HP.COM ------------------------------ Date: 4 Nov 90 19:10:25 GMT From: att!ima!mirror!pallio!dg@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (David Goodenough) Subject: pallio.UUCP Message-ID: There appears to be a little confusion as to the date of my movement, so I'll reiterate what will be happening to pallio and the rna server here. pallio will be online up to the 9th of November, and will probably get reconnected around the 20th. - 21st. - 22nd. I'll post when I'm online again, but it will doubtless take a while till the maps get sorted out. So the 10th. through about the 22nd. I'm going to be offline, and for a while after that, it'll be harder to get in at me. -- dg@pallio.UUCP - David Goodenough +---+ IHS | +-+-+ ..... !harvard!xait!pallio!dg +-+-+ | AKA: dg%pallio.uucp@xait.xerox.com +---+ ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #173 ************************************* 7-Nov-90 13:20:35-MST,8220;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Wed, 7 Nov 90 13:15:09 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #174 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901107131509.V90N174@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Wed, 7 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 174 Today's Topics: Irv Hoff Irv Hoff and Article 1124 Kaypro disk with unix dd command Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change READ/WRITE MSDOS DISKS ON OTRONA (2 msgs) Unusual File Compression Method Z280 CP/M ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 5 Nov 90 19:01:46 GMT From: igloo!ddsw1!corpane!disk!andy@gargoyle.uchicago.edu (andy) Subject: Irv Hoff Message-ID: <4449@disk.UUCP> I had no idea Irv was ill. He was a _tremendous_ help to me years ago, when I was just starting my microcomputer days (via Morrow MD-2). His series of MDMxxx overlays made it possible for me to get online and expand my knowledge of telecommunications. Several times we "chatted" on CompuServe; more recently I had the privilege of giving _him_ advice in my capacity as a Sysop of CIS's Consumer Electronics Forum. He's always been an exceedingly gracious, tireless gentleman. I hope with all my heart he can beat his illness. ------------------------------ Date: 5 Nov 90 23:44:37 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!ira.uka.de!smurf!gopnbg!altger!doitcr!jungkunz@ucsd.edu (Helmut Jungkunz) Subject: Irv Hoff and Article 1124 Message-ID: <1531@doitcr.doit.sub.org> Sadly, I received the message of Irv's illness, and on behalf of our CP/M and MSDOS User Group SCUG (Schneider/Amstrad CPC User Group Munich) I'd like to express our feelings. We want to thank him for his work and hope that he will not suffer. He should know, that although noone has ever met him over here, he is still very well known and respected. Irv, if you read this, we feel really bad that we never had a chance to give you back anything in response. We will always remember you. Helmut Jungkunz Munich on behalf of SCUG ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 18:05:05 GMT From: mvb.saic.com!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Kaypro disk with unix dd command Message-ID: <1990Nov6.180505.18003@simasd.uucp> alz@tc.fluke.COM (Al Weiss) writes: >>The only Kaypros that used single-density system tracks were the original >>Kaycomp II's -- they had single-density drives. > >As a Kaycomp owner, I disagree. Single sided, double density on the >original Kaycomp/Kaypro II's. But at least one of the Osbornes had >single sided, single density on the whole floppy. > >-- > >Al Weiss alz@tc.fluke.com 206-356-5252 >John Fluke Mfg. Co., Inc. MS-269E PO Box 9090 Everett, WA 98206-9090 USA As I recall, the program MFDISK for the Kaypro II listed a SSSD option under the Kaypro selection. So *some* model of Kaypro must have had SD tracks. Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 15:53:42 GMT From: usc!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!ea.ecn.purdue.edu!wieland@ucsd.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) Subject: Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change Message-ID: <1990Nov7.155342.23829@ecn.purdue.edu> In article <4060001@hpnmdla.HP.COM> donm@hpnmdla.HP.COM (Don Montgomery) writes: >This may have been asked many times previously, but I missed it- > >I have a "stock" Kaypro II-84 with 191K SSDD drives. What do I need to convert >to DSDD drives besides the drives themselves? (The originals are indeed single- >sided, one head with a rubbing block on the other side.) Does anyone have the >code for the monitor ROM changes? What other hardware changes are required, if >any? With the demise of MICROCORNUCOPIA magazine and the advent of MS/DOS, all >the advertisers for this sort of thing have disappeared. > >Can anyone offer any help? Thanks Advent Products should still have upgrade products for Kaypros. They sell the TurboROM for $60, which knows about DSDD (and 96 tpi) drives. They also sell a drive decoder board that adds the additional logic for double-sided drives (also allows up to four drives) -- it goes for $40. I believe the TurboROM manual has instructions on how to add the side select circuit yourself, too. Advent's number is 714-630-8172. By the way, Bridger Mitchell's company, Plu*Perfect Systems apparently wrote both the TurboROM code and the Turbo BIOS code. I have no relationship with Advent or Plu*Perfect -- I just think that they have darned good products that work together. My Kaypro 2X has Advent's TurboROM, host-adapter, 1 Meg RAM disk, real-time clock, Western Digital WD-1002-005 hard disk controller and a Seagate ST-138-1 (30 meg) hard drive. I am using NZCOM and ZSDOS, and it all works. I also have a MicroSphere Color Graphics board in it, but that's another story... -- Jeff Wieland wieland@acn.purdue.edu ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 17:18:50 GMT From: farris@marlin.nosc.mil (Russell H. Farris) Subject: READ/WRITE MSDOS DISKS ON OTRONA Message-ID: <1654@marlin.NOSC.MIL> Does anyone know of a CPM program that will permit my Otrona Attache to read and/or write MSDOS diskettes? Was a version of Uniform ever produced for the Otrona? Can the Otrona be modified to use an 80-track floppy drive? Where can I buy the ever-failing 5027 CRT controllers? Is it feasible to add ram for a ram drive? Thanks, Russ Farris (farris@marlin.nosc.mil) (619) 553-4129 Code 444 Naval Ocean Systems Center 271 Catalina Blvd "As for Gunnar I cannot speak, San Diego, Calif 92152-5000 but his halberd is home!" Njal's Saga ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 19:12:41 GMT From: mentor.cc.purdue.edu!descartes.math.purdue.edu!wilker@purdue.edu (Clarence Wilkerson) Subject: READ/WRITE MSDOS DISKS ON OTRONA Message-ID: <16247@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> Somewhere in my archives, I have a Turbo Pascal rewrite of a program to read MSDOS diskettes on a CP/M system that has a bios that will recognize the physical format used ( 512 byte sectors, etc). I believe I posted it once to the CP/M section of GENIE . Clarence Wilkerson wilker@math.purdue.edu ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 15:46:56 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!trantor.harris-atd.com!mlb.semi.harris.com!jujeh.mlb.semi.harris.com!krl@ucsd.edu (Ken Lyons) Subject: Unusual File Compression Method Message-ID: <1990Nov7.154656.18243@mlb.semi.harris.com> I am trying uncompress some files I obtained from SIMTEL-20 that are of the form: *.?Y? Can anyone indicate what this form is and what I need to get to uncompress it and where? I am already familiar with *.LBR, *.?Q?, *.?Z?, and *.ARK, but this one has me stumped. Thanks, Ken Lyons This is not a disclaimer. ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 03:34:59 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!metro!research.canon.oz.au!graeme@uunet.uu.net (Graeme Wong See) Subject: Z280 CP/M Message-ID: <1990Nov7.033459.8380@research.canon.oz.au> Does anyone run or heard of anyone run CP/M on a Z280 based system? Any reports on how they did it, problems etc would be appreciated. Graeme. -- Graeme Wong See, Hardware Engineer | Net: graeme@research.canon.oz.au Canon Information Systems Research Australia | Phone: +1 61 2 805 2912 P.O. Box 313 North Ryde, NSW, Australia 2113 | Fax: +1 61 2 805 2929 ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #174 ************************************* 8-Nov-90 16:26:32-MST,8665;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 8 Nov 90 16:15:18 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #175 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901108161518.V90N175@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 8 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 175 Today's Topics: Advent CPM Viri (3 msgs) Dutch CP/M Supercomputer (2 msgs) Need Osbourne Executive Bits... Osborne 1: UUCP? Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? Z-80 emulator posted to alt.sources ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 8 Nov 90 17:52:28 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!unix.cis.pitt.edu!csfst1@ucsd.edu (Charles S. Fuller) Subject: Advent Message-ID: <58354@unix.cis.pitt.edu> In article <23829@ecn.purdue.edu> wieland@ea.ecn.purdue.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) writes: > Advent Products should still have upgrade products for Kaypros. > [...] > ... Advent's number is 714-630-8172. As the owner of a coupla old Kaypro II's, I was quite excited when I read this. But, alas, the phone company recordings tell me that the number has been disconnected. Can anyone verify that Advent is still in business? Chuck Fuller ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 01:20:16 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!dali.cs.montana.edu!milton!blake.u.washington.edu!callisto@ucsd.edu (Finn) Subject: CPM Viri Message-ID: <10775@milton.u.washington.edu> In article <1990Nov7.112631.9252@techbook.com> fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: >In article <1392@tharr.UUCP> pm111@tharr.UUCP (Paul Martin) writes: >>Would it surprise the net if I said that CPM Plus is not immune to >after the retirement of 2.2 in favor of msdos, so you don't see many >viruses around. > > I understand that cp/m virus was invented and that was quite lethal, but it didn't go very far. Probably had something to do with the >200 K library of system specific overlay files that came with it. ;} ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 11:26:31 GMT From: zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!percy!nosun!techbook!fzsitvay@uunet.uu.net (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: CPM Viri Message-ID: <1990Nov7.112631.9252@techbook.com> In article <1392@tharr.UUCP> pm111@tharr.UUCP (Paul Martin) writes: >Would it surprise the net if I said that CPM Plus is not immune to >viruses? > cp/m 2.2 is an easy target for viruses as well, but the virus craze came after the retirement of 2.2 in favor of msdos, so you don't see many viruses around. -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 08:34:24 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!lobster!mwk!pittman@ucsd.edu (V. Darrell Pittman, M.W. Kellogg, KT26, 713-753-4410) Subject: CPM Viri Message-ID: <6191@mwk.uucp> In article <1990Nov7.112631.9252@techbook.com>, fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: > cp/m 2.2 is an easy target for viruses as well, but the virus craze came > after the retirement of 2.2 in favor of msdos, so you don't see many > viruses around. Shhhh! They're listening! ;-) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- V. Darrell Pittman The M. W. Kellogg Co. Email: pittman@mwk.uucp Sr. Systems Programmer 601 Jefferson Ave, KT26 CompuServe: 72277,3146 Houston, TX 77002 Phone: (713) 753-4410 Fax: (713) 753-5353 The opinions expressed herein are my own, not necessarily those of my employer or any other third party (and who would blame them?) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 15:33:00 GMT From: astroatc!nicmad!madnix!deety!rat@speedy.wisc.edu (David Douthitt) Subject: Dutch CP/M Supercomputer Message-ID: I have the files on this - does anyone else want this besides David Goodenough (dg@pallio.uucp)? If so, I'll send it out. I don't know how long that will take, though - deety has been hacking and coughing recently - is it the flu? :-) Seems to be temperature-related... Deety goes to sleep when her temperature goes up :-) Hangin' tough... -- ====== David Douthitt ======== aka "The Stainless Steel Rat" ==== UUCP: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!deety!rat InterNet: deety%rat@spool.cs.wisc.edu <<< Home of Mad Apple Forth and the Tiger Toolbox -- Apple II Forever! <<< "Drop dead - but first get permit." - The Moon is a Harsh Mistress ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 12:47:29 GMT From: eru!hagbard!sunic!mcsun!hp4nl!sci.kun.nl!cs.kun.nl!lwj@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Luc Rooijakkers) Subject: Dutch CP/M Supercomputer Message-ID: <2421@wn1.sci.kun.nl> rat@deety.UUCP (David Douthitt) writes: >I have the files on this - does anyone else want this besides >David Goodenough (dg@pallio.uucp)? If so, I'll send it out. If anyone wants the files from one of the authors or has other questions, feel free to mail me, as I am one of the authors of the system. I have all of the files online and in my head :-) The ORDINATOR system is still operational (though it has not been used much in the last few weeks). -- Luc Rooijakkers Internet: lwj@cs.kun.nl Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science UUCP: uunet!cs.kun.nl!lwj University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands tel. +3180652271 ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 05:43:25 GMT From: hpcc05!hpdmd48!ritchie@hplabs.hpl.hp.com (David Ritchie) Subject: Need Osbourne Executive Bits... Message-ID: <16870002@hpdmd48.boi.hp.com> I have recently acquired an Osborne Executive sans diskettes/manuals. Does anyone have an idea where I might obtain CP/M for this machine at low or no cost? -- Dave Ritchie ritchie@hpdmd48.boi.hp.com ------------------------------ Date: 6 Nov 90 15:33:00 GMT From: astroatc!nicmad!madnix!deety!rat@speedy.wisc.edu (David Douthitt) Subject: Osborne 1: UUCP? Message-ID: With the query on Osborne 1 overlays, is there anyone with a UUCP (or, by definition a QTerm) overlay for the Osborne 1? Is there enough ROOM on those Osborne 1 drives to support UUCP? -- ====== David Douthitt ======== aka "The Stainless Steel Rat" ==== UUCP: uwvax!astroatc!nicmad!madnix!deety!rat InterNet: deety%rat@spool.cs.wisc.edu <<< Home of Mad Apple Forth and the Tiger Toolbox -- Apple II Forever! <<< "Drop dead - but first get permit." - The Moon is a Harsh Mistress ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 04:28:43 GMT From: sumax!thebes!ole!ray@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Ray Berry) Subject: Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? Message-ID: <1690@ole.UUCP> Having been casting about lately for a cheap Z-80 cross compiler for doing controllers, I got to wondering if I could press my moldy C/80/mathpak stuff into service (running under Z80MU etc. on a pc). When the dust stopped flying in the garage, I had the original 8" diskettes, but alas no docs. Question 1: Does anyone have same they can copy etc (in exchange for reasonable remuneration)? Question 2: Has anyone managed to *use* C/80 for target systems? I don't have the disks xlated to 5 1/4 inch yet so I'm don't know what I've got (lib src, etc). I'm not sure yet just how feasible this scheme is. -- Ray Berry kb7ht uucp: ...ole!ray CIS: 73407,3152 /* "inquire within" */ ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 17:20:54 GMT From: uop!quack!mrapple@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Nick Sayer) Subject: Z-80 emulator posted to alt.sources Message-ID: Some have pointed out that comp.sources.misc is dead but not burried at the moment. So upm is in alt.sources. Have fun. -- Nick Sayer | Disclaimer: "Don't try this at home, | RIP: Mel Blanc mrapple@quack.sac.ca.us | kids. This should only be done by | 1908-1989 N6QQQ [44.2.1.17] | trained, professional idiots." | May he never 209-952-5347 (Telebit) | --Plucky Duck | be silenced. ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #175 ************************************* 9-Nov-90 09:24:04-MST,10597;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Fri, 9 Nov 90 09:16:16 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #176 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901109091619.V90N176@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Fri, 9 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 176 Today's Topics: CPM Viri Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change Osborne 1: UUCP? QTERM READ/WRITE MSDOS DISKS ON OTRONA (2 msgs) Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? Unusual File Compression Method ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 8 Nov 90 17:16:27 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!caen!hellgate.utah.edu!fcom.cc.utah.edu!cc.utah.edu!cc.usu.edu!slsw2@ucsd.edu Subject: CPM Viri Message-ID: <1990Nov8.111627.42046@cc.usu.edu> In article <1392@tharr.UUCP>, pm111@tharr.UUCP (Paul Martin) writes: > Would it surprise the net if I said that CPM Plus is not immune to > viruses? I always knew that CP/M was not immune, but I really see no way to make a virus general enough to infect *every* CP/M system. For example, the boot drive on my DECmate is drive E:, not A:, and most of CP/M is stored in a file. So you couldn't infect my system by just scribbling all over track 0 of drive A:. -- =============================================================================== Roger Ivie 35 S 300 W Logan, Ut. 84321 (801) 752-8633 =============================================================================== ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 19:45:03 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!wuarchive!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@decwrl.dec.com (Don Maslin) Subject: Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change Message-ID: <1990Nov8.194503.18866@simasd.uucp> donm@hpnmdla.HP.COM (Don Montgomery) writes: >This may have been asked many times previously, but I missed it- > >I have a "stock" Kaypro II-84 with 191K SSDD drives. What do I need to convert >to DSDD drives besides the drives themselves? (The originals are indeed single- >sided, one head with a rubbing block on the other side.) Does anyone have the >code for the monitor ROM changes? What other hardware changes are required, if >any? With the demise of MICROCORNUCOPIA magazine and the advent of MS/DOS, all >the advertisers for this sort of thing have disappeared. > >Can anyone offer any help? Thanks > While it is true that uC magazine is gone (and much lamented), they are still selling their products for Kaypro and other CP/M machines. A friend recently purchased their PRO 884 MAX ROM for his KP-4/84. uC also markets a decoder board to permit up to four floppy drives on the KP. Their mail address is: Micro Cornucopia, Inc. P.O. Box 223 Bend OR 97709 Another possible source of KP stuff is: Emerald Microware P.O. Box 1726 Beaverton OR 97075 503/641-8088 Advent Products, Inc. 3154-F East La Palma Ave Anaheim CA 92806 714/630-0446 Good luck. Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 21:25:47 GMT From: pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucsd.edu (Ian Justman) Subject: Osborne 1: UUCP? Message-ID: rat@deety.UUCP (David Douthitt) writes: > With the query on Osborne 1 overlays, is there anyone with > a UUCP (or, by definition a QTerm) overlay for the Osborne 1? > > Is there enough ROOM on those Osborne 1 drives to support UUCP? Not on the single density drives. I've used an Osborne 1 with SSDD, and I got a bit more space on it. ------------------------------ Date: 7 Nov 90 04:26:12 GMT From: swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!lobster!urchin!Charles.Cotham@ucsd.edu (Charles Cotham) Subject: QTERM Message-ID: <3342.2737D1D7@urchin.fidonet.org> TO:dg@pallio.UUCP (David Goodenough) David, Please send the Osborne 1 overlays to the address below, thanks for the help. I need to get a Vt-100 emulator going on the old Ozzie. Hope your move goes smooth and you get back on line OK. Thanks Again, Charles Cotham 2205 Lilac Street Nederland, Tx. 77627 ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 20:05:02 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!wuarchive!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@decwrl.dec.com (Don Maslin) Subject: READ/WRITE MSDOS DISKS ON OTRONA Message-ID: <1990Nov8.200502.19014@simasd.uucp> farris@marlin.NOSC.MIL (Russell H. Farris) writes: >Does anyone know of a CPM program that will permit my Otrona >Attache to read and/or write MSDOS diskettes? Was a version of >Uniform ever produced for the Otrona? No, UniForm was never produced for the Attache'; however, Mycroft Labs, Inc. P.O. Box 4106, Tallahassee FL 32315, (904) 385-1141, produced a program called COMPAT which performed the same functions. As I recall, it only supported the 8 sector DOS disks, but a call to Mycroft should tell you whether that is true and if it is still available. > >Can the Otrona be modified to use an 80-track floppy drive? Yes, some of them were built that way; in fact, the BIOS source listing referred to it also. > >Where can I buy the ever-failing 5027 CRT controllers? I bought one from JDR in San Jose. > >Is it feasible to add ram for a ram drive? Probably, but I can't help you on that one. > >Thanks, > Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 13:28:53 GMT From: usc!cs.utexas.edu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!ccu.umanitoba.ca!shad04@apple.com (Dan Fandrich) Subject: READ/WRITE MSDOS DISKS ON OTRONA Message-ID: <1990Nov9.132853.19974@ccu.umanitoba.ca> In article <1654@marlin.NOSC.MIL> farris@marlin.NOSC.MIL (Russell H. Farris) writes: >Does anyone know of a CPM program that will permit my Otrona >Attache to read and/or write MSDOS diskettes? Was a version of >Uniform ever produced for the Otrona? There's a program called READ-PC.PAS, written in Turbo Pascal, at SIMTEL-20 in the directory PD2:READ-PC.LBR. It was originally written for the H-89 but it uses standard BIOS calls so it won't take much to get it going on any system that uses IBM-style MFM floppies. I've made a few changes to the version at SIMTEL-20 to make it a little more portable and to fix a few bugs. The source will be available for anonymous ftp at ccu.umanitoba.ca as file pub/cpm/read-pc.pas for the next couple of weeks. >>> Dan -- Internet: shad04@ccu.umanitoba.ca CI$: 72365,306 FidoNet: 1:153/511.1 ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 15:01:35 GMT From: prism!jm59@gatech.edu (MILLS,JOHN M.) Subject: Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? Message-ID: <16760@hydra.gatech.EDU> In article <1690@ole.UUCP> ray@ole.UUCP (Ray Berry) writes: > > Having been casting about lately for a cheap Z-80 cross >compiler for doing controllers, (expletives deleted ...) > Question 1: Does anyone have same they can copy etc (in exchange >for reasonable remuneration)? I will be happy to copy my C/80 v3.0 and MathPak manuals, for copy and postage costs (under $5, I expect). E-mail me your address. > Question 2: Has anyone managed to *use* C/80 for target systems? >I don't have the disks xlated to 5 1/4 inch yet so I'm don't know what >I've got (lib src, etc). I'm not sure yet just how feasible this scheme is. Sorry- my system is 8-in. only. I can print out the directories of the distribution disks. An ex-colleague at Scientific-Atlanta was going to use c/80 for embedded _8080_ code (I think that c/80 _only_ speaks 8080). The manual has some references to this, mainly: (1) full-service assembler/linker/locater needed (natch), and (2) I/O libraries were _not_ guaranteed ROMable (i.e., roll your own). I will try to find out how it worked. I have used the MATHPAK for simple antenna computations (tracking patterns), and found numerical agreement with the same code in the Data General MV4000 C. (Ain't fast, tho!! I _strongly_ recommend a RAMdisk for compilation.) Hope that was some help. I am also interested in this. I hope this note wasn't too rocky, being my first .article. >Ray Berry kb7ht uucp: ...ole!ray CIS: 73407,3152 /* "inquire within" */ John M. Mills jm59@hydra.gatech.EDU -- MILLS,JOHN M. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta Georgia, 30332 uucp: ...!{decvax,hplabs,ncar,purdue,rutgers}!gatech!prism!jm59 Internet: jm59@prism.gatech.edu ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 06:45:03 GMT From: usc!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!umich!sharkey!indetech!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@apple.com (Ian Justman) Subject: Unusual File Compression Method Message-ID: krl@jujeh.mlb.semi.harris.com (Ken Lyons) writes: > I am trying uncompress some files I obtained from SIMTEL-20 that are > of the form: > > *.?Y? > > Can anyone indicate what this form is and what I need to get to > uncompress it and where? I am already familiar with *.LBR, *.?Q?, > *.?Z?, and *.ARK, but this one has me stumped. > > Thanks, > Ken Lyons > > This is not a disclaimer. You use a newer uncrunch program called "ucrlzh11.com" in CRLZH11.LBR. I believe it's in PD:CRLZH11.LBR. The *.?Y? uses the LZH compression method. If you like I could send you a copy of the program. ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #176 ************************************* 10-Nov-90 14:32:13-MST,9823;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Sat, 10 Nov 90 14:15:35 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #177 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901110141536.V90N177@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Sat, 10 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 177 Today's Topics: Advent CP/M C compilers (2 msgs) Does Zilog have a *** 20MHz *** Z80? Early microcomputer networks (2 msgs) Need Osbourne Executive Bits... ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 9 Nov 90 21:09:46 GMT From: att!pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Ian Justman) Subject: Advent Message-ID: csfst1@unix.cis.pitt.edu (Charles S. Fuller) writes: > As the owner of a coupla old Kaypro II's, I was quite excited when I read thi > But, alas, the phone company recordings tell me that the number has been > disconnected. Can anyone verify that Advent is still in business? > > Chuck Fuller Advent is no longer in business, as far as I know. I believe they went out of business a couple of months ago. ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 23:39:47 GMT From: julius.cs.uiuc.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!milo.mcs.anl.gov!milo.mcs.anl.gov!winans@apple.com (John Winans) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <1990Nov9.233947.4224@mcs.anl.gov> Howdy, Just started reading comp.os.cpm to see what the current state of CP/M is. It doesn't look too far from where I last used it in '86. I am interested in using it some more to delevop some code that will run on a Z80 based controller. I have used BDS C on systems an undergrad in college. I thought I could recompile the libs and stuff so I could generate ROM based code. I looked on simtel and they did not have the whole thing. Anybody know what ever happened to Leor Zolman? Or where I can get a copy of BDS C? I could use a cross-compiler that runs on a PC instead if it could generate ROM based code. Any other comments on other Z80 code generating C compilers floating around would be welcome too. Hmmmm... For that matter any info on the licencing status of CP/M would be welcome as well. I have a real live legal copy that came with my Altos a while back, but I gotta wonder if it is PD these days or if there are any PD clones of it around. I have Z80mu that I run on my PC sometimes, but wonder if there is a PD CP/M for Z80 machines around. Thanx in advance. P.S. If there is an FAQ for this group, could someone please email it to me?? -- ! John Winans Advanced Computing Research Facility ! ! winans@mcs.anl.gov Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois ! ! ! !"The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away"-- Tom Waite ! ------------------------------ Date: 10 Nov 90 02:05:29 GMT From: usc!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!mentor.cc.purdue.edu!descartes.math.purdue.edu!wilker@apple.com (Clarence Wilkerson) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <16403@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> CP/M is not public domain. The major components of CP/M are 1) Utilities..ASM.COM, etc. There are public domain upgrades to most of these. 2) CCP the command line processor. There are several z80 and 8080 replacements/enhancements to this. 3) BDOS the guts of CP/M. There are several z80 replacements in SIMTEL20 PD2:. I don't know of any purely public domain 8080 versions. I have for example a dis-assembly of the DRI BDOS but it is not public domain. 4) BIOS this comes from the computer maker, or from you, adapted to your machine. There are also some integrated "ZCPR" packages for particular machines. If you want to roll your own public domain verisons, you may need some effort producing a bios, and producing a MOVCPM that will relocate your "CP/M". If you want a legal copy of CP/M, check garage sales, versions for Apple or Commodore. As far as I know, sales to individuals of CP/M 2.2 or 3.0 are no longer possible in the US. Clarence Wilkerson ------------------------------ Date: 10 Nov 90 00:43:11 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!crdgw1!ge-dab.ge.com!tarpit!bilver!bill@ucsd.edu (Bill Vermillion) Subject: Does Zilog have a *** 20MHz *** Z80? Message-ID: <1315@bilver.UUCP> In article <2288@bnlux0.bnl.gov> scott@solids.phy.bnl.gov (david scott coburn) writes: >In article <1990Nov1.174451.28750@techbook.com> fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: >>what i really want is a 12 to 16 mhz z80 code compatible processor. >>does anyone know if such a beast exists?? I have a Xenix system I take care of that uses a Z280 at 20MHz to handle up to 32 serial ports. Isn't the Z280 upward compatible. It's supposed to do upto 57kbaud on 32 ports but I don't have anything that talks that fast ;-] bill -- Bill Vermillion - UUCP: uunet!tarpit!bilver!bill : bill@bilver.UUCP ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 11:44:34 GMT From: mcsun!ukc!edcastle!cs.ed.ac.uk!cs.edinburgh.ac.uk!gdmr@uunet.uu.net (George Ross) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1593@skye.cs.ed.ac.uk> In article , news@helens.Stanford.EDU (news) writes: > ... But what about networks that became extinct, the > network dinosaurs? What was happening with other mini/microcomputer > networks around that time? They're still alive and kicking (at least, in their later incarnations). In the early '70s we had an assortment of minis, tied together with point-to-point "links", running initially at about 256Kbaud, and latterly at 2Mbaud. These links were full-duplex flow-controlled, with error detection (parity and positive/negative acknowledgement). The machines included several Interdata 70s, a dozen or so 74s, a PDP-8, a PDP-9 and a PDP-15. Originally they all ran their usual operating systems, but around 1976 we added a big (67Mbyte!) disc to one of the 70s and converted it to a file server. At first it just did file storage and transfer, but by the early 1980s we had converted the 74s to be discless clients which booted from the central server (thanks to the AUTOLOAD instruction) and then relied completely on it and a separate compute server (another 70). Meantime the PDP-8 had been retired and the 9 and 15 converted to use the central server as a virtual-DECtape server as well as a file server. Since then we've converted the links to a 2Mbaud CSMA/CD network which provides reliable virtual circuits in the firmware, added 60-odd 68K-based machines, retired all the Interdatas and the PDP-9 and 15, and added several new 68K-based file servers. There's nothing left now of the original hardware, though for a while around the mid '80s it was all running happily together. In fact, the last "link" board was removed just last year when we switched off our 780. The file access protocol is still the same, though, more or less, as that used in 1976 -- the only difference is that the current servers don't understand some of the more baroque block-size constructs needed to get the virtual DECtapes working sensibly. It's a stateful protocol, btw, with user validation done by the servers on the basis of link- and VC-specific tokens issued by them in response to the initial logon request. Just what's needed, in fact, to deal with a labful of students all doing operating systems practicals. > > Jim Helman > Department of Applied Physics Durand 012 > Stanford University FAX: (415) 725-3377 > (jim@KAOS.stanford.edu) Work: (415) 723-9127 -- George D M Ross, Department of Computer Science, University of Edinburgh 031-650 5147 or 031-667 1081 gdmr@uk.ac.ed.cs (or cs.ed.ac.uk if you prefer) ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 22:23:56 GMT From: cert!netnews.upenn.edu!grad2.cis.upenn.edu!farber@lll-winken.llnl.gov (David Farber) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <32602@netnews.upenn.edu> In 1973 ish at UC Irvine, we ran a fully distributed operating system with message passing IPC over a 2.3 megabit per second local token ring. The systems were 11 style (Locheed SUES) and the ring evolved to the Proteon and IBM rings latter on. ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 20:05:05 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Need Osbourne Executive Bits... Message-ID: <1990Nov9.200505.6693@simasd.uucp> ritchie@hpdmd48.boi.hp.com (David Ritchie) writes: > > > I have recently acquired an Osborne Executive sans diskettes/manuals. > > Does anyone have an idea where I might obtain CP/M for this machine at low >or no cost? > There are a couple of possibilities as follow: Worswick Industries 4898 Ronson Ct. Ste H San Diego CA 92111 619/ 299-5769 Contact: Bill FOG (First Osborne Group) P.O. Box 3474 Daly City CA 94015-0474 415/ 755-2000 Good luck Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #177 ************************************* 12-Nov-90 01:59:43-MST,8126;000000000000 Mail-From: KPETERSEN created at 12-Nov-90 01:50:22 Return-Path: Date: Mon, 12 Nov 90 01:50:22 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #178 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901112015022.V90N178@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Mon, 12 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 178 Today's Topics: CP/M C compilers (2 msgs) CPM Viri Does Zilog have a *** 20MHz *** Z80? looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 ROS BBS & Osborne 1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 11 Nov 90 10:09:53 GMT From: mips!pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@apple.com (Ian Justman) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <7eVgs1w163w@ijpc.UUCP> wilker@descartes.math.purdue.edu (Clarence Wilkerson) writes: > > CP/M is not public domain. The major components of CP/M > are > your "CP/M". <> > If you want a legal copy of CP/M, check garage sales, versions for > Apple or Commodore. As far as I know, sales to individuals of > CP/M 2.2 or 3.0 are no longer possible in the US. > Clarence Wilkerson It thought that Digital Research withdrew all of its support for CP/M years ago. I would think that they would have relinquished their rights because they don't support it. If they still distribute it, but don't support it, then something is SERIOUSLY (IMHO) with DRI's policies, mainly because most of its work is devoted to DR-DOS and GEM-86 and GEM-68k. Anyone care to rebut? Thanks in advance. ------------------------------ Date: 11 Nov 90 17:50:18 GMT From: eru!hagbard!sunic!isgate!krafla!adamd@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Adam David) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <2401@krafla.rhi.hi.is> In <16403@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> wilker@descartes.math.purdue.edu (Clarence Wilkerson) writes: > CP/M is not public domain. The major components of CP/M >are >1) Utilities..ASM.COM, etc. There are public domain upgrades to most >of these. >2) CCP the command line processor. There are several z80 and 8080 >replacements/enhancements to this. >3) BDOS the guts of CP/M. There are several z80 replacements in >SIMTEL20 PD2:. I don't know of any purely public domain >8080 versions. I have for example a dis-assembly of the DRI BDOS >but it is not public domain. >4) BIOS this comes from the computer maker, or from you, adapted >to your machine. I read a few years ago (don't remember where offhand) that DRI had put CP/M 2.2 in the public domain when it was no longer viable as a commercial product and possibly also so they could back out of supporting the system. CP/M 3.0 retained full proprietory material status and continued to be sold. Two questions: 1) Is this true? 2) how much of the material was actually released to PD? Adam David. adamd@rhi.hi.is ------------------------------ Date: 11 Nov 90 06:01:26 GMT From: zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!qiclab!techbook!fzsitvay@uunet.uu.net (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: CPM Viri Message-ID: <1990Nov11.060126.20596@techbook.com> In article <1990Nov8.111627.42046@cc.usu.edu> slsw2@cc.usu.edu writes: >In article <1392@tharr.UUCP>, pm111@tharr.UUCP (Paul Martin) writes: >> Would it surprise the net if I said that CPM Plus is not immune to >> viruses? > >I always knew that CP/M was not immune, but I really see no way to make >a virus general enough to infect *every* CP/M system. For example, the >boot drive on my DECmate is drive E:, not A:, and most of CP/M is stored >in a file. So you couldn't infect my system by just scribbling all over >track 0 of drive A:. >-- ture, but there are other nasties you can do, like allocating disk space to hidden files, tagging on a few extra blocks to .COM files, and even twiddling stuff in the directory so text files will be scrambled in chunks of 128 bytes. but whatever you do, don't try this at home... -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ Date: 11 Nov 90 18:38:37 GMT From: eru!hagbard!sunic!isgate!krafla!adamd@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Adam David) Subject: Does Zilog have a *** 20MHz *** Z80? Message-ID: <2402@krafla.rhi.hi.is> In <1315@bilver.UUCP> bill@bilver.UUCP (Bill Vermillion) writes: >In article <2288@bnlux0.bnl.gov> scott@solids.phy.bnl.gov (david scott coburn) writes: >>In article <1990Nov1.174451.28750@techbook.com> fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: >>>what i really want is a 12 to 16 mhz z80 code compatible processor. >>>does anyone know if such a beast exists?? The Zilog Z180 is available to 10MHz, Maybe a 12MHz 64180 can be had from Hitachi (?). I've seen the info booklet on 20MHz Z80 from Zilog. It looks like a nice piece of work. Don't know anything about delivery times yet, but it ought to be available by now. >I have a Xenix system I take care of that uses a Z280 at 20MHz to >handle up to 32 serial ports. Isn't the Z280 upward compatible. The crystal oscillator is run at 20MHz but this is divided by two to give 10MHz to the actual works. In preliminary product specs a 16MHz version was mentioned, which would be clockable at 32MHz. In later literature only the 10 MHz version remains. Actual execution is faster on a Z280 than a standard Z80 at similar speeds because of pipelining and caching. There is also an option to use a 16-bit data bus. The Z280 in system mode can be (very almost) 100% code compatible with the Z80. Any code that relies on the R register being incremented every opcode fetch will not work, because all 8 bits of what is stored there with LD R,A remains unchanged until the next LD R,A or system reset. There is a whole wealth of new instructions and addressing modes, some of which are more useful than others. The Z80-bus (8-bit) hardware interface is slightly less than actually compatible. The main difference is that M1L signal is output only during IM0 interrupt acknowledge or RETI instruction fetch. (no other fetches). The refresh rate can be programmed but there will not be a refresh at the end of each opcode fetch, as with the Z80. Also the lower 8 bits of the address bus need to be demultiplexed from the data bus. Single-stepping and other hardware traps are supported. A third interrupt mode provides more flexibility. Most of the time these differences won't actually matter, and should even make design easier. Adam David. adamd@rhi.hi.is ------------------------------ Date: 8 Nov 90 12:49:53 GMT From: usc!cs.utexas.edu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!utzoo!censor!isgtec!bmw@ucsd.edu (Bruce M. Walker) Subject: looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 Message-ID: <717@isgtec.UUCP> In article <1988@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au> gtw@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au (Grant Waldram) writes: > I'm currently trying to track down a cross compiler for the HD64180. Try "Z-World" who advertise regularly in Byte magazine. My spies inform me that their stuff (C, xasm, remote debugger) is good. -- bmw@isgtec.uucp [ ..uunet!utai!lsuc!isgtec!bmw ] Bruce Walker ------------------------------ Date: 10 Nov 90 01:41:02 GMT From: sccsi.com!lobster!urchin!Charles.Cotham@uunet.uu.net (Charles Cotham) Subject: ROS BBS & Osborne 1 Message-ID: <3380.273B7700@urchin.fidonet.org> Has anyone managed to get ROS 3.4 BBS running on an Osborne 1? I have tried to get it going using the Osborne 1 overlays by Larry G. Bell that incorporate his DTR mod but haven't had any luck yet. I sure would like to hear from anyone who has it up and running. Thanks... Charles Cotham 2205 Lilac St. Nederland, Tex 77627 ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #178 ************************************* 12-Nov-90 16:28:30-MST,10271;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Mon, 12 Nov 90 16:15:17 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #179 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901112161518.V90N179@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Mon, 12 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 179 Today's Topics: Advent Early microcomputer networks Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 (2 msgs) Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 12 Nov 90 15:44:13 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@uunet.uu.net Subject: Advent Message-ID: <15668.273ec34d@levels.sait.edu.au> In article , ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: > csfst1@unix.cis.pitt.edu (Charles S. Fuller) writes: > >> As the owner of a coupla old Kaypro II's, I was quite excited when I read thi >> But, alas, the phone company recordings tell me that the number has been >> disconnected. Can anyone verify that Advent is still in business? >> >> Chuck Fuller > > Advent is no longer in business, as far as I know. I believe > they went out of business a couple of months ago. What does this mean to Advent ROM owners? Have their products been given to another company to distribute, in case I want to get one myself in the future?? Does Plu*perfect or someone have rights to the ROM code now?? Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 16:05:41 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@uunet.uu.net Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <15662.273ad3d6@levels.sait.edu.au> > But what about networks that became extinct, the > network dinosaurs? What was happening with other mini/microcomputer > networks around that time? > When I came to Australia, Two years ago, I had to deal with a Corvus Omninet They wouldn't believe me when I told them they needed a new network. It ran a bunch apple II's. Yuk, but It could connect up to IBM PC's and other computers as well. I understand (now) it was a type of RS422 hdwe layer. Anyways. I wouldn't mind having it at home tho. :-) Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 16:40:48 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@uunet.uu.net Subject: Kaypro II-84: SSDD to DSDD Change Message-ID: <15663.273adc10@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <1990Nov7.155342.23829@ecn.purdue.edu>, wieland@ea.ecn.purdue.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) writes: > In article <4060001@hpnmdla.HP.COM> donm@hpnmdla.HP.COM (Don Montgomery) writes: >>This may have been asked many times previously, but I missed it- >> >>I have a "stock" Kaypro II-84 with 191K SSDD drives. What do I need to convert >>to DSDD drives besides the drives themselves? (The originals are indeed single- >>sided, one head with a rubbing block on the other side.) Well, I bought two 2-84's, just as you describe. Both have SSDD drives for 191K and I just put in a copy of my Microcornucopia ROM and have installed a 360K drive with no probs. . . I'm not too sure about copying my ROM like that but they are out of business, right? Anyways, the turbo ROM I don't know about. I do also have a 2x (that's right, 3 of 'em!) and it came with the 'U' ROM, so that came with DSDD drives.. On simtel you'll find the Tinkerkit. It has alot of code in it, if you're a real nut case (like me) I can send you a copy of my U ROM if you like, but you may want to go up to Quad drives instead. I did, it saved me alot a space; makes disks go further. No prbs with using DSDD floppies yet either. 780K IS worth it. Especially if you have no HD. . . >>Does anyone have the >>code for the monitor ROM changes? What other hardware changes are required, if >>any? With the demise of MICROCORNUCOPIA magazine and the advent of MS/DOS, all >>the advertisers for this sort of thing have disappeared. >> As far as I know, you don't need to modify a thing. All the '84 computers had the same PC I believe. Just lacked some parts for the SASI interface, int modem and Clock. At least my 2 '84 went up to 360 K with ONLY a ROM and drive. It still lacks the stuff I put into my 2x (SASI, MDM, RTC) I know how you feel about uC. Pretty much my fave mag. That's how it is tho. Polyphony died, Popular Electronics died before it died. . . Byte died, And it's still alive!! :-) That's why I don't subscribe to mags for more than a year now. Got too many settlements like Creative Computing and Computer Language (which BTW I have not yet received a copy of!!!! ) Embedded Systems Programming looked good, from the eyes of a Charter Subscriber (me) But their billing Dept. jerked me around so much since I sent them my cash that I'm almost glad my Feb '90 issue just arrived, forwarded from ARGENTINA!! (I'm in South Australia) No bull. I'm mad as hell, but have to take it! Get a subscription to The Computer Journal. You'll like it. Info: TCJ 190 Sullivan Columbia Falls, MT 59912 USA Tell 'em Ronn sent ya. >>Can anyone offer any help? Thanks There you go. . > > Advent Products should still have upgrade products for Kaypros. They sell > the TurboROM for $60, which knows about DSDD (and 96 tpi) drives. They > also sell a drive decoder board that adds the additional logic for > double-sided drives (also allows up to four drives) -- it goes for $40. > I believe the TurboROM manual has instructions on how to add the side > select circuit yourself, too. Advent's number is 714-630-8172. What's their address?? > > By the way, Bridger Mitchell's company, Plu*Perfect Systems apparently > wrote both the TurboROM code and the Turbo BIOS code. > > I have no relationship with Advent or Plu*Perfect -- I just think that > they have darned good products that work together. My Kaypro 2X has > Advent's TurboROM, host-adapter, 1 Meg RAM disk, real-time clock, > Western Digital WD-1002-005 hard disk controller and a Seagate ST-138-1 > (30 meg) hard drive. I am using NZCOM and ZSDOS, and it all works. > I also have a MicroSphere Color Graphics board in it, but that's another > story... I called up Microsphere some time ago; evidently, they no longer have any more Kaypro stuff. Didn't want to know me either. . . Too bad, I wanted a color board too. :-( ------------------------------ Date: 9 Nov 90 17:14:07 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@uunet.uu.net Subject: looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 Message-ID: <15664.273ae3df@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <1988@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au>, gtw@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au (Grant Waldram) writes: > I'm currently trying to track down a cross compiler for the > HD64180. As most of you would know, this is Hitachi's version > of the Z180. The thing we've got at the moment > (IAR Systems ICCZ80 V2.22C/MD2) is a DOG to put it politely, > managing to fall in an undignified heap whenever we want to > compile more than 30K of C source. Hi: Last year I bought Cross-16 from Universal Cross Assemblers in CANADA. I used it for Z80 code development on a PCXT to be used with MT-Basic on a NSC-800 based STD-Bus computer. Everything worked fine. UCA now has a Cross-32 Assembler they are offering to me for 99US$ The retail price is 199US$, but I still believe Cross-16 is 99$. They not only compile for the Z80 and 64180, but for over 30 processors total. It's table driven, so you can do your own too. The info is: UCA POB 6158, Saint John, NB CANADA E2L 4R6 Tel 506 847 0681 Tell'em Ronn sent ya. If you're too cheep to buy your own, I can sell you mine maybe. . . Or if you're in a hurry. Ronn > > ps: also available at 's884764@otto.bf.rmit.oz.au' ------------------------------ Date: 12 Nov 90 15:48:25 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@uunet.uu.net Subject: looking for a cross-compiler for 64180 Message-ID: <15669.273ec449@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <717@isgtec.UUCP>, bmw@isgtec.uucp (Bruce M. Walker) writes: > In article <1988@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au> gtw@eyrie.img.uu.oz.au (Grant Waldram) writes: >> I'm currently trying to track down a cross compiler for the HD64180. > > Try "Z-World" who advertise regularly in Byte magazine. My spies inform me > that their stuff (C, xasm, remote debugger) is good. > Well, I saw alot of nice brochures on their Z80 stuff about a year ago. Looked like they had a great co-processor board for the PC (Blue Thunder?) That seemed like the ticket for cross/Pc-host code development. Considering all the guff in c.o.cpm lately about Z80MU, I'd try to run a co-processor and get Hi-Tech C on it to do the C code. . . . That'd be about 1K bucks?? Maybe, that would be affordable by a code developer. I wouldn't mind it personally :-) Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 12 Nov 90 18:58:05 GMT From: prism!jm59@gatech.edu (MILLS,JOHN M.) Subject: Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? Message-ID: <16906@hydra.gatech.EDU> The Software Toolworks is still in operation, at: The Software Toolworks 60 Leveroni Court Novato, CA 94949 Phone: 415-883-3000 Their sales office reports that Toolworks c/80 is still listed as a product, though not actively supported. Unfortunately, that leaves the manuals out of PD: contact them for manuals. (With Toolworks' permission, I would still be happy to copy at cost.) Inquiries to find someone who has used Toolworks c/80 to write embedded (i.e., ROMable) code have also come up negative. Subject still open -- user comments welcome. -- MILLS,JOHN M. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta Georgia, 30332 uucp: ...!{decvax,hplabs,ncar,purdue,rutgers}!gatech!prism!jm59 Internet: jm59@prism.gatech.edu ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #179 ************************************* 13-Nov-90 14:24:13-MST,9311;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Tue, 13 Nov 90 14:15:27 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #180 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901113141530.V90N180@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Tue, 13 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 180 Today's Topics: Advent Advent and TurboROMs AMD 8251 (USART) Info? CP/M C compilers Early microcomputer networks (2 msgs) Osborne 1 Status Refuge for Hacker Nostalgists ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 12 Nov 90 21:23:09 GMT From: elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@decwrl.dec.com (Ian Justman) Subject: Advent Message-ID: etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au writes: > In article , ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: > > csfst1@unix.cis.pitt.edu (Charles S. Fuller) writes: > > > >> As the owner of a coupla old Kaypro II's, I was quite excited when I read > >> But, alas, the phone company recordings tell me that the number has been > >> disconnected. Can anyone verify that Advent is still in business? > >> > >> Chuck Fuller > > > > Advent is no longer in business, as far as I know. I believe > > they went out of business a couple of months ago. > > > What does this mean to Advent ROM owners? Have their products been given > to another company to distribute, in case I want to get one myself in the > future?? Does Plu*perfect or someone have rights to the ROM code now?? > > Ronn That's a good questin. Someone wrote earlier that Bridger Mitchell wrote some of the code in the TurboROM (Bridger, if you're out there, please correct me if I'm wrong, or someone!); if that were the case, then Plu*Perfect wold probably still stock it. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Nov 90 13:36:08 EST From: SAGE@LL.LL.MIT.EDU Subject: Advent and TurboROMs Advent does appear to be completely out of business at this point. I am in the process of trying to arrange for Sage Microsystems East to produce the TurboROMs for Plu*Perfect Systems. It may take a little time to get this sorted out, but I think it will eventually come to pass. ------------------------------ Date: 13 Nov 90 18:50:29 GMT From: bbn.com!gonzalez@apple.com (Jim Gonzalez) Subject: AMD 8251 (USART) Info? Message-ID: <60822@bbn.BBN.COM> I am in the process of getting a Northstar HSIO (serial interface) board working on a Cromemco System Three (S-100 bus with a Z-80). The CPU board apparently produces a 4MHz clock, while the serial board expects to be clocked at 2MHz. I could adjust the baud rate specification by a factor of 2 (yielding 1200 baud when I tell it to run at 600, for example), except the 8251 is only rated to run up to 2.4MHz. The 8251A is rated for a maximum of 3MHz, so a chip upgrade won't help either. Des anyone know if there is a faster version of the 8251 available? My information comes from the 1987 ediiton of an Advanced Micro Devices data book. The part must be a drop-in; if I have to do any cutting I may as well just build a new board. -Jim. ------------------------------ Date: 12 Nov 90 22:13:27 GMT From: nsc!pyramid!athertn!paul@decwrl.dec.com (Paul Sander) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <33487@athertn.Atherton.COM> In article <7eVgs1w163w@ijpc.UUCP> ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: >wilker@descartes.math.purdue.edu (Clarence Wilkerson) writes: >> If you want a legal copy of CP/M, check garage sales, versions for >> Apple or Commodore. As far as I know, sales to individuals of >> CP/M 2.2 or 3.0 are no longer possible in the US. >> Clarence Wilkerson > >It thought that Digital Research withdrew all of its support for >CP/M years ago. I would think that they would have relinquished >their rights because they don't support it. If they still >distribute it, but don't support it, then something is SERIOUSLY >(IMHO) with DRI's policies, mainly because most of its work is >devoted to DR-DOS and GEM-86 and GEM-68k. Anyone care to rebut? Digital Research no longer supports CP/M, but they have sold the rights to another firm that still has copies of CP/M 2.2 and 3.0. I believe the name of the company is "Johnson and Lord", and they are located in the Pacific Grove or Monterey area. This firm still sells 8 inch floppies containing vanilla CP/M, with all of DR's documentation. No specific vendors' ports are supported; you'd have to go to the vendor for support for their particular version. Prices are also reminiscent of DR's. By the way, they offer no support or update policy on the software. It's been long enough that I am unsure if I got the name of the company correct. I'll try to dig up the correct name and telephone number for them and post them later. -- Paul Sander (408) 734-9822 | "Passwords are like underwear," she said, paul@Atherton.COM | "Both should be changed often." {decwrl,pyramid,sun}!athertn!paul | -- Bennett Falk in "Mom Meets Unix" ------------------------------ Date: 12 Nov 90 23:21:42 GMT From: mcdchg!ddsw1!zane@rutgers.edu (Sameer Parekh) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov12.232142.16577@ddsw1.MCS.COM> In article <15662.273ad3d6@levels.sait.edu.au> etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au writes: > > >> But what about networks that became extinct, the >> network dinosaurs? What was happening with other mini/microcomputer >> networks around that time? >> > > >When I came to Australia, Two years ago, I had to deal with a Corvus Omninet >They wouldn't believe me when I told them they needed a new network. > >It ran a bunch apple II's. Yuk, but It could connect up to IBM PC's and >other computers as well. I understand (now) it was a type of RS422 hdwe >layer. Anyways. I wouldn't mind having it at home tho. :-) > >Ronn They are running that at my school now. A High School. (Of course this is a school in the Midwest. . .) (Ducking head to avoid flames) -- zane@ddsw1.MCS.COM ------------------------------ Date: 13 Nov 90 06:16:08 GMT From: bu.edu!shelby!helens!baroque!jim@uunet.uu.net (James Helman) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: I remember people having Corvus disk systems on their Apple II's around 1980. But I never used them. What was the architecture? Was the protocol file level or raw device? Jim Helman Department of Applied Physics Durand 012 Stanford University FAX: (415) 725-3377 (jim@KAOS.stanford.edu) Work: (415) 723-9127 ------------------------------ Date: 12 Nov 90 22:00:17 GMT From: epicb!jerry@uunet.uu.net (Jerry Thompson) Subject: Osborne 1 Status Message-ID: <528@epicb.com> I just stumbled out of the Amiga news groups and was stunned to find comp.os.cpm. It's been over 3 years since I used my Osborne 1 much. This group brings back very fond memories. I have just loaned Ozzy to my girlfriends father (not father-in-law yet, hence conditional loan ;^) He is recovering from hip-surgery. Now is his chance to learn about computers and what better way to start. I was wondering what is new with the Osborne in the last 3 years. - Is there anything new in the way of WP or spreadsheets? - I have Oterm and I think I have ZCPR (minor enhancements to CP/M?). What does ZCPR3 have in it? - What is in QTerm and what are the overlays? Thanks, -- Jerry Thompson | // checks ___________ | "I'm into S&M, "What I want to know is, have | \\ // and | | | | Sarcasm and you ever seen Claude Rains?" | \X/ balances /_\ | /_\ | Mass Sarcasm." ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 Nov 90 09:49:59 EST From: black@ll-null.ll.mit.edu (Jerry Glomph Black) Subject: Refuge for Hacker Nostalgists Message-ID: <9011131449.AA15915@deepuv> I've spent years with CP/M and Z-System machines & software, and I still use both my BigBoard I and several SB180s running Z-software. The BigBoard has been lobotomized to boot up as a terminal for the other systems. Anyway, when the urge arises, I do my software & hardware hacking on my Amiga 500! The system is ultra-open, and allows all sorts of hardware & software hacks, with color video, and 4-channel sound. A real deal for $500., comes with floppy, 1 Meg Ram, now bundled with the AmigaVision audio-video authoring s/w which is pretty decent. Also, the O/S is virtually all on the ROM (256kB), so you get to use more than 93% of the RAM. For mouse-haters (and Mac-haters)like me, you almost NEVER have to use it. I have no connection with the mfr., I just like to play with this machine. Jerry Black, black@MICRO.LL.MIT.EDU ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #180 ************************************* 14-Nov-90 12:29:44-MST,9889;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Wed, 14 Nov 90 12:15:37 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #181 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901114121538.V90N181@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Wed, 14 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 181 Today's Topics: Advent and TurboROMs Early microcomputer networks (2 msgs) Osborne 1 Status Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 14 Nov 90 17:48:52 GMT From: snorkelwacker.mit.edu!usc!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!ea.ecn.purdue.edu!wieland@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) Subject: Advent and TurboROMs Message-ID: <1990Nov14.174852.26460@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> In article <9011140806.AA19369@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> SAGE@LL.LL.MIT.EDU writes: > > Advent does appear to be completely out of business at this point. I am >in the process of trying to arrange for Sage Microsystems East to produce >the TurboROMs for Plu*Perfect Systems. It may take a little time to get >this sorted out, but I think it will eventually come to pass. YAY!! The TurboROM is too darned good to die! By the way, I have written an overlay for David Goodenough suite of UUCP-type programs for CP/M that uses the ZSDOS/ZDDOS time and date system calls to read the clock. It works with current release of these programs. I have been unable to get in touch with David to see if he would like to include it with his distribution, so, if anyone would like to use it, send me email, and I send it to you. -- Jeff Wieland wieland@ecn.purdue.edu ------------------------------ Date: 13 Nov 90 21:01:41 GMT From: swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!en.ecn.purdue.edu!milton@ucsd.edu (Milton D Miller) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov13.210141.28709@en.ecn.purdue.edu> In article jim@baroque.Stanford.EDU (James Helman) writes: > >I remember people having Corvus disk systems on their Apple II's >around 1980. But I never used them. What was the architecture? >Was the protocol file level or raw device? > Well, let's see what I can rember. We had one of these installed in high school, and I was a consultant* there too, only I worked more on the prime, but that is a different story. All of this is from memory of a user, so someone can correct my errors :-) The last time I went back and visited they had replaced it with a NOVELL (sp?) and had some macs and a couple IBM's too. The lab was installed in 1982; I graduated in 1986. * Consultant to other students, aka lab assistant during one class hour. My supervisor was the system administrator for the instructional computing facilities at the highschool. What I rember was 3 stackable boxes about 9x15" of various heights, one was the network interface (2-3" high), one was the VCR backup attachment (one board in a 1" case), and the disk itself (actually two drives, 40MB???? each?, 5-6" high). I rember the apple in the office was special, but I don't rember if it was in the datapath to the drive or not (probably not, as you could run regular applications there too). The lab consisted of 30 apple ][e's connected via 2 wires to a common bus line. Connections to the bus were made with T boxes and a 2 pin 1/8" phone plug. Each apple had a board in slot six (so you could boot from it), if you used ctl-reset you could abort the network boot. There was user login (with password) and you were given one or more pseudo-floppy disk volumes which booted a slightly different apple dos. Actually, you had drives one and two on slot six and volumes 1-255, so you play games. Each apple also had a local floppy drive installed in slot four for user access and program storage. There was also support for apple pascal, you could boot and run it off the network, including accessing multiple volumes (this is where I took my first stab at pascal....) It took some time to get reliable VCR backups, which took about 45 min to record and another 45 to verify (we found that the early ones with random VCRs were not doing any good, and bought a VCR for our sole use). Probably the thing I rember most is patching basic software to support the multiple volumes so the program and data would be on the shared read-only disk, but the data would be written on the disk in drive 4). The other thing I rember doing is going around and booting some wordprocessor at every station from two floppies :-) (yes, we were licsensed for multiple copies). Well, this is what I rember from a user's perspective. If you have specific questions, I try and rember, but no promises. milton ------------------------------ Date: 14 Nov 90 17:50:37 GMT From: mojo!hsu@mimsy.umd.edu (Dagwood splits the Atom) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov14.175037.1497@eng.umd.edu> In article <1990Nov13.210141.28709@en.ecn.purdue.edu> milton@en.ecn.purdue.edu (Milton D Miller) writes: >In article jim@baroque.Stanford.EDU (James Helman) writes: >>I remember people having Corvus disk systems on their Apple II's >>around 1980. >Well, let's see what I can rember. We had one of these installed in >high school... The lab was installed in 1982; I graduated in 1986. ... >What I rember was 3 stackable boxes about 9x15" of various heights, >one was the network interface (2-3" high), one was the VCR backup >attachment (one board in a 1" case), and the disk itself Sounds like a Corvus Constellation setup with the Corvus Mirror VCR backup device. Who says videotape data storage is a new idea :-) Someone actually bought a Mirror? Wow. -dave -- David Hsu Engineering Computer Facility (301) 405 3689 hsu@eng.umd.edu The Maryversity of Uniland, College Park, MD 20742 SAM: "Uh, thanks." TUTTLE: "Listen, kid, we're all in it together." ------------------------------ Date: 13 Nov 90 09:23:50 GMT From: pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucsd.edu (Ian Justman) Subject: Osborne 1 Status Message-ID: jerry@truevision.com (Jerry Thompson) writes: { stuff deleted } I'm not head-up on Osborne stuff, but I can tell you about stuff in the CP/M world in general. > - Is there anything new in the way of WP or spreadsheets? Nothing really. I haven't seen anything new in WP or SS in the commercial or the public domain sector. The only newest WP stuff I know about is WordStar Release 4. > - I have Oterm and I think I have ZCPR (minor enhancements to CP/M?). Are you talking about the original ZCPR? If so, I know little or nothing about the original. > What does ZCPR3 have in it? Now, on that subject, I can tell you PLENTY. I have ZCPR33 (the latest version of Z3 you can get for free; there is a ZCPR34, but it's commercial, but I like ZCPR33 anyway) on my main CP/M sysems, and it is nice. It has named directory areas (not just drive a, user 4 or such like that, you can name it ASM, DOWNLOAD, GAMES, WHATEVER (pun intended). And if you run a machine where you could have several different types of terminals online like a UNIX-type system can like I do, you can pop in a termcap for your specific terminal. But since the Ozzie probably is the type of computer which has only ADM-3A type emulation (correct me if I'm wrong), this will be of no worry. But there are just too many neat things to describe here. If you're the type who likes to get down and dirty for dirt cheap (like I am), then get ZCPR33, which comes complete with source code which you can hack to death if you want to (just kidding, Jay). Or if you wish, you can get NZ-COM which will automatically install itself. I can't tell you a thing about NZ-COM because I've never used it and don't own a copy, but most people here say it's a great product. > - What is in QTerm and what are the overlays? Qterm is a nice little terminal program with all flavors of Xmodem, including 1k-Xmodem, Modem7 batch with 128- or 1024-byte packets, Ymodem (the true implementation to Forsberg's specifications), and Kermit (haven't used this one much, but it works just fine with the UNIX system I call from time to time). Plus it has VT100 emulation and a VERY powerful scripting system. All this in a program that resides in almost 16k of memory. It is written by David Goodenough, who is currently moving to the west coast from the east coast. He specializes in writing CP/M utilities which are based on stuff you would find in UNIX. His UUCP software is a good example. I run a site with it, and I am a beta site for his UUCP software, and have written drivers for his UUCP/Qterm software. You should check his stuff out. Ranks up there with the likes of Irv Hoff, Ron Fowler, Jay Sage, and others. > Thanks. Anytime. ------------------------------ Date: 14 Nov 90 01:27:19 GMT From: ddl@husc6.harvard.edu (Dan Lanciani) Subject: Software Toolworks C/80 for embedded systems? Message-ID: <4701@husc6.harvard.edu> I've used that compiler to program several embedded systems including a "mini" logic analyzer, a voice <-> RS232 box, and a general controller. All used the NSC8000. Each required a small amount of assembler in critical areas. C/80 and the NSC800 make a nice combination if you don't need tremendous speed. Dan Lanciani ddl@harvard.* ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #181 ************************************* 14-Nov-90 20:26:52-MST,10306;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Wed, 14 Nov 90 20:15:18 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #182 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901114201519.V90N182@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Wed, 14 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 182 Today's Topics: Advent Early microcomputer networks (2 msgs) V20 chips in DEC Rainbow computers Z-80 emulator (upm) available via anon-FTP. Z-Msg BBS program author and info? ZIPper / LZHer out there?? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 14 Nov 90 12:40:48 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@THEORY.TN.CORNELL.EDU (What a Guy!) Subject: Advent Message-ID: <15682.27413b50@levels.sait.edu.au> In article , ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: > etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au writes: > >> In article , ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: >> > csfst1@unix.cis.pitt.edu (Charles S. Fuller) writes: >> > >> >> As the owner of a coupla old Kaypro II's, I was quite excited when I read >> >> But, alas, the phone company recordings tell me that the number has been >> >> disconnected. Can anyone verify that Advent is still in business? >> >> >> >> Chuck Fuller >> > >> > Advent is no longer in business, as far as I know. I believe >> > they went out of business a couple of months ago. >> >> >> What does this mean to Advent ROM owners? Have their products been given >> to another company to distribute, in case I want to get one myself in the >> future?? Does Plu*perfect or someone have rights to the ROM code now?? >> >> Ronn > > That's a good questin. Someone wrote earlier that Bridger > Mitchell wrote some of the code in the TurboROM (Bridger, if > you're out there, please correct me if I'm wrong, or someone!); > if that were the case, then Plu*Perfect wold probably still stock > it. Well, I know that most of P*P's stuff like DosDisk, etc. needs the Turbo ROM Which I don't have, of course, so I would have assumed that BM has contacts with the TROM at least. He could get hold of the rights if he wanted to. Anyways, what is in that ROM as compared to others (like my PROMAX 884, by uC) Does the Code come with the Turbo ROM? (Some how doubt it, as usual) The uC ROM didn't come with code. How much was the Turbo ROM? Ronn Also, on a tangent here, and related to the dead networks thread. . . I recall that there was a Kaypro network out there some time ago, right?? What happened to it????? ------------------------------ Date: 14 Nov 90 22:25:45 GMT From: hub.ucsb.edu!ucsbuxa!6600raft@ucsd.edu (Michael Wise) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <7228@hub.ucsb.edu> In article <1990Nov14.175037.1497@eng.umd.edu> hsu@eng.umd.edu (Dagwood splits the Atom) writes: >In article <1990Nov13.210141.28709@en.ecn.purdue.edu> milton@en.ecn.purdue.edu (Milton D Miller) writes: >>In article jim@baroque.Stanford.EDU (James Helman) writes: >>>I remember people having Corvus disk systems on their Apple II's >>>around 1980. >>Well, let's see what I can rember. We had one of these installed in >>high school... The lab was installed in 1982; I graduated in 1986. I remember using a Corvus Constellation setup in H.S. too. I remember the servers came in 5, 10 and 20 meg versions (correct me if I'm wrong), and that was pretty impressive when at the time an Apple ][ floppy only held about 140K. Remember how when you booted up the Apple the constellation would appear on the screen in ascii "*"s... -- ========================================================================= | Internet: 6600raft@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu | All opinions stated are mine.| | BITNET: 6600raft@UCSBUXA.BITNET | **Save The Earth** | ========================================================================= ------------------------------ Date: 15 Nov 90 10:04:52 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@THEORY.TN.CORNELL.EDU (What a Guy!) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <15686.27426844@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <1990Nov14.175037.1497@eng.umd.edu>, hsu@eng.umd.edu (Dagwood splits the Atom) writes: > In article <1990Nov13.210141.28709@en.ecn.purdue.edu> milton@en.ecn.purdue.edu (Milton D Miller) writes: >>In article jim@baroque.Stanford.EDU (James Helman) writes: >>>I remember people having Corvus disk systems on their Apple II's >>>around 1980. >>Well, let's see what I can rember. We had one of these installed in >>high school... The lab was installed in 1982; I graduated in 1986. > ... >>What I rember was 3 stackable boxes about 9x15" of various heights, >>one was the network interface (2-3" high), one was the VCR backup >>attachment (one board in a 1" case), and the disk itself > > Sounds like a Corvus Constellation setup with the Corvus Mirror VCR backup > device. Who says videotape data storage is a new idea :-) > > Someone actually bought a Mirror? Wow. > Well, like I said, the Ozzie company here (my previous employer BTW :-) ) had the Omninet. . . They had one 10M server and a mirror, which was not utilized; It was just 'around'. Anyways - - You could run Different net OS'es on it. Since it was basically RS-422, I guess the specs were pretty easy to find. Our problem was that we had the Constellation II software, an upgrade I assume from the C I product. It used pipes to send files & things between apples & IBM's, etc. . . I have seen a card since for an NEC APC (!?) Talk about a beast. . . Well, that was basically our problem; because Novell had a package of Netware to run on the Omninet. Unfortunately, we had the CII software from Corvus, which had just gone under. I couldn't find anything to help me use the system and the rest of the site (Winery) was going headlong into Appletalk and since Mac IIcx's, I got frustrated and left. How can you do control on a shoestring like that? It would have been nice to do Arcnet. I understand that's a good deterministic system. Would have been just right for controlling gear remotely, although there was another net (by Proteon?) called 10-net ??? I was impressed by that. What has happened to it? I could seal off sections of the net and if connections where completely broken, you'd have two separately operating systems Sounded great, but was $$$. . . Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 14 Nov 90 21:39:32 GMT From: amethyst!organpipe!astro.as.arizona.edu@noao.edu (Thomas J. Trebisky) Subject: V20 chips in DEC Rainbow computers Message-ID: <453@organpipe.UUCP> First, is there a newsgroup more appropriate than this for questions about the Rainbow? Second, does anyone have experiences, pro or con, about replacing the 8088 with the more efficient V20 processor. I have heard a variety of groundless apprehensions, but I am hoping someone will respond with something like, "yes, I have run one for years and it works great." ------------------------------ Date: 14 Nov 90 23:53:32 GMT From: uop!nsayer@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Nick Sayer) Subject: Z-80 emulator (upm) available via anon-FTP. Message-ID: <2741d8fb.479d@uop.uop.edu> Lots of people want the recently posted Z-80 emulator in C, so it's available via anonymous ftp from uop.edu, under /pub/upm.shar.[12]. Have a blast. -- Nick Sayer | Disclaimer: "Don't try this at home, | RIP: Mel Blanc mrapple@quack.sac.ca.us | kids. This should only be done by | 1908-1989 N6QQQ [44.2.1.17] | trained, professional idiots." | May he never 209-952-5347 (Telebit) | --Plucky Duck | be silenced. ------------------------------ Date: 15 Nov 90 01:01:40 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!uniwa!vax7!nmurrayr@THEORY.TN.CORNELL.EDU Subject: Z-Msg BBS program author and info? Message-ID: <4533.27425974@cc.curtin.edu.au> We are running a CP/M BBS (Z-Node 62) here in Perth, using Z-Msg as the main BBS program (with BYE, of course, amd my own Fido software). Now, Z-Msg has a few problems when run with Fido, most of which we've managed to work around, but it would be nice to fix it properly, either with the sources (if available), or an updated version. What's the latest version of it? (I think we're running 1.5 or 1.6). And is there any way we can contact Tim Gary, author of Z-Msg? Thanks, ....Ron -- Internet: Murray_RJ@cc.curtin.edu.au | "This brain is ACSnet: Murray_RJ@cc.cut.oz.au | intentionally Bitnet: Murray_RJ%cc.curtin.edu.au@cunyvm.bitnet | left blank" UUCP : uunet!munnari.oz!cc.curtin.edu.au!Murray_RJ | ------------------------------ Date: 14 Nov 90 14:44:44 GMT From: munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@THEORY.TN.CORNELL.EDU (What a Guy!) Subject: ZIPper / LZHer out there?? Message-ID: <15685.2741585c@levels.sait.edu.au> From: IN%"ewen@actrix.co.nz" "Ewen McNeill" 14-NOV-1990 14:35:35.71 To: ETRMG@sait.edu.au CC: Subj: RE: File Server; UnZIP X-Envelope-to: ETRMG In a message from ETRMG@levels.sait.edu.au: > > Do you know of a ZIP program or an LZH maker? For CP/M that is. . . > We here are looking high and low for those type of things. If you ever > do bump into them, please POST about them or Email me. THX alot Sorry, I have seen extraction programs for both types, but nothing that will make them (for CP/M at least). I suggest you try posting to comp.os.cpm, and see what the response is. I would be interested in a LZH maker if you get told (by mail) about one. -- Ewen McNeill. Email: ewen@actrix.co.nz Ok: Anybody out there with C code or anything (TP3?) for a ZIP or LZH maker??? Gotta give it up. . . Ronn ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #182 ************************************* 16-Nov-90 00:05:51-MST,4438;000000000000 Mail-From: W8SDZ created at 15-Nov-90 23:56:34 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 15 Nov 90 23:56:34 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #183 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901115235634.V90N183@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 15 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 183 Today's Topics: Amstrad CP/M C compilers Early microcomputer networks I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm ZCPR33 Code Hacking ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 16 Nov 90 02:22:22 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!maverick.ksu.ksu.edu!uafhp!uafcseg!bbs00167@ucsd.edu (Keefe Jackson) Subject: Amstrad Message-ID: <5543@uafhp.uark.edu> Does anyone know anything about the Amstrad "128k CP/M" machine? Is there a hard disk available for it? Is it still availble? Thanks in advance... -KNJ (bbs@uafcseg.uark.edu) ------------------------------ Date: 13 Nov 90 20:03:34 GMT From: zephyr.ens.tek.com!orca.wv.tek.com!pogo!rickc@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Rick Clements) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <10075@pogo.WV.TEK.COM> In article <7eVgs1w163w@ijpc.UUCP> ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: }wilker@descartes.math.purdue.edu (Clarence Wilkerson) writes: }} CP/M is not public domain. The major components of CP/M }It thought that Digital Research withdrew all of its support for }CP/M years ago. I would think that they would have relinquished }their rights because they don't support it. If they still }distribute it, but don't support it, then something is SERIOUSLY }(IMHO) with DRI's policies, mainly because most of its work is }devoted to DR-DOS and GEM-86 and GEM-68k. Anyone care to rebut? I bought a C128 a couple years ago. It has a CP/M licence agreement with it. So, I ASSUME that it isn't public domain. -- Rick Clements (RickC@pogo.WV.TEK.COM) ------------------------------ Date: 15 Nov 90 15:49:04 GMT From: phri!marob!cowan@nyu.edu (John Cowan) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <2742B8F0.6ED4@marob.masa.com> In article <15686.27426844@levels.sait.edu.au>, etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au (What a Guy!) writes: >there was another net (by Proteon?) called 10-net ??? I was impressed by that. >What has happened to it? I could seal off sections of the net and if >connections where completely broken, you'd have two separately operating systems >Sounded great, but was $$$. . . Proteon 10-Net is an 802.5-style token ring, essentially like IBM Token Ring but at 10 Mbits/sec rather than 4 or 16. -- cowan@marob.masa.com (aka ...!hombre!marob!cowan) e'osai ko sarji la lojban ------------------------------ Date: 13 Nov 90 07:08:59 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!caen!ox.com!kitenet!shl@ucsd.edu (Stephen Landman) Subject: I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm Message-ID: <1990Nov13.070859.19357@m-net.ann-arbor.mi.us> I've got a Kaypro I (actually I've got two of them), and I want to know if there's a conversion program out there to make either ms dos or Apple CP/M disks from the Kaypro CP/M disks. -- Stephen Landman | SLANDMAN@MCIMail.com 3460 Platt Road | or Ann Arbor, MI 48108 | shl@m-net.ann-arbor.mi.us ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 15 Nov 90 11:42:55 EST From: SAGE@LL.LL.MIT.EDU Subject: ZCPR33 Code Hacking Ian Justman wrote: >> If you're the type who likes to get down and dirty for dirt cheap (like I >> am), then get ZCPR33, which comes complete with source code which you can >> hack to death if you want to (just kidding, Jay). No kidding! That's why the source code is out there. Let's just call it "hacking it to life." That's how all this started for me. There were some things in ZCPR30 that I thought could be improved, so I started experimenting... Even the ZCPR34 code, though commercial, is available to those who want it. If anyone comes up with some good improvement, please let me know. -- Jay Sage ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #183 ************************************* 16-Nov-90 22:26:05-MST,9303;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Fri, 16 Nov 90 22:15:09 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #184 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901116221510.V90N184@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Fri, 16 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 184 Today's Topics: Advent and TurboROMs Anyone Built and Used CMODEM? CP/M and public domain CP/M C compilers Early microcomputer networks I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm Wanted: CP/M computer ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 15 Nov 90 06:54:15 GMT From: att!pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Ian Justman) Subject: Advent and TurboROMs Message-ID: <511Ns1w163w@ijpc.UUCP> wieland@ea.ecn.purdue.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) writes: > By the way, I have written an overlay for David Goodenough suite of > UUCP-type programs for CP/M that uses the ZSDOS/ZDDOS time and date > system calls to read the clock. It works with current release of > these programs. I have been unable to get in touch with David to see > if he would like to include it with his distribution, so, if anyone > would like to use it, send me email, and I send it to you. David is in the processing of moving to the West Coast. I too have written a clock overlay, but for the CompuPro System Support 1 I have on my S100 boatanchor. As for one for ZSDOS and ZDDOS, one has been already written by Dave Goodman. He and I are both beta testers of Dave's UUCP software. It would be interesting to see anyway and see how the two compare. ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 90 02:59:31 GMT From: bbn.com!gonzalez@eddie.mit.edu (Jim Gonzalez) Subject: Anyone Built and Used CMODEM? Message-ID: <60896@bbn.BBN.COM> Now that I have the HSIO (many thanks to those who responded) working, my attention has turned to terminal emulation and file transfer software. Included with the commercial distribution of BDS C is the source for a program called CMODEM. It claims to implement the MODEM7 protocol, which Jay Sage told me is also known as XMODEM. I've successfully compiled and linked CMODEM, and the terminal emulation component seems to work well enough (I'm using it to enter this posting, for example). When I attempt to transfer files from various boards that support nMODEM (where n is X,Y, or Z), I get nothing. I tell the remote host that I want to do an XMODEM transfer, escape to CMODEM's command level and tell it to receive the file. It sits there doing retries, showing no errors or received packets. Aborting the transfer from my end, using ^X, and returning to terminal mode shows that the remote host received the abort signal (a pass-through of the ^X I typed, according to the source) and is waiting for me at command level. Has anyone here successfully built and used CMODEM? Perhaps I'm specifying the wrong protocol to the remote host (Jay indicated that specifying XMODEM *without* batch mode or 1K mode was the way to go; I tried 128 and 1K, CRC and checksum in various combinations). -Jim. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 16 Nov 90 19:57:50 -0600 From: mknox@emx.utexas.edu (Margaret H. Knox) Subject: CP/M and public domain Message-ID: <9011170157.AA18613@emx.utexas.edu> I have to jump in here. CP/M *is* very much still available for saile. TriSoft still sells and supports both CP/M-2.2 and CP/M-68K. As for as DRI putting it in the PD, ... they are still charging *us* royalties! Unfortunately, the person whose question started all this still has the problem of needing a version for HIS machine ... unless he can find a person with his special BIOS. ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 90 23:06:07 GMT From: dog.ee.lbl.gov!hellgate.utah.edu!caen!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!samsung!munnari.oz.au!comp.vuw.ac.nz!am.dsir.govt.nz!dsiramd!marcamd!mercury!kcbbs!kc@ucsd.edu (Richard Plinston) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <1990Nov16.230607.7051@kcbbs.gen.nz> >>> Johnson & Lord Are you confused with Andy Johnson-Laird, a person not a company. Most Ex-DRI products seem to be handled by Discus, including CP/M 2.2 and CP/M Plus (3.0). Also CBasic, Fortran-77, PL/1-86, MT+. Discus Distribution Services 340 El Camino Real South Firestone Business Park Salinas, CA 93901 (408) 424-5851 I wonder where Andy is now ? | / /~~ Public Unix BBS 24hrs | Ban French |_/ /\ |~\ |~\ /\ | |~ | | /~ | (~ Auckland NEW ZEALAND | nuclear | \ \,\ |,/ |,/ \,\ | | |_| \_ | _) KC BBS: 09-817-3714 | testing in | \ | | \__ Voice: 09-817-5569 | Pacific ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 90 18:05:05 GMT From: van-bc!ubc-cs!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!watserv1!sunee!erick@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Erick Engelke) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov16.180505.21897@sunee.waterloo.edu> In article <2742B8F0.6ED4@marob.masa.com> cowan@marob.masa.com (John Cowan) writes: etrmg@levels.sait.edu.au (What a Guy!) writes: >>there was another net (by Proteon?) called 10-net ??? I was impressed by that. >>What has happened to it? I could seal off sections of the net and if >>connections where completely broken, you'd have two separately operating systems >>Sounded great, but was $$$. . . > >Proteon 10-Net is an 802.5-style token ring, essentially like IBM Token Ring >but at 10 Mbits/sec rather than 4 or 16. >-- Proteon proNET 10 is still a popular networking product. It's simple to program, has low overhead, and performs faster than 16Mbit IBM Token Ring due to the low amount of overhead. Banyan Vines, Novell and a bunch of other network operating systems all support it. So do quite a few large university networks Watstar (ours is 450 nodes), TCP/IP stuff at Purdue and MIT, and the Free University of Holland (Taunenbaum's home). ProNET 10 is cheaper than IBM Token Ring, and pretty similar to good Ethernet cards. Erick Engelke Systems Manager University of Waterloo ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 90 13:12:35 GMT From: sun-barr!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!lobster!mwk!pittman@ames.arc.nasa.gov (V. Darrell Pittman, M.W. Kellogg, KT26, 713-753-4410) Subject: I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm Message-ID: <6540@mwk.uucp> In article <1990Nov13.070859.19357@m-net.ann-arbor.mi.us>, shl@m-net.ann-arbor.mi.us (Stephen Landman) writes: > I've got a Kaypro I (actually I've got two of them), and I want > to know if there's a conversion program out there to make either > ms dos or Apple CP/M disks from the Kaypro CP/M disks. Programs like COMPAT (from Mycroft Labs) and Uniform (vendor forgotten) convert Kaypro to MS-DOS and vice-versa. I looked around for a way to convert to Apple II disks, but was basically told it was impossible because their disk drives are just so different. (Someone once told me they basically treat a disk drive as a direct-access cassette tape, whatever that means --no flames please--). Best bet for the Apple is to set it next to the Kaypro, get out the trusty old null modem cable, crank both RS-232s up to 19.2 kbps, and start a YMODEM/Batch file transfer. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- --- Darrell Pittman email: pittman@mwk.uucp cis: 72277,3146 --- --- M. W. Kellogg Co. phone: (713) 753-4410 fax: (713) 753-5353 --- --- 601 Jefferson Ave. Houston, TX 77002 U.S.A. --- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- "The time has come," the Walrus said, "to talk of many things... Of shoes, and ships, and sealing wax; of cabbages, and kings." --Lewis Carroll-- ------------------------------ Date: 17 Nov 90 03:50:23 GMT From: aramis.rutgers.edu!athos.rutgers.edu!shapiro@rutgers.edu (Joel Shapiro) Subject: Wanted: CP/M computer Message-ID: As vspicer reminds me that there may be some museum types who might help me unload the dusty junk in my basement, and even pay me for it, here is a list of stuff I have available: SD Starter kit single board Z80 hex keypad computer with stuff added, including IO port. Documentation included 2 8" single sided single density floppy drives, cant remember whose, no docs one 100 x 100 bit plane of true CORE, 9" on a side, probably from a PDP6 a large number (if you act fast), of 8 x 64 x 64 bit planes of CORE, 4" on a side. Note the factor of 5 improvement in density from the above. This may well represent the epitome of this technology. ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #184 ************************************* 18-Nov-90 23:22:59-MST,4707;000000000000 Mail-From: W8SDZ created at 18-Nov-90 23:11:03 Return-Path: Date: Sun, 18 Nov 90 23:11:02 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #185 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901118231103.V90N185@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Sun, 18 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 185 Today's Topics: Amstrad CP/M machines BDS C modem program. CP/M C compilers ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 16 Nov 90 21:14:33 PST From: cwr@pnet01.cts.com (Will Rose) Subject: Amstrad CP/M machines Message-ID: <0093FD150686BB20.00000111@dcs.simpact.com> Amstrad made/makes several CP/M and IBM PC compatible machines. They are UK based, and single-handedly (more or less) sold cheap computing to the UK public. Their machines were sold in the US by Sears (they may still be) but not to any extent. I don't know if you can fit a hard disk on their CP/M machines. Their address is: Amstrad Brentwood House 169 Kings Road Brentwood Essex CM14 4EF UK Tel: 0277-230222 Hope this helps. If you need more info, email me. Good luck - Will ----------------------------------------------------------------------- "If heaven too had passions | Will Rose even heaven would | UUCP: {nosc ucsd hplabs!hp-sdd}!crash!pnet01!cw grow old." - Li Ho. | ARPA: crash!pnet01!cwr@nosc.mil | INET: cwr@pnet01.cts.com UUCP: {nosc ucsd hplabs!hp-sdd}!crash!pnet01!cwr ARPA: crash!pnet01!cwr@nosc.mil INET: cwr@pnet01.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 18 Nov 90 21:02:34 PST From: cwr@pnet01.cts.com (Will Rose) Subject: BDS C modem program. Message-ID: <0093FEA471A692A0.00000111@dcs.simpact.com> Sorry for the net bandwidth, but messages bounced: I re-wrote the cmodem program extensively under BDS C 1.5, and have ported it to five or six (very) different micros at one time or another. It is usually the first thing I bring up on a new CP/M box. (It has got steadily more modular over the years, and each successive port has been easier as the dependencies have been localised!) If you like, I can mail you the source; it runs under 1.5, not 1.6, but 1.6 comes (as I recall) with a 1.5 lib. You might find it easier to bring up than the standard version, and it has options to mess with the RS 232 port control lines, cycle port parameters, and so on, which ease communication debugging. Good luck - Will ----------------------------------------------------------------------- "If heaven too had passions | Will Rose even heaven would | UUCP: {nosc ucsd hplabs!hp-sdd}!crash!pnet01!cw grow old." - Li Ho. | ARPA: crash!pnet01!cwr@nosc.mil | INET: cwr@pnet01.cts.com UUCP: {nosc ucsd hplabs!hp-sdd}!crash!pnet01!cwr ARPA: crash!pnet01!cwr@nosc.mil INET: cwr@pnet01.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 16 Nov 90 20:29:03 GMT From: zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!qiclab!techbook!fzsitvay@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: CP/M C compilers Message-ID: <1990Nov16.202903.9159@techbook.com> In article <10075@pogo.WV.TEK.COM> rickc@pogo.WV.TEK.COM (Rick Clements) writes: > >I bought a C128 a couple years ago. It has a CP/M licence agreement with it. >So, I ASSUME that it isn't public domain. version 3, perhaps, but they stopped marketing 2.2 many years ago, and i haven't seen any new packages that include 2.2 code, and they don't support 2.2 anymore, so i guess according to pournelle's guidlines, it's psuedo pd. at least, i highly doubt that DR is going to sue you because you copied a boot disk for someone... but remember, the bios is the property of the company that wrote it, usually the manufacturer of the machine, and they can be somewhat sticky about this... case in point - Trisoft now holds the rights to pickles and trout cp/m for the radio shack model 2, 12, and 16. radio shack stopped producing the last of the machines perhaps 1 or 2 years ago, and has stopped supporting the z80 machines (2, 12) altogether, but trisoft will still sell you a virgin copy of cp/m 2.2 for $125. -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #185 ************************************* 20-Nov-90 00:30:33-MST,9663;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Tue, 20 Nov 90 00:24:28 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #186 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901120002430.V90N186@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Tue, 20 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 186 Today's Topics: 20 MHz Z80 Amstrad (2 msgs) Early microcomputer networks I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm NZCOM for MP/M and MSX - Help wanted V20 chips in DEC Rainbow computers ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sun, 18 Nov 1990 23:04 CST From: LANCE TAGLIAPIETRA Subject: 20 MHz Z80 [ I found the following announcement in the March 15, 1990 issue of EDN, Info-cpm readers may be interested.--Lance ] Z80 uP Hits 20 MHz After nearly 15 years on the market, the Z80 uP still keeps chugging along. The latest version of theis venerable 8-bit part, the Z84C0020, runs at 20 MHz and retains full code compatability with its predecessors. You can get samples of the device from Zilog Inc (Campbell, CA, (408) 370-8000, FAX (408) 370-8056) for $18. --Steven H Leibson. ------------------------------ Date: 19 Nov 90 00:51:27 GMT From: comp.vuw.ac.nz!actrix!ewen@uunet.uu.net (Ewen McNeill) Subject: Amstrad Message-ID: <1990Nov19.005127.14430@actrix.co.nz> In article <5543@uafhp.uark.edu> bbs00167@uafcseg.uucp (Keefe Jackson) writes: > > > Does anyone know anything about the Amstrad "128k CP/M" machine? > Is there a hard disk available for it? Is it still availble? > Thanks in advance... > > -KNJ (bbs@uafcseg.uark.edu) I tried mailing this.... but as I expected with a from address like the one given, it bounced. Sorry about the wasted bandwidth -- perhaps that particular BBS would care to fix up the from line so that it is a propper domain address (if this BBS (Actrix) can manage it, I don't see why everyone else can't). I know a reasonable amount about the Amstrad CPC128 (which I presume is the machine you refer to). I have owned one for about 5 years, and still think it is a good machine. There is not a hard disc available for the 6128, to my knowledge. There was talk of one, a while back, but I think it was going to cost about twice as much as the computer :-) The other Amstrad 8-bit models (PCW8256, PCW8512 and PCW9512) have a hard drive available for them. Does that help? BTW, if you are running out of storage space, you might consider using a large capacity ("1MB") 3.5" or 5.25" drive, and RAMDOS. That should give you 800K to a disk, which seems huge compared to the 178K you normally get. If you are worried about the speed, you might consider a ram disk. DK'Tronics used to make one, but they have been bought out so many times I am not sure who owns the name now. I think it might be Ram electronics. -- Ewen McNeill. Email: ewen@actrix.gen.nz ------------------------------ Date: 19 Nov 90 09:05:18 GMT From: csus.edu!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Amstrad Message-ID: <1990Nov19.090518.3479@simasd.uucp> ewen@actrix.co.nz (Ewen McNeill) writes: >In article <5543@uafhp.uark.edu> bbs00167@uafcseg.uucp (Keefe Jackson) writes: >> >> Does anyone know anything about the Amstrad "128k CP/M" machine? >> Is there a hard disk available for it? Is it still availble? > >I know a reasonable amount about the Amstrad CPC128 (which I presume > >There is not a hard disc available for the 6128, to my knowledge. Assuming that it is a Z-80 based machine (display of ignorance here!), it seems that it might be possible to get a HD kit from Emerald Microware which uses a small daughter board that plugs into the Z-80 socket plus the WD1002-05 hard disk controller. The one problem that might crop up would be the software modifications to the BIOS. I know Emerald has it for 2.2, but I'm not sure about 3.0. A telephone call should answer that though. Ewen, would you care to comment? - don Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 18 Nov 90 05:40:11 GMT From: julius.cs.uiuc.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!dino!news.iastate.edu!exnet.iastate.edu!i1neal@apple.com (Neal Rauhauser -- ELT Computer Applications Group) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov18.054011.16521@news.iastate.edu> In article <7228@hub.ucsb.edu> 6600raft@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu (Michael Wise) writes: >In article <1990Nov14.175037.1497@eng.umd.edu> hsu@eng.umd.edu (Dagwood splits the Atom) writes: > >>In article <1990Nov13.210141.28709@en.ecn.purdue.edu> milton@en.ecn.purdue.edu (Milton D Miller) writes: >>>In article jim@baroque.Stanford.EDU (James Helman) writes: >>>>I remember people having Corvus disk systems on their Apple II's >>>>around 1980. >>>Well, let's see what I can rember. We had one of these installed in >>>high school... The lab was installed in 1982; I graduated in 1986. > >I remember using a Corvus Constellation setup in H.S. too. I remember >the servers came in 5, 10 and 20 meg versions (correct me if I'm wrong), My office mate is a Corvus mechanic on the side - the latest version of the roms for those things support 330 meg mfm drives(!) and the largest hes ever used was a 110 meg disk ------------------------------ Date: 18 Nov 90 21:24:25 GMT From: mikes@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu (Michael Squires) Subject: I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm Message-ID: <72760@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu> Emerald MicroWare (ad in Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar) handles Uniform and has an add-on drive for a MS-DOS system that handles Apple II diskettes. -- Mike Squires (mikes@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu) 812 855 3974 (w) 812 333 6564 (h) mikes@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu 546 N Park Ridge Rd., Bloomington, IN 47408 Under construction: mikes@sir-alan@cica.indiana.edu ------------------------------ Date: 18 Nov 90 13:58:37 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!ira.uka.de!smurf!gopnbg!altger!doitcr!jungkunz@ucsd.edu (Helmut Jungkunz) Subject: NZCOM for MP/M and MSX - Help wanted Message-ID: <1542@doitcr.doit.sub.org> Hello there, since I am very happy using NZCOM (CP/M 2.2 auto-installer) on various CP/M machines, I have run across two systems that do make life hard, since some operating systems are only CP/M compatible in some respect. It would be necessary for me to run NZCOM under MP/M, since my ZNODE 51 is originally a MP/M ALTOS machine and probably functions better with serving a different terminal for the BBS than the one used for boot-up. There are a couple people who would like to purchase NZCOM, but cannot make it work under MSX. If anyone (or more) know solutions to these problems, please answer here or to me directly. I read CP/M news almost everyday. Thank you - and keep on Z-ing! Ciao, -> Helmut Jungkunz <- ------------------------------ Date: 18 Nov 90 04:47:57 GMT From: dog.ee.lbl.gov!hellgate.utah.edu!fcom.cc.utah.edu!cc.utah.edu!cc.usu.edu!slsw2@ucsd.edu Subject: V20 chips in DEC Rainbow computers Message-ID: <1990Nov17.224757.42648@cc.usu.edu> In article <453@organpipe.UUCP>, tom@astro.as.arizona.edu (Thomas J. Trebisky) writes: > First, is there a newsgroup more appropriate than this for questions > about the Rainbow? Try comp.sys.dec.micro. > Second, does anyone have experiences, pro or con, about replacing the 8088 > with the more efficient V20 processor. > I have heard a variety of groundless apprehensions, but I am hoping someone > will respond with something like, "yes, I have run one for years and it works > great." This is actually a rather popular thing to do to a Rainbow. I just put one in mine a couple of days ago (sorry, I can't claim years), but lots of people have done it. The only caveat is that when you do it your Rainbow will no longer pass its power-on diagnostics. However, I came across this on comp.sys.dec.micro the other day (I've not tried it yet, so I can't say what it is or if it works): >> Date: 10-23-90 (10:26) >> To: ALL >> Subject: V20 EPROM MODS >> From: FRANK MALLORY >> >> Carl Houseman has uploaded his article describing how to modify your >> boot ROM to adapt it to the NEC V20 processor. It's available >> here as V20ARTIC.ZIP, in file area 25. >> * Origin: Silver Bullet - Silver Spring, Md. - 301-622-2247 (1:109/417) If you do look at this article, I'd be interesting in knowing what it says (301's a long-distance call from 801). -- =============================================================================== Roger Ivie 35 S 300 W Logan, Ut. 84321 (801) 752-8633 =============================================================================== ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #186 ************************************* 22-Nov-90 08:25:36-MST,9409;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 22 Nov 90 08:15:15 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #187 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901122081515.V90N187@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 22 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 187 Today's Topics: Amstrad CPC -- HDs BigBoard II Info needed on Compupro 8/16 I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm New Z-80 Chips --> Upgrade? PD Z80-crosscompilers Strange Kaypro problems Wanted: S100 serial card Wavemate Bullet/Super Bullet ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 20 Nov 90 21:29:04 GMT From: comp.vuw.ac.nz!actrix!ewen@uunet.uu.net (Ewen McNeill) Subject: Amstrad CPC -- HDs Message-ID: <1990Nov20.212904.14578@actrix.co.nz> In article <1990Nov19.090518.3479@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: > ewen@actrix.co.nz (Ewen McNeill) writes: > >In article <5543@uafhp.uark.edu> bbs00167@uafcseg.uucp (Keefe Jackson) writes: > >> > >> Does anyone know anything about the Amstrad "128k CP/M" machine? > >> Is there a hard disk available for it? Is it still availble? > > > >I know a reasonable amount about the Amstrad CPC6128 (which I presume > >[...] > >There is not a hard disc available for the 6128, to my knowledge. > > Assuming that it is a Z-80 based machine (display of ignorance here!), it > seems that it might be possible to get a HD kit from Emerald Microware which > uses a small daughter board that plugs into the Z-80 socket plus the WD1002-05 > hard disk controller. The one problem that might crop up would be the > software modifications to the BIOS. I know Emerald has it for 2.2, but I'm > not sure about 3.0. A telephone call should answer that though. > > Ewen, would you care to comment? Certainly, I will comment :-) The machine is definately Z80 based, so your solution might well work. Software modifications of the BIOS could be difficult, as could be keeping up with the speed of a HD. The machine runs at 4Mhz with one wait state (effective speed is said to be 3.3Mhz). The machine does not support DMA, or Interupt driven Disk IO (the floppy IO is done by polling the controller as is the serial IO -- both _cannot_ be done at the same time :-) I think the answer is that technically it might be possible, but the only real way to approach the problem (from my point of view) would be to build a seperate (Z80 controlled) Disk drive manager (supporting Floppies and HDs). That would allow an implementation of DMA - and with big enough cache, reasonable amounts to be read at one time. Again, BIOS would be a problem. I don't have source to it (though, I may well reverse-engineer it one day :-) and the CPM 2.2 implementation on the Amstrad only allows for 42K TPA. (The screen on this machine is a graphics only one -- and it takes 16K!). Amstrads are definately cut price machines. One possible solution (with expanded memory (of which I have 512K!)) might be to run CP/M in a different bank from the screen. Still, someone would have to do a lot of work. One final problem -- the HD would still cost more than the machine :-) -- Ewen McNeill. Email: ewen@actrix.gen.nz ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 01:30:54 GMT From: van-bc!ubc-cs!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!ccu.umanitoba.ca!vspicer@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU Subject: BigBoard II Message-ID: <1990Nov21.013054.18342@ccu.umanitoba.ca> Hello CP/M world... I recently got a "patched together" CP/M machine consisting of 2 8" single sided floppy drives, the guts of an Amdek composite monitor an ASCII encoded keyboard and a single board CP/M unit called a "Big Board II" made around 1982. It's a very nice single board computer with 2 serial ports, composite video output, SASI and "mini floppy" (5.25"??) interfaces and some other goodies. It boots fine with the CP/M 2.2 supplied and I can format 8" disks up to 670K each. My question is: does anyone have the firmware to let this thing use 5.25" disks drives as well? has anyone hooked a hard drive up to one of these things? I'm more than willing to hack with the guts of this thing if needed; they were kind enough to also supply full schematics for the thing. I've been told the "Big Board" design was widely copied by Osborne, Kaypro and Xerox for their CP/M machines. thanks vic spicer ------------------------------ Date: 20 Nov 90 06:41:23 GMT From: ucrmath!ucrmath.ucr.edu@ucsd.edu (Kevin Lund) Subject: Info needed on Compupro 8/16 Message-ID: <10026@ucrmath.ucr.edu> Hi, I'm looking at buying a Compupro 8/16; the deciding factor is whether or not I can find system software for it (i.e. something to boot it up with...). So, any Compupro fans out there? Any and all comments on the machine are welcome, nay, desperately sought...thanks... Kevin Lund (kevin@ucrmath.ucr.edu) ------------------------------ Date: 17 Nov 90 19:04:54 GMT From: unisoft!hoptoad!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Ian Justman) Subject: I want to convert Kaypro I cpm data to msdos or Apple Z80 cpm Message-ID: pittman@mwk.uucp (V. Darrell Pittman, M.W. Kellogg, KT26, 713-753-4410) writes: > ...and Uniform (vendor forgotten) The vendor in question is MicroSolutions. > Best bet for the Apple is to set it next to the Kaypro, get out > the trusty old null modem cable, crank both RS-232s up to 19.2 kbps, > and start a YMODEM/Batch file transfer. It depends on what software you're using, and what operating system you're operating it under. If you're using ProDOS or DOS 3.3, then you might be able to get away with it at 19.2kb. But if you're using CP/M, it depends on the card and software. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 20 Nov 90 12:38 CDT From: "Arun Baheti " Subject: New Z-80 Chips --> Upgrade? After seeing the notice regarding the latest 20mhz z-80 chips, I am curious to find out if anyone has successfully upgraded their Xerox 820-II or Xerox 16/8 to the higher speed chips? Does anyone have any information or pointers? --arun baheti nbaheti.elsegundo@xerox.com sabahe@macalstr.edu ------------------------------ Date: 20 Nov 90 15:57:10 GMT From: eru!hagbard!sunic!news.funet.fi!funic!santra!santra!puhuri@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Markus Peuhkuri) Subject: PD Z80-crosscompilers Message-ID: I am working on a small controller that is based on Sinclar Spectrum. I was wondering if anyone has an (PD) crosscompiler for z80 assembler. I would prefer one runing under UNIX (bsd 4.3) or AmigaDos, thought MeSsyDos-version will work if no other alternatives exists. Also c/pascal-source of one (I can try to port it) will work ok. -- * Markus Peuhkuri * puhuri@niksula.hut.fi ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Nov 90 09:38:15 PST From: rzh@icf.llnl.gov (R. Hanscom) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <9011211738.AA04958@icf.llnl.gov.llnl.gov> In <1990Nov20.221811.7383@techbook.com>, fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: > is it normal for the > drive access led to stay lit even after the drive has been accessed?? I believe that this is normal behavior for a Kaypro. At least mine does this. It worried me at first because I have another machine that refuses to give me back the diskette when the led is on. The Kaypro doesn't do this. One can remove the diskette if the little light is off or on! roger icf!rzh@lll-winken.llnl.gov rzh@phoenix.ocf.llnl.gov ------------------------------ Date: 19 Nov 90 23:39:12 GMT From: csus.edu!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!cs.uoregon.edu!ogicse!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!loop!tessi!steve%tessi.uucp@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Steve Willoughby) Subject: Wanted: S100 serial card Message-ID: <619@tessi.UUCP> I'm looking for a serial board for an S-100 bus 8080 machine (acutally an Altair 8800, in case anybody else remembers those beasts...) 20mA loop capability would be nice, as well as RS-232. Please send info to steve@aardvark.pdx.com or the address in the signature below. Thanks. Steve ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 04:04:47 GMT From: van-bc!cynic!pevans@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Phillip Evans) Subject: Wavemate Bullet/Super Bullet Message-ID: I have a pair of Wavemate z80 SBC's - they apparently are 'Super Bullet' computers. 256K, lost of pins, run a SASI HD controller and a 1793 FDC. Would anyone who has documentation for these please respond. ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #187 ************************************* 22-Nov-90 12:23:56-MST,13718;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Thu, 22 Nov 90 12:15:07 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #188 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901122121508.V90N188@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Thu, 22 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 188 Today's Topics: BigBoard II DisplayWriter and CP/M 86 Early microcomputer networks Info needed on Compupro 8/16 NZCOM for MP/M and MSX - Help wanted PD Z80-crosscompilers Strange Kaypro problems (3 msgs) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 22 Nov 90 03:05:05 GMT From: mvb.saic.com!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: BigBoard II Message-ID: <1990Nov22.030505.6665@simasd.uucp> The WD1771 FDC controller used in the Big Board is the same as used in the Xerox 820 and is capable of using 5.25" floppies. What needs to be done is to cut the data transfer rate from the 8" rate (500,000K bps) to the 5.25" rate (250,000K bps) and, obviously, accommodate the 34 pin connector on the 5.25" drive. If you can find someone with schematics for the Xerox 820, you can see exactly how they did it. Emerald Microware, 12470 SW First, Beaverton OR 97005 sells parts, software, and/or a kit to install a HD in the Xerox 820, amongst others, which would perhaps work with the BB. Others may also. Good luck. Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 04:25:12 GMT From: cs.dal.ca!NSTN.NS.CA!clyde.concordia.ca!ccu.umanitoba.ca!vspicer@uunet.uu.net Subject: DisplayWriter and CP/M 86 Message-ID: <1990Nov21.042512.24932@ccu.umanitoba.ca> I've seen in an old issue of "kilobaud microcomputing" an ad from Digital Research stating that CP/M 86 could operate on an IBM DisplayWriter. Does anyone have a bootable CP/M 86 that can operate on a DisplayWriter? Also, if this is true, what CP/M software is available? A friend has a nice unit he got for nothing and it makes a nifty word processor, but if it can work as a computer as well... that would be great. All he has with it is a self-booting word processor disk which has only rudimentary DOS functions like delete file. thanks very much vic spicer ------------------------------ Date: 20 Nov 90 20:15:09 GMT From: bbn.com!nic!chaos.cs.brandeis.edu!cos@apple.com (Ofer Inbar) Subject: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov20.201509.14205@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu> In article <7228@hub.ucsb.edu> 6600raft@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu (Michael Wise) writes: >I remember using a Corvus Constellation setup in H.S. too. I remember >the servers came in 5, 10 and 20 meg versions (correct me if I'm wrong), >and that was pretty impressive when at the time an Apple ][ floppy >only held about 140K. > >Remember how when you booted up the Apple the constellation would appear >on the screen in ascii "*"s... We had an Apple ][ lab with a Corvus in elementary school; it was installed when I was in sixth grade (1981). The one thing I best remember about it was how often it crashed, and how often we lost all of our files. I really hated the thing, I almost expected to lose my files every time I went into the lab. The year I graduated from 8th grade they got a second Corvus (ack!). I used to use the Apple monitor program to write short machine language programs, and would save them on the Corvus using BSAVE. The computer teacher/sysadmin used to blame me for bringing down the Corvus by writing binary files to it. -- Cos (Ofer Inbar) -- cos@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu -- WBRS (BRiS) -- WBRS@binah.cc.brandeis.edu WBRS@brandeis.bitnet ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 11:03:19 GMT From: pacbell.com!pacbell!sactoh0!ijpc!ianj@ucsd.edu (Ian Justman) Subject: Info needed on Compupro 8/16 Message-ID: <9JgZs1w163w@ijpc.UUCP> kevin@ucrmath.ucr.edu (Kevin Lund) writes: > > Hi, I'm looking at buying a Compupro 8/16; the deciding factor is whether > or not I can find system software for it (i.e. something to boot it up > with...). So, any Compupro fans out there? Any and all comments on the > machine are welcome, nay, desperately sought...thanks... > > I've got a CompuPro 8/16 (will be acquiring another one in the very near future) and I'm pleased with it. It depends on what hardware the machine's got and what operating system it runs. I suggest a look under the hood. If it has a SPUZ card, and you do mostly 8-bit applications, GET IT! They use a Z80H clocked at 8MHz and it goes real fast. If the machine in question has a hard disk and/or an M-DRIVE/H, even better. Those applications will fly even faster. However, if it doesn't have a SPUZ, the main operatins system you have to buy for is CP/M-86. Most 8/16's have either a CPU-8085/8088 or a CPU-'286, many of them run Concurrent DOS 816 (which mine does). But if your system does have a SPUZ in it, and if you get your hands on another SPUZ, you can have multiple 8-bit tasks running. Right now, I'm limited to one Z80-based task because I have only one SPUZ on my system. If the system has MP/M or CP/M-86, I dunno how to help you there. Good luck. ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 14:10:06 GMT From: mintaka!olivea!samsung!munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (What a Guy!) Subject: NZCOM for MP/M and MSX - Help wanted Message-ID: <15706.274a8abe@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <1542@doitcr.doit.sub.org>, jungkunz@doitcr.doit.sub.org (Helmut Jungkunz) writes: > Keywords:ZCPR NZCOM MP/M MPM MSX > >Hello there, Hi > There are a couple people who would like to purchase NZCOM, but cannot make > it work under MSX. If anyone (or more) know solutions to these problems, > please answer here or to me directly. I read CP/M news almost everyday. > I have a friend with one of those Yamaha music MSX boxes. I could get it from him & beat it up. Problem is, it has no disk drives, so that may slow me down. Also, I've been in contact with two other MSX unit owners thru the rec.music.synth group and one sounds like a bit of a hardware nut, so we may have a goer here. . . Get in touch. Ronn > Thank you - and keep on Z-ing! Thank you, whenever I get the time. . . . ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 13:42:37 GMT From: mintaka!olivea!samsung!munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (What a Guy!) Subject: PD Z80-crosscompilers Message-ID: <15705.274a844e@levels.sait.edu.au> In article , puhuri@niksula.hut.fi (Markus Peuhkuri) writes: > find people hacking with z80> > > I am working on a small controller that is based on Sinclar Spectrum. > I was wondering if anyone has an (PD) crosscompiler for z80 assembler. > I would prefer one runing under UNIX (bsd 4.3) or AmigaDos, thought > MeSsyDos-version will work if no other alternatives exists. > > Also c/pascal-source of one (I can try to port it) will work ok. CUG276 & CUG292 are C sources of Assemblers for the Z80 and 64180. You can obtain them thru the C User's Group, or I can Email them to you. They are PD and have been run thru a number of compilers already. It's easy to select which to compile for since all you have to do is uncomment a define which selects your flavor of C. Although I've had trouble with the 6805 assembler under Aztec CII 1.05 (still am struggling) Your compiler needs calloc() which mine don't have!!! Also, I have to define void as int type and rename getc & putc to agetc & aputc. . . .. etc. Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 03:05:04 GMT From: mvb.saic.com!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> 11-21-90 First, a blushing thanks for the kudo! Taking things in a different order than you presented them: The results you are getting with COPY.COM and STAT.COM are obviously not right. Their CRCs should be 62 12 and 4C ED, respectively. If they are not, let me know and I will see that you get 'fresh' copies. The fact that your retry problem, during format, is 'portable' from drive to drive suggests a diskette problem - but not necessarily! I have had some problems in the past on a Morrow machine, with the old Shugart single sided drives, that looked like a disk problem but the problem was really the drives sticking and not indexing properly. On the later machines, at least, the drive light (and motor) stay on for several seconds after disk access and then turn off. I would assume that yours should do that also. In order to use QD drives you need to make changes to both ROM and BIOS. There are/were a couple of outfits that had slightly differing versions: Advent's TurboROM and Micro Cornucopia's MAX ROM. I hear that Advent has shut down (I have not personally checked that), but Micro C is still selling their stuff - just out of the magazine business. By the way, when you 'pry the machine apart' to anoint the drives with alcohol, check the ROM number. It should be chip U47 near front center, and the ROM number should be either 81-149-C or 81-232-A. Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 20 Nov 90 22:18:11 GMT From: usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!dali.cs.montana.edu!ogicse!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!qiclab!techbook!fzsitvay@apple.com (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov20.221811.7383@techbook.com> something else i should have mentioned... is it normal for the drive access led to stay lit even after the drive has been accessed?? right now, the machine has been sitting after booting for a good half hour, and the led for drive a is still lit. of course, the led goes out when i turn the machine off. if i access drive b, it will do the same for drive b. -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ Date: 20 Nov 90 20:17:20 GMT From: swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!dali.cs.montana.edu!ogicse!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!nosun!qiclab!techbook!fzsitvay@ucsd.edu (Frank Zsitvay) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov20.201720.5035@techbook.com> A public 'thank you' to don maslin for sending me a boot disk for my geriatric kaypro 2/83. it's people like him who make this hobby worth pursuing... But, i am having some problems that are very strange - unless they are common to kaypro machines. (which i am not) first, i formatted a bunch of blanks so i could put the 'master' in a safe place. during the format process, the machine had to retry several tracks. the most it had to on any single track was once, but still this is somewhat unerving. ironically, it has the same pattern of track retries for a given disk no matter which floppy it's in. by the by, i did this with the 'mfdisk' multi-format program, selecting kaypro double density. well, each disk that formatted checked out with no errors, so that's not critical... however, using the copy program (much like diskcopy in msdos) it crashed rather beautifully, all kinds of trash on the screen. however, an ESC would bring it back to the CCP. oh, it also beeps with each new helping of screen trash. and last, but not least, STAT dies upon loading. no error message, not a peep. loads and stops dead in it's tracks. the reset button is the only way out. (aside from turning the machine off and on...) PIP does work, and i used that to copy the system disk, as well as SYSGEN to transfer the operating system. now, i know the disk heads are probably filthy from sitting in a dusty warehouse for a good many years, which would account for the problems formatting disks, so i'll pry the machine apart and spend some time with alcohol-soaked Q-tips and maybe even a head cleaner as a last resort, but i doubt dirty r/w heads would cause copy and stat to crash like they did. (whenever the heads on my trs2 mod 12 get dirty enough to cause problems, i usually get a BDOS error, but never a crash.) any help would be greatly appreciated... i like this little machine, now if i can get it to work properly, i'd like to add dsqd drives to it. anyone know where i can find a pd hacked bios for that?? -- fzsitvay@techbook.COM - but don't quote me on that.... American Oil Company motto - Bend over, We'll pump!!! ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #188 ************************************* 23-Nov-90 15:29:30-MST,11919;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Fri, 23 Nov 90 15:15:12 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #189 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901123151513.V90N189@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Fri, 23 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 189 Today's Topics: Amstrad CPC -- HDs CP/M Benchmarks CP/M Benchmarksexit CP/M Printmaster Info needed on Compupro 8/16 Kaypro disk with unix dd command QTERM on Xerox 16/8 or 820-II Strange Kaypro problems (2 msgs) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 21 Nov 90 18:05:03 GMT From: csus.edu!beach.csulb.edu!nic.csu.net!usc!samsung!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Amstrad CPC -- HDs Message-ID: <1990Nov21.180503.3251@simasd.uucp> Touche'! - don Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 23:34:42 GMT From: olivea!orc!inews!cadev5!dbraun@apple.com (Doug Braun ~) Subject: CP/M Benchmarks Message-ID: <1064@inews.intel.com> Can anyone suggest any benchmark programs for CP/M computers, such as Dhrystone, or something like the Norton "SI" program? I guess the problem with Dhrystone is that it is really a compiler/machine benchmark, and there is no standard C compiler for CP/M. To get things rolling: My Z280 system and the Code Works Q/C Compiler, modified to generate Z280 code, give just about 500 Dhrystones/second. Doug Braun Intel Corp CAD 408 765-4279 dbraun@scdt.intel.com or maybe: / decwrl \ | hplabs | -| oliveb |- !intelca!mipos3!cadev6!dbraun | amd | \ qantel / ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 19:13:07 GMT From: zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!munnari.oz.au!sirius.ucs.adelaide.edu.au!levels!etrmg@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (What a Guy!) Subject: CP/M Benchmarksexit Message-ID: <15711.274c2343@levels.sait.edu.au> In article <1064@inews.intel.com>, dbraun@cadev5.intel.com (Doug Braun ~) writes: > Can anyone suggest any benchmark programs for CP/M computers, > such as Dhrystone, or something like the Norton "SI" program? Didn't Dr. Dobb's have some of this type of thing in C some time ago? I recall that the C User's Group might have had it alternatively. . . I'll give it a look. . . > I guess the problem with Dhrystone is that it is really a > compiler/machine benchmark, and there is no standard C compiler > for CP/M. In Embedded Systems Programming tere was something on this type of thing too; A Rhrealstone gage for Realtime systems. . . I'll get that issue # tonight. > To get things rolling: My Z280 system and the Code Works Q/C Compiler, > modified to generate Z280 code, give just about 500 Dhrystones/second. Why do this? Ronn ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 01:09:49 GMT From: csus.edu!beach.csulb.edu!nic.csu.net!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!lavaca.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!nuchat!lobster!urchin!Charles.Cotham@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Charles Cotham) Subject: CP/M Printmaster Message-ID: <3605.2749EB68@urchin.fidonet.org> I am looking for a CP/M version of Printmaster to run on the old Osborne One. I tried Central Computer Products but they are sold out and don't think they will get anymore. If you have a copy or know of another place to try , Please leave me a note. Thanks, Charles Cotham ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 19:38:44 GMT From: julius.cs.uiuc.edu!usc!ucselx!crash!mwilson@apple.com (Marc Wilson) Subject: Info needed on Compupro 8/16 Message-ID: <5784@crash.cts.com> In article <9JgZs1w163w@ijpc.UUCP> ianj@ijpc.UUCP (Ian Justman) writes: >I've got a CompuPro 8/16 (will be acquiring another one in the >very near future) and I'm pleased with it. Where are you inding these, Ian? I'd love to find another machine, especially one with a SPUZ in it. I'm about to break down and trade in one of my Z80 boards on one. Half price, don'tcha know. >However, if it doesn't have a SPUZ, the >main operatins system you have to buy for is CP/M-86. Most >8/16's have either a CPU-8085/8088 or a CPU-'286, many of them >run Concurrent DOS 816 (which mine does). I meant to ask you before... how does CDOS run on the CPU 85/88? I've stuck my 8Mhz ( 161F ) board in a couple of times, and it's a real dog here. Loading it with the terminal in the bedroom along with the system console REALLY slows the thing down. Gotta call CompuPro and get the PAL for my CPU 286 so's I can get rid of the 6 Mhz '286. 8-) >But if your system does have a SPUZ in it, and if you get your hands >on another SPUZ, you can have multiple 8-bit tasks running. Right now, I'm >limited to one Z80-based task because I have only one SPUZ on my >system. If the system has MP/M or CP/M-86, I dunno how to help >you there. According to CompuPro, you should be able to run 4 8-bit tasks per SPUZ. Are you sure you have the queues installed correctly? What version of SWITCH are you using ( I have several later, and may be able to help ). What version of CDOS? On the subject of MP/M-86 and CP/M-86, I have both operating systems, along witht the CompuPro technical manuals. Ran MP/M 8-16 on my 8/16 until I picked up CDOS. Can I call my machine an 8/16? I integrated it, not CompuPro. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 18:25:03 GMT From: csus.edu!beach.csulb.edu!nic.csu.net!usc!samsung!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Kaypro disk with unix dd command Message-ID: <1990Nov21.182503.3468@simasd.uucp> This was thrashed through a while back. There may have been a very few of the very early KayComp computers that used single density (throughout, rather than just system tracks), but the Kaypro II, 4, 2, 2X, and 10 were all DD. - don Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 22 Nov 90 14:36 CDT From: "Arun Baheti " Subject: QTERM on Xerox 16/8 or 820-II Has anyone had success running QTERM on a 16/8 or 820-II? I have the system installed with the provided overlay, but the VT100 emulation is less than perfect. I am in need of a good terminal emulation program for use on VAX/VMS systems (I have a version of Kermit, and several other Xerox configured programs, but the only one that works very well is limited to speeds below 2400 baud). Pointers? Ideas? --Arun Baheti Arun_Baheti.ElSegundo@Xerox.COM SABahe@Macalstr.EDU ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 19:29:02 GMT From: usc!ucselx!crash!mwilson@apple.com (Marc Wilson) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <5783@crash.cts.com> In article <1990Nov20.221811.7383@techbook.com> fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: > > something else i should have mentioned... is it normal for the >drive access led to stay lit even after the drive has been accessed?? >right now, the machine has been sitting after booting for a good >half hour, and the led for drive a is still lit. of course, the >led goes out when i turn the machine off. if i access drive b, it >will do the same for drive b. That's the way the D BIOS works. The last drive selected STAYS selected until you select another. It's not dangerous, it's just the way the ROM BIOS deals with the drives. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 06:10:01 GMT From: bionet!hayes.ims.alaska.edu!floyd@apple.com (Floyd Davidson) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov22.061001.8422@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> In article <5783@crash.cts.com> mwilson@crash.cts.com (Marc Wilson) writes: >In article <1990Nov20.221811.7383@techbook.com> fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank Zsitvay) writes: >> >> something else i should have mentioned... is it normal for the >>drive access led to stay lit even after the drive has been accessed?? >>right now, the machine has been sitting after booting for a good >>half hour, and the led for drive a is still lit. of course, the >>led goes out when i turn the machine off. if i access drive b, it >>will do the same for drive b. > > That's the way the D BIOS works. The last drive selected STAYS >selected until you select another. It's not dangerous, it's just the >way the ROM BIOS deals with the drives. With the original monitor ROM in '83 machines the heads would also stay loaded and the disks spinning. That tends to wear out the floppy. I don't remember how much of that is a problem with Tandon drives and how much a problem with the monitor ROM, as I replaced both in every Kaypro I owned. At one time I had 4 of them, and now there is only one left and it rarely ever gets turned on. So this is all from foggy memory. There used to be a significant difference between different brands of floppy disks when it came to how long they would last in a Kaypro under heavy use. I found that one of the cheaper brands would have the media peeling right off the disk fairly quickly, and saved several examples to demonstrate the point to anyone who recommended cheap floppies! You could see right through the worn areas! Floyd -- Floyd L. Davidson floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu Salcha, AK 99714 paycheck connection to Alascom, Inc. When I speak for them, one of us will be *out* of business in a hurry. ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #189 ************************************* 23-Nov-90 17:22:46-MST,10101;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Fri, 23 Nov 90 17:15:05 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #190 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901123171506.V90N190@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Fri, 23 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 190 Today's Topics: Amstrad CPC Kaypro 4 and Epson Geneva For Sale Strange Kaypro problems (3 msgs) TeleRAM 3000 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 22 Nov 90 19:27:10 GMT From: swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!ira.uka.de!smurf!gopnbg!altger!doitcr!jungkunz@ucsd.edu (Helmut Jungkunz) Subject: Amstrad CPC Message-ID: <1543@doitcr.doit.sub.org> Hello world, as they say. Doesn't anybody ever read my notes? We, the Schneider/Amstrad CPC User Group of Munich, Germany, very well support the CPC machines with their various RAM expansions and BIOSes. There i s a harddisk for the CPCs. For all three types the same one! It does cost more than the computer, but - it contains the 20 MB Harddisk with a SEAGATE-type controller, an interface to handle the I/O plus a very well written and very well serviced BIOS EPROM, enabling you to use a quad density (80 Track souble sided) drive with three different auto-login formats: Vortex (almost identical to ALTOS 5), a DATA-Format and a System format. Drive 0 is normally drive A: and a 3" drive is expected. It is possible to boot from any partition of the harddisk as well as from any disk. It is necessary to have at least a minimum configuration RAM-disk by either dktronics or (better) the same brand as the hard disk: DOBBERTIN Elektronik, Brahmsstr. 4, 6835 Bruehl, West-Germany I have been using my hard disk together with NZCOM and Z3PLUS since more than a year now (I originated the idea then to the manufacturer) and I can only say: You don't even notice anything else but comfort as long as you are in CP/M. In Basic, some ill-behaved programs store their variables at a far too high point in memory. But that had been a problem from the first day of computers till today. As you might have guessed, it is possible to run 6128 Programs a n d CP/M Plus on all three CPCs with this configuration. If you are using your computer regularly - go out and buy this delight for your nerves. I also have an IBM-clone, but it's fan and hard disk are much louder and get on my nerves. I just use it for mailboxing and word processing every now and then. Please - do spread the word. There are MEGABYTES of P.D. Software sitting here ready to go out to any willing regional distributor at very little charge. Keep Z up and going! Ciao, -> Helmut Jungkunz <- ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 22:44:23 GMT From: hub.ucsb.edu!ucsbuxa!6500boo@ucsd.edu (William Bushing) Subject: Kaypro 4 and Epson Geneva For Sale Message-ID: <7357@hub.ucsb.edu> I'm not sure if "for sale" postings are appropriate to this newsgroup... if not, go ahead and flame me and I'll learn from my mistake. I have a Kaypro 4 and an Epson Geneva laptop CP/M for sale. I assume there is still interest in such machines based on what I've read in the newsgroup. Although they certainly served their purpose well in the past, I'm a 386 man these days and have no real need for the two computers. Both computers have all bundled software disks and most manuals as well as some public domain stuff. Kaypro was bundled with Wordstar, Perfect Writer, Perfect Calc, Perfect Filer and also has dBASE II. Epson has Wordstar, a spreadsheet package and a scheduler if I remember right. The Kaypro had some problems booting up if I remember right but the Epson ran fine. They've been sitting in boxes in storage for a while. If interested, make me an offer I can't refuse. Bill Bushing ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 11:09:49 GMT From: bionet!hayes.ims.alaska.edu!floyd@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Floyd Davidson) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov22.110949.12852@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> In article <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: > > 11-21-90 > > On the later machines, at least, the drive light (and motor) stay > on for several seconds after disk access and then turn off. I > would assume that yours should do that also. The Kaypro monitor ROM has no provision for timeout on the disks. Micro C's ROM and TurboROM both do. > In order to use QD drives you need to make changes to both ROM and > BIOS. There are/were a couple of outfits that had slightly > differing versions: Advent's TurboROM and Micro Cornucopia's MAX > ROM. I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, but if I remember right all the code that handles disk blocking and so on is in the ROM, all the BIOS does is call the ROM. On most earlier CP/M systems that code was actually in the BIOS itself. Floyd -- Floyd L. Davidson floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu Salcha, AK 99714 paycheck connection to Alascom, Inc. When I speak for them, one of us will be *out* of business in a hurry. ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 20:05:03 GMT From: usc!samsung!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov22.200503.21516@simasd.uucp> floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: > >The Kaypro monitor ROM has no provision for timeout on the disks. >Micro C's ROM and TurboROM both do. You are right - at least mostly. On the K10 with 81-302 ROM the drive light and motor does timeout. Whether this is in ROM or O/S I don't know. On the KP-2X (81-292), only the drive motor times out. The light remains on. > >I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first >ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be >changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, >but if I remember right all the code that handles disk blocking and >so on is in the ROM, all the BIOS does is call the ROM. On most >earlier CP/M systems that code was actually in the BIOS itself. > Rereading the Micro C manual strongly suggests that you are right. I don't now have access to the T'ROM manual, but it likely is the same. I stand corrected (and smarter!). - don Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 23 Nov 90 03:07:06 GMT From: bionet!hayes.ims.alaska.edu!floyd@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Floyd Davidson) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov23.030706.1717@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> In article <1990Nov22.200503.21516@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: >floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: >> >>The Kaypro monitor ROM has no provision for timeout on the disks. >>Micro C's ROM and TurboROM both do. > >You are right - at least mostly. On the K10 with 81-302 ROM the drive light >and motor does timeout. Whether this is in ROM or O/S I don't know. >On the KP-2X (81-292), only the drive motor times out. The light remains on. I should have stated that what I know applies only to the '83 versions. Even the k-10 I had was an old one, so I don't know what was done in the later versions. If anyone is seriously interested in ROM's that handle DSQD disks I could dig up the source code I've got (somewhere) for a ROM that handles it. It will work with 4 drives using the converter that Mirco-C used to sell (still does?) or with just two drives. It has some built in routines to handle other formats, though I never used them. I can't remember what all else it did... Floyd -- Floyd L. Davidson floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu Salcha, AK 99714 paycheck connection to Alascom, Inc. When I speak for them, one of us will be *out* of business in a hurry. ------------------------------ Date: 22 Nov 90 08:24:36 GMT From: sparkyfs.erg.sri.com!hercules!fernwood!portal!cup.portal.com!Yonderboy@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Christopher Lee Russell) Subject: TeleRAM 3000 Message-ID: <36154@cup.portal.com> Has anybody out there in CPM land ever heard of a TeleRAM 3000? I have such a beast.. It is pretty cool.. A little portable deal that runs an early version of CPM. It has a little tilt-up 4 x 80 tilt-up display. I got it for free from the last place I worked. It has a virutal disk drive built in that is actually bubble-RAM.. This stuff is super-non-volatile which is good cuz it has been off for years at a time.. It has a version of BASIC, a Term program (teleTALK), CPM support files, and a coupla others. It has a RS232 and I have used the comm. program and called up BBS's, but the software doesn`t have X-modem but it does have it's own proprietary x-fer protocol. There is a connector on the back for a disk drive, but I don't have one.... The manual I have is copyrighted 1982 and the company is TeleRAM Communications Corporation... The problem is that I have no way of putting more programs in the thing...unless I type them in! The whole unit is about the size of a 3-ring binder.. Anybody know anything?... ....Yonderboy..... ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #190 ************************************* 24-Nov-90 21:26:45-MST,9606;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Sat, 24 Nov 90 21:15:12 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #191 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901124211515.V90N191@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Sat, 24 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 191 Today's Topics: Amstrad CPC -- HDs (2 msgs) BigBoard II Re: Early microcomputer networks Strange Kaypro problems Wanted: Interrupt driven term program for Kaypro II-84 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 23 Nov 90 17:40:00 GMT From: swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!hellgate.utah.edu!fcom.cc.utah.edu!cc.utah.edu!cc.usu.edu!slsw2@ucsd.edu Subject: Amstrad CPC -- HDs Message-ID: <1990Nov23.114001.43015@cc.usu.edu> In article <1990Nov20.212904.14578@actrix.co.nz>, ewen@actrix.co.nz (Ewen McNeill) writes: > In article <1990Nov19.090518.3479@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: >> >> Assuming that it is a Z-80 based machine (display of ignorance here!), it >> seems that it might be possible to get a HD kit from Emerald Microware which >> uses a small daughter board that plugs into the Z-80 socket plus the WD1002-05 >> hard disk controller... > > The machine is definately Z80 based, so your solution might well > work. Software modifications of the BIOS could be difficult, as > could be keeping up with the speed of a HD. The machine runs at > 4Mhz with one wait state (effective speed is said to be 3.3Mhz). > The machine does not support DMA, or Interupt driven Disk IO (the > floppy IO is done by polling the controller as is the serial IO -- > both _cannot_ be done at the same time :-) Actually, the WD1002-05 has a sector buffer on board. The data is transferred from the disk into this sector buffer, after which the host processor can pull the data from the sector buffer at its leisure. DMA is not required, nor are interrupts. -- =============================================================================== Roger Ivie 35 S 300 W Logan, Ut. 84321 (801) 752-8633 =============================================================================== ------------------------------ Date: 25 Nov 90 03:54:37 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!munnari.oz.au!comp.vuw.ac.nz!actrix!ewen@ucsd.edu (Ewen McNeill) Subject: Amstrad CPC -- HDs Message-ID: <1990Nov25.035437.20871@actrix.gen.nz> In article <1990Nov23.114001.43015@cc.usu.edu> slsw2@cc.usu.edu writes: > >> > >> [...] HD kit from Emerald Microware which > >> uses a small daughter board that plugs into the Z-80 socket plus the > >> WD1002-05 hard disk controller... > > [...] > > could be keeping up with the speed of a HD. The machine runs at > > 4Mhz with one wait state (effective speed is said to be 3.3Mhz). > > The machine does not support DMA, or Interupt driven Disk IO > > Actually, the WD1002-05 has a sector buffer on board. The data is transferred > from the disk into this sector buffer, after which the host processor can > pull the data from the sector buffer at its leisure. DMA is not required, nor > are interrupts. This begins to sound very interesting. Can someone mail me the address of Emerald Microware, and also the cost of this small daughter board? The design of my machine (Amstrad CPC6128) is such that it should go in quite easily. I am also interested in any comments that people have about the reliability of this controller, and the sort of through-put that you get. Of course, then I have to find a HD... but that shouldn't be difficult. There seem to be a lot of oldish 10MB drives around NZ, going cheaply. Anyone know of a reasonable access speed for this type of setup (I would be inclined to think that 65ms would be more than fast enough). Thank you all for your help. -- Ewen McNeill. Email: ewen@actrix.gen.nz ------------------------------ Date: 23 Nov 90 17:43:36 GMT From: swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!hellgate.utah.edu!fcom.cc.utah.edu!cc.utah.edu!cc.usu.edu!slsw2@ucsd.edu Subject: BigBoard II Message-ID: <1990Nov23.114336.43016@cc.usu.edu> In article <1990Nov22.030505.6665@simasd.uucp>, donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: > The WD1771 FDC controller used in the Big Board is the same as used in > the Xerox 820 and is capable of using 5.25" floppies. What needs to be > done is to cut the data transfer rate from the 8" rate (500,000K bps) to > the 5.25" rate (250,000K bps) and, obviously, accommodate the 34 pin > connector on the 5.25" drive. Or, you can just grab some 1.2 MB drives from an IBoringM AT. They run at 500 KHz, so should work just fine. -- =============================================================================== Roger Ivie 35 S 300 W Logan, Ut. 84321 (801) 752-8633 =============================================================================== ------------------------------ Date: 21 Nov 90 16:43:09 GMT From: mcdchg!tellab5!nucsrl!accuvax.nwu.edu!casbah.acns.nwu.edu!ils.nwu.edu!aristotle.ils.nwu.edu!lynch@rutgers.edu (Richard Lynch) Subject: Re: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <20@anaxagoras.ils.nwu.edu> In article <1990Nov20.201509.14205@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu> cos@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu (Ofer Inbar) writes: > We had an Apple ][ lab with a Corvus in elementary school; it was > installed when I was in sixth grade (1981). The one thing I best > remember about it was how often it crashed, and how often we lost all > of our files. I really hated the thing, I almost expected to lose my > files every time I went into the lab. The year I graduated from 8th > grade they got a second Corvus (ack!). > > I used to use the Apple monitor program to write short machine > language programs, and would save them on the Corvus using BSAVE. The > computer teacher/sysadmin used to blame me for bringing down the > Corvus by writing binary files to it. And he/she/it was absolutely RIGHT!!! You ex- little s*&%. :-) The BSAVE command takes several optional arguements. There are two numbers to include at the end that specified volume and directory on a system such as the Corvus. If you left them off, you ended up saving your machine language right on top of the directory structure on the corvus. I saw students do this when I was student teaching. If only there had been a manual around, I could have told them what to type in or at least have told them it wouldn't work and why. As it was, they were using some program that would calculate the numbers automatically and it worked great for the standard (disk in slot 6?) setup, but didn't append the extra numbers for the Corvus. "TANSTAAFL" Rich lynch@aristotle.ils.nwu.edu ------------------------------ Date: 23 Nov 90 01:12:22 GMT From: pasteur!dog.ee.lbl.gov!hellgate.utah.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!munnari.oz.au!comp.vuw.ac.nz!actrix!ewen@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Ewen McNeill) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov23.011222.24134@actrix.co.nz> In article <9011211738.AA04958@icf.llnl.gov.llnl.gov> rzh@ICF.LLNL.GOV (R. Hanscom) writes: > In <1990Nov20.221811.7383@techbook.com>, fzsitvay@techbook.com (Frank > Zsitvay) writes: > > is it normal for the > > drive access led to stay lit even after the drive has been accessed?? > > I believe that this is normal behavior for a Kaypro. At least mine > does this. It worried me at first because I have another machine that > refuses to give me back the diskette when the led is on. The Kaypro > doesn't do this. One can remove the diskette if the little light is > off or on! It is definately normal behaviour on my Amstrad (CPC6128) -- but only the B drive. This has something to do with the minimal decoding internally in the machine (I never bothered to trace it down in the circuit diagram). I would say that in most computers it is safe to remove the disk when the little light is on, so long as you are _sure_ it is not being accessed (and, obviously, that there are no open files on it -- especially for writing). I usually listen to the motors (I have 5.25" drives) to tell when the disks are no longer needed (and of course keeping an eye on the program that is working). Of course, there are a few occasions when you want to remove the disk while it is being accessed..... :-) [Yet another comment about computers which follow instructions too literally!] -- Ewen McNeill. Email: ewen@actrix.gen.nz ------------------------------ Date: 23 Nov 90 15:43:37 GMT From: snorkelwacker.mit.edu!usc!cs.utexas.edu!ut-emx!mike@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Mike O'Donnell) Subject: Wanted: Interrupt driven term program for Kaypro II-84 Message-ID: <40090@ut-emx.uucp> I am looking for an interrupt driven term program for the Kaypro II-84. I pulled a couple off of the simtel archives but they don't seem to work. The dates in those source files are 1984 so maybe they are for the older models, who knows. Anyway, I'd appreciate it if ssome one would e-mail a copy to me. \ I can be reached at either the address listed in this header on as mikeod@itx.isc.com Thanks, Mike O'Donnell ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #191 ************************************* 25-Nov-90 16:20:15-MST,10483;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Sun, 25 Nov 90 16:15:09 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #192 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901125161510.V90N192@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Sun, 25 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 192 Today's Topics: Amstrad CPC Amstrad CPC -- HDs (2 msgs) BigBoard II (2 msgs) Kaypro ROMs ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 25 Nov 90 21:33:39 GMT From: usc!samsung!munnari.oz.au!comp.vuw.ac.nz!actrix!ewen@ucsd.edu (Ewen McNeill) Subject: Amstrad CPC Message-ID: <1990Nov25.213339.3433@actrix.gen.nz> Sorry about this folks - the mail bounced. I am slightly more suprised that it did this time, the address looks much more like a domain address. However, please check the address. In article <1543@doitcr.doit.sub.org> jungkunz@doitcr.doit.sub.org writes: > Hello world, as they say. Doesn't anybody ever read my notes? > We, the Schneider/Amstrad CPC User Group of Munich, Germany, very well > support the CPC machines with their various RAM expansions and BIOSes. I must admit that I didn't recall you mentioning a HD. I did try to reply to your earlier messages, but the mail bounced (althougth this return address looks _much_ better). > There i s a harddisk for the CPCs. For all three types the same one! > [...] > > It is necessary to have at least a minimum configuration RAM-disk by either > dktronics or (better) the same brand as the hard disk: > DOBBERTIN Elektronik, Brahmsstr. 4, 6835 Bruehl, West-Germany Now, that sounds very interesting. Both the HD, and the ram-disk. Could you mail me more information about the ram-disk (I already own the dk'tronics one but I have a friend who would be very interested in the one you mention). The HD is also interesting - but costing more than the machine, I don't think that I can afford it. Infact, I would rather go out and buy a '286 or a '386 given the price difference (they are here for NZ$3000 compared to the cost of the Amstrad CPC for NZ$1200). This is mostly due to the terrible support that Amstrad recieves in NZ., and the fact that most people here own PC clones. > I have been using my hard disk together with NZCOM and Z3PLUS [...] I was considering the purchase of NZCOM or Z3PLUS, but I wasn't sure how well it would work with the machine. I am already having trouble with the BIOS patch for the dk'tronics ram disk (under CP/M Plus). Do you have any replacement patches suitable? > Please - do spread the word. There are MEGABYTES of P.D. Software sitting here > ready to go out to any willing regional distributor at very little charge. > Keep Z up and going! I am interested in this. Do you think it would be possible to put some of the programs onto 5.25" floppies if I were to mail them to you? Can you supply a mail address? Ewen McNeill, Secretary for Amswell - Amstrad club of Wellington NZ. -- Ewen McNeill. Email: ewen@actrix.gen.nz ------------------------------ Date: 25 Nov 90 06:25:05 GMT From: mvb.saic.com!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: Amstrad CPC -- HDs Message-ID: <1990Nov25.062505.26432@simasd.uucp> ewen@actrix.gen.nz (Ewen McNeill) writes: > >This begins to sound very interesting. Can someone mail me the >address of Emerald Microware, and also the cost of this small >daughter board? The design of my machine (Amstrad CPC6128) is such >that it should go in quite easily. > Emerald Microware P.O. Box 1726 Beaverton OR 97075 USA 503/641-8088 HDS Host Board w/ software $79.95 HDS Board, WD-1002-05 & s/w $245.00 WD-1002-05 HDC only $185.00 >I am also interested in any comments that people have about the >reliability of this controller, and the sort of through-put that you >get. Should be roughly comparable to a Kaypro K-10. Its virtually the same HDC board (floppy controller added to the -05). > >Of course, then I have to find a HD... but that shouldn't be >difficult. There seem to be a lot of oldish 10MB drives around NZ, >going cheaply. Anyone know of a reasonable access speed for this >type of setup (I would be inclined to think that 65ms would be more >than fast enough). > Probably 65-85 would work just fine. Have fun! - don Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 25 Nov 90 22:49:47 GMT From: zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!eve.usc.edu!mlinar@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (Mitch Mlinar) Subject: Amstrad CPC -- HDs Message-ID: <28385@usc> In article <1990Nov25.062505.26432@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: > >>I am also interested in any comments that people have about the >>reliability of this [WD1002] controller, and the sort of through-put that you >>get. > >Should be roughly comparable to a Kaypro K-10. Its virtually the same HDC >board (floppy controller added to the -05). Actually, the throughput of HDS is slightly (10%) higher since the original Kaypro s/w was pretty inefficient, despite the fact it was only targeted at a one drive, 10M hard disk. With Winchester Connection (the s/w which is attached to HDS as well as part of all KayPLUS ROMs), you can handle any hard drive from 5 to 64M (up to 2 hard drives). Note that the throughput of the KayPLUS ROMs is 30% greater on hard disk than either MicroCornucopia or TurboROM, and 25% faster on video. Just different coding. >>type of setup (I would be inclined to think that 65ms would be more >>than fast enough). Yep. 65 is good enough for the WD1002; they are not all that fast anyway. -Mitch ------------------------------ Date: 25 Nov 90 06:25:03 GMT From: mvb.saic.com!ncr-sd!simasd!simasd!pnet07!donm@ucsd.edu (Don Maslin) Subject: BigBoard II Message-ID: <1990Nov25.062503.26396@simasd.uucp> slsw2@cc.usu.edu writes: >In article <1990Nov22.030505.6665@simasd.uucp>, donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: >> The WD1771 FDC controller used in the Big Board is the same as used in > >Or, you can just grab some 1.2 MB drives from an IBoringM AT. They run at >500 KHz, so should work just fine. >-- Hmmmmmmm, let's see - single sided, single density. Why, that's a 241K byte 5.25" floppy! But seriously, that could be done although you would pay the space penalties previous, I think. - don Keeper of the CP/M System Disk | UUCP: {nosc ucsd crash ncr-sd}!pnet07!donm Archives for the Dino(saur)SIG | ARPA: simasd!pnet07!donm@nosc.mil - San Diego Computer Society - | INET: donm@pnet07.cts.com ------------------------------ Date: 25 Nov 90 16:22:06 GMT From: mentor.cc.purdue.edu!gauss.math.purdue.edu!wilker@purdue.edu (Clarence Wilkerson) Subject: BigBoard II Message-ID: <1756@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> I think the BBII supported DS DD 8" drives. So on a IBM HD drive you could get about 1.2 megs depending on your format. Zenith CP/M supported a 77 track x 2 sides x 9 sectors x 1024 byte format. ------------------------------ Date: 25 Nov 90 23:07:16 GMT From: zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!eve.usc.edu!mlinar@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (Mitch Mlinar) Subject: Kaypro ROMs Message-ID: <28387@usc> In article <1990Nov22.110949.12852@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: >In article <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: >> In order to use QD drives you need to make changes to both ROM and >> BIOS. There are/were a couple of outfits that had slightly >> differing versions: Advent's TurboROM and Micro Cornucopia's MAX >> ROM. > >I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first >ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be >changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, >but if I remember right all the code that handles disk blocking and >so on is in the ROM, all the BIOS does is call the ROM. On most >earlier CP/M systems that code was actually in the BIOS itself. Floyd is part right: all blocking/deblocking of of disk sectors is done in the ROM itself. And, although you can use the original BIOS with two of them (not KayPLUS - the third), why would you want to? The original Kaypro BIOS is pretty poor and makes some bad assumptions. See below. As far as ROMs, actually MicroCornucopia ROMS are pretty poor, but they were the *first* Kaypro replacement. Both TurboROM and KayPLUS are much more powerful and flexible. There is also no need to screw around with assembly language in KayPLUS (and I think TurboROM, too), just run a configuration program. Regarding BIOS: Kaypro assumed that you were in an 8080 world AND interrupts do not exist. (They wrote their BIOS in Z80 code, though, and used the "back-side" Z80 registers.) Bridger Mitchell (TurboROM) is better here in that he understands that interrupts might exist, but ALSO assumes that one lives in an 8080 world only. In other words, the assumption is that IX and IY registers are unchanged outside of your program. KayPLUS does not make any of those assumptions, especially since 90% of the CP/M computers are Z80 and replacement operating systems (like QP/M or ZCPR) all exploit the Z80 instruction set. The most fun I have had in writing code has been the lack of understanding about interrupts. I like to use them because they improve throughput. Even early DBASE and Wordstar code fails on interrupt driven CP/M architectures. Most code I have seen in CP/M in recent years has finally gotten much better in its understanding of the processor and interrupts. KayPLUS (MICROCode Consulting) is still sold by Emerald Microware. -Mitch ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #192 ************************************* 26-Nov-90 13:25:48-MST,12156;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Mon, 26 Nov 90 13:15:06 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #193 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901126131507.V90N193@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Mon, 26 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 193 Today's Topics: CP/M Benchmarks Kaypro ROMs Re: Early microcomputer networks Reply to Big Board II Strange Kaypro problems System use of Z80 registers ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 26 Nov 90 02:35:46 GMT From: zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!crdgw1!sixhub!davidsen@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (Wm E. Davidsen Jr) Subject: CP/M Benchmarks Message-ID: <2400@sixhub.UUCP> In article <1064@inews.intel.com> dbraun@cadev5.UUCP (Doug Braun ~) writes: | To get things rolling: My Z280 system and the Code Works Q/C Compiler, | modified to generate Z280 code, give just about 500 Dhrystones/second. Could you post or mail that benchmark? I would love to try it on my CP/M emulator, to see how fast it runs in a Z80 emulation run by an 8088 emulation. I have run an Apple ][ emulation under that and still had reasonable throughput. -- bill davidsen - davidsen@sixhub.uucp (uunet!crdgw1!sixhub!davidsen) sysop *IX BBS and Public Access UNIX moderator of comp.binaries.ibm.pc and 80386 mailing list "Stupidity, like virtue, is its own reward" -me ------------------------------ Date: 26 Nov 90 06:32:51 GMT From: bionet!hayes.ims.alaska.edu!floyd@apple.com (Floyd Davidson) Subject: Kaypro ROMs Message-ID: <1990Nov26.063251.6554@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> In article <28387@usc> mlinar@eve.usc.edu (Mitch Mlinar) writes: >In article <1990Nov22.110949.12852@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: >>In article <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: >>> In order to use QD drives you need to make changes to both ROM and >>> BIOS. There are/were a couple of outfits that had slightly >>> differing versions: Advent's TurboROM and Micro Cornucopia's MAX >>> ROM. >> >>I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first >>ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be >>changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, >>but if I remember right all the code that handles disk blocking and >>so on is in the ROM, all the BIOS does is call the ROM. On most >>earlier CP/M systems that code was actually in the BIOS itself. > >Floyd is part right: all blocking/deblocking of of disk sectors is done >in the ROM itself. And, although you can use the original BIOS with two >of them (not KayPLUS - the third), why would you want to? The original >Kaypro BIOS is pretty poor and makes some bad assumptions. See below. Hey, what I said was that to use QD disks you don't *have* to change the BIOS. Thats is totally true, (I think). As to why would one want to use the original BIOS: only if you can't get or program a new one. I'll go along on that. Floyd -- Floyd L. Davidson floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu Salcha, AK 99714 paycheck connection to Alascom, Inc. When I speak for them, one of us will be *out* of business in a hurry. ------------------------------ Date: 26 Nov 90 06:12:03 GMT From: tsx-11.MIT.EDU!tytso@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Theodore Y. Ts'o) Subject: Re: Early microcomputer networks Message-ID: <1990Nov26.061203.17589@athena.mit.edu> In article <20@anaxagoras.ils.nwu.edu> lynch@aristotle.ils.nwu.edu (Richard Lynch) writes: >In article <1990Nov20.201509.14205@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu> >cos@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu (Ofer Inbar) writes: >> We had an Apple ][ lab with a Corvus in elementary school; it was >> installed when I was in sixth grade (1981). The one thing I best >> remember about it was how often it crashed, and how often we lost all >> of our files. I really hated the thing, I almost expected to lose my >> files every time I went into the lab. The year I graduated from 8th >> grade they got a second Corvus (ack!). >> The other neat thing about the Corvus was that the "Login program" would read the login/password file into memory and leave it there after it logged you in. Of course, the passwords were stored in the clear, so it was the work of a moment to write a quick basic program to dump out all of the accounts with their passwords. Security? What's that? =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Theodore Ts'o bloom-beacon!mit-athena!tytso 3 Ames St., Cambridge, MA 02139 tytso@athena.mit.edu Everybody's playing the game, but nobody's rules are the same! ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 25 Nov 90 22:44:21 -0600 From: John.R.Lyman@cdcnet.ahse.cdc.com Subject: Reply to Big Board II Message-ID: <901126112316052-MTAVN3*John.R.Lyman@cdcnet.ahse.cdc.com> ] > The WD1771 FDC controller used in the Big Board is the same as used in ] > the Xerox 820 and is capable of using 5.25" floppies. What needs to be ] > done is to cut the data transfer rate from the 8" rate (500,000K bps) to ] > the 5.25" rate (250,000K bps) and, obviously, accommodate the 34 pin ] > connector on the 5.25" drive. ] ] Or, you can just grab some 1.2 MB drives from an IBoringM AT. They run at ] 500 KHz, so should work just fine. I have a Big Board II, and was looking for some 1.2 Meg DSDD 8" floppy drives. I found them to be very expensive compared to 1.2 Meg 5.25" drives. So I went out and bought a PC compatible (i.e. standard) 1.2 Meg 5.25" drive and hooked it up to the BB2. I now have a 1.2 meg floppy drive! I figure that a 3.5" drive should also work, but I haven't tried one yet. I had two problems, 1) the BIOS was assembled to support single sided drives only, so I had to change a EQU and reassemble, 2) the 5.25" drives don't usually provide a READY signal like the old 8" drives did, I just hard wired this signal to ZERO (this causes a retry during formatting when you switch sides, and may cause some when the motor has to start up, but, I haven't noticed any problems. The 5.25" drive is faster than the old SSDD 8" drives, and a lot quieter (the motor shuts off too)! John Lyman ------------------------------ Date: 26 Nov 90 14:53:22 GMT From: sdd.hp.com!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!ea.ecn.purdue.edu!wieland@ucsd.edu (Jeffrey J Wieland) Subject: Strange Kaypro problems Message-ID: <1990Nov26.145322.4099@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> In article <1990Nov22.110949.12852@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: >In article <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Maslin) writes: >> >> 11-21-90 >> >> On the later machines, at least, the drive light (and motor) stay >> on for several seconds after disk access and then turn off. I >> would assume that yours should do that also. > >The Kaypro monitor ROM has no provision for timeout on the disks. >Micro C's ROM and TurboROM both do. That's because the Kaypro ROM does a physical write every time BDOS is called to write a record. There is an option in Kaypro's configuration program (the Write Safe flag?) to turn this off, but Kaypro warns that this might cause some programs to trash files. This probably only happens with files that aren't closed before the program exits. >I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first >ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be >changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, I you want to use a parallel printer with a TurboROM, you have to use the TurboBIOS. It appears that the ROM entry point was changed (at least for my Kaypro 2X, CP/M 2.2H). Besides, you will need the TurboBIOS to support hard drives, RAM drives, or 96 tpi floppy drives. Or to use the Multicopy Turboset program -- lets you use almost any 5.25" floppy disk format on your Kaypro without using memory resident software like Uniform -- it sets up the disk parameter tables in high memory to access other formats. Also allows you to use DosDisk for accessing MS-DOS floppies. There is also a version of DosDisk for the KayPlus ROM. MultiCopy and DosDisk are available from Plu*Perfect Systems. I don't have a current address for Plu*Perfect. DosDisk is also available from Sage MicroSystems East, 1435 Centre St., Newton Centre, MA 02159-2469, voice: 617-965-3552, modem: 617-965-7259 (password=DDT) (MABOS on PC-Pursuit). -- Jeff Wieland wieland@ecn.purdue.edu ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 26 Nov 90 09:58:58 PST From: Bridger Mitchell Subject: System use of Z80 registers Message-ID: <9011261759.AA10916@newton> Mitch Mlinar wrote: >> Regarding BIOS: Kaypro assumed that you were in an 8080 world AND interrupts >> do not exist. (They wrote their BIOS in Z80 code, though, and used the >> "back-side" Z80 registers.) Bridger Mitchell (TurboROM) is better here in >> that he understands that interrupts might exist, but ALSO assumes that one >> lives in an 8080 world only. In other words, the assumption is that IX and >> IY registers are unchanged outside of your program. KayPLUS does not make >> any of those assumptions, especially since 90% of the CP/M computers are >> Z80 and replacement operating systems (like QP/M or ZCPR) all exploit the >> Z80 instruction set. >> >> Not many people are writing Z80 operating systems today (although interesting applications such as background reminder calendars continue to appear). However, I think some clarification of Mitch's comments is desirable. I (and others) have long argued strenuously for strict adherence to the following systems-programming guideline: **** SYSTEM CODE (BIOS, BDOS, INTERRUPT-SERVICE ROUTINES, AND BACKGROUND UTILITIES) SHOULD *ALWAYS PRESERVE* THE NON-8080 REGISTERS. **** This rule ensures that an application that uses Z80 opcodes can run on any z80 system without having to save and restore any of those registers before every BIOS and BDOS call. Note that system code can indeed *use* the Z80 registers (the TurboRom, BackGrounder ii, and ZSDOS, for example, do so extensively). The code must just push/pop or save/restore from memory any registers that it needs to use. A flagrant violations of this guideline is found in an early version of the Osborne Executive rom, which used an index register (probably IY) in a service interrupt routine. Not even the smartest application can safely use IY, since the interrupt is asynchronous, and until a corrected rom was issued early owners were baffled to find that some programs would simply not run correctly. Another egregious case is the BIOS in the ON! computer, which uses af' without preserving it. This topic -- appropriate use of registers -- is part of the larger subject I have called "environmental programming" and discussed at greater length in a column in The Computer Journal. Each programmer needs to be aware of the computer environment in which his/her code may be executing, and take appropriate steps to preserve that environment. Systems code has an especially heavy obligation to allow applications to thrive; hence the abvove guideline. But applications also have responsibilities -- for example, to verify that the host has the necessary resources (devices, type of BIOS, etc.) before executing code that can crash or do damage on the wrong platform. -- bridger ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #193 ************************************* 27-Nov-90 15:26:47-MST,13873;000000000000 Return-Path: Date: Tue, 27 Nov 90 15:15:35 MST From: INFO-CPM-REQUEST@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Reply-To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #194 To: INFO-CPM@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL Message-ID: <901127151537.V90N194@WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL> INFO-CPM Digest Tue, 27 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 194 Today's Topics: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #193 Speaking of benchmarks... Wanted S-100 boards Where info for DEC Rainbow? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 27 November 1990 15:31:08 CST From: "Sig B. " Subject: INFO-CPM Digest V90 #193 UNSUBSCRIBE INFO-CPM SIGMUND W. BURDIN > INFO-CPM Digest Mon, 26 Nov 90 Volume 90 : Issue 193 > > Today's Topics: > CP/M Benchmarks > Kaypro ROMs > Re: Early microcomputer networks > Reply to Big Board II > Strange Kaypro problems > System use of Z80 registers > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Date: 26 Nov 90 02:35:46 GMT > From: > zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!crdgw1!sixhub!davidsen@tut. > s.ohio-state.edu (Wm E. Davidsen Jr) > Subject: CP/M Benchmarks > Message-ID: <2400@sixhub.UUCP> > > In article <1064@inews.intel.com> dbraun@cadev5.UUCP (Doug Braun ~) writes: > > | To get things rolling: My Z280 system and the Code Works Q/C Compiler, > | modified to generate Z280 code, give just about 500 Dhrystones/second. > > Could you post or mail that benchmark? I would love to try it on my > CP/M emulator, to see how fast it runs in a Z80 emulation run by an 8088 > emulation. I have run an Apple ][ emulation under that and still had > reasonable throughput. > -- > bill davidsen - davidsen@sixhub.uucp (uunet!crdgw1!sixhub!davidsen) > sysop *IX BBS and Public Access UNIX > moderator of comp.binaries.ibm.pc and 80386 mailing list > "Stupidity, like virtue, is its own reward" -me > > ------------------------------ > > Date: 26 Nov 90 06:32:51 GMT > From: bionet!hayes.ims.alaska.edu!floyd@apple.com (Floyd Davidson) > Subject: Kaypro ROMs > Message-ID: <1990Nov26.063251.6554@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> > > In article <28387@usc> mlinar@eve.usc.edu (Mitch Mlinar) writes: >>In article <1990Nov22.110949.12852@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> > floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: >>>In article <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don > Maslin) writes: >>>> In order to use QD drives you need to make changes to both ROM and >>>> BIOS. There are/were a couple of outfits that had slightly >>>> differing versions: Advent's TurboROM and Micro Cornucopia's MAX >>>> ROM. >>> >>>I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first >>>ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be >>>changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, >>>but if I remember right all the code that handles disk blocking and >>>so on is in the ROM, all the BIOS does is call the ROM. On most >>>earlier CP/M systems that code was actually in the BIOS itself. >> >>Floyd is part right: all blocking/deblocking of of disk sectors is done >>in the ROM itself. And, although you can use the original BIOS with two >>of them (not KayPLUS - the third), why would you want to? The original >>Kaypro BIOS is pretty poor and makes some bad assumptions. See below. > > Hey, what I said was that to use QD disks you don't *have* to change > the BIOS. Thats is totally true, (I think). As to why would one > want to use the original BIOS: only if you can't get or program a > new one. I'll go along on that. > > Floyd > > -- > Floyd L. Davidson floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu > Salcha, AK 99714 paycheck connection to Alascom, Inc. > When I speak for them, one of us will be *out* of business in a hurry. > > ------------------------------ > > Date: 26 Nov 90 06:12:03 GMT > From: tsx-11.MIT.EDU!tytso@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (Theodore Y. Ts'o) > Subject: Re: Early microcomputer networks > Message-ID: <1990Nov26.061203.17589@athena.mit.edu> > > In article <20@anaxagoras.ils.nwu.edu> lynch@aristotle.ils.nwu.edu (Richard > Lynch) writes: >>In article <1990Nov20.201509.14205@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu> >>cos@chaos.cs.brandeis.edu (Ofer Inbar) writes: >>> We had an Apple ][ lab with a Corvus in elementary school; it was >>> installed when I was in sixth grade (1981). The one thing I best >>> remember about it was how often it crashed, and how often we lost all >>> of our files. I really hated the thing, I almost expected to lose my >>> files every time I went into the lab. The year I graduated from 8th >>> grade they got a second Corvus (ack!). >>> > The other neat thing about the Corvus was that the "Login program" would > read the login/password file into memory and leave it there after it logged > you in. Of course, the passwords were stored in the clear, so it was the > work of a moment to write a quick basic program to dump out all of the > accounts with their passwords. > > Security? What's that? > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= > Theodore Ts'o bloom-beacon!mit-athena!tytso > 3 Ames St., Cambridge, MA 02139 tytso@athena.mit.edu > Everybody's playing the game, but nobody's rules are the same! > > ------------------------------ > > Date: Sun, 25 Nov 90 22:44:21 -0600 > From: John.R.Lyman@cdcnet.ahse.cdc.com > Subject: Reply to Big Board II > Message-ID: <901126112316052-MTAVN3*John.R.Lyman@cdcnet.ahse.cdc.com> > > ] > The WD1771 FDC controller used in the Big Board is the same as used in > ] > the Xerox 820 and is capable of using 5.25" floppies. What needs to be > ] > done is to cut the data transfer rate from the 8" rate (500,000K bps) to > ] > the 5.25" rate (250,000K bps) and, obviously, accommodate the 34 pin > ] > connector on the 5.25" drive. > ] > ] Or, you can just grab some 1.2 MB drives from an IBoringM AT. They run at > ] 500 KHz, so should work just fine. > > I have a Big Board II, and was looking for some 1.2 Meg DSDD 8" floppy > drives. I found them to be very expensive compared to 1.2 Meg 5.25" drives. > So I went out and bought a PC compatible (i.e. standard) 1.2 Meg 5.25" drive > and hooked it up to the BB2. I now have a 1.2 meg floppy drive! I figure > that a 3.5" drive should also work, but I haven't tried one yet. > > I had two problems, 1) the BIOS was assembled to support single sided > drives only, so I had to change a EQU and reassemble, 2) the 5.25" drives > don't usually provide a READY signal like the old 8" drives did, I just > hard wired this signal to ZERO (this causes a retry during formatting > when you switch sides, and may cause some when the motor has to start up, > but, I haven't noticed any problems. The 5.25" drive is faster than the > old SSDD 8" drives, and a lot quieter (the motor shuts off too)! > > John Lyman > > ------------------------------ > > Date: 26 Nov 90 14:53:22 GMT > From: sdd.hp.com!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!ea.ecn.purdue.edu!wieland@ucsd.e > (Jeffrey J Wieland) > Subject: Strange Kaypro problems > Message-ID: <1990Nov26.145322.4099@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> > > In article <1990Nov22.110949.12852@hayes.ims.alaska.edu> > floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes: >>In article <1990Nov22.030504.6649@simasd.uucp> donm@pnet07.cts.com (Don Masli > writes: >>> >>> 11-21-90 >>> >>> On the later machines, at least, the drive light (and motor) stay >>> on for several seconds after disk access and then turn off. I >>> would assume that yours should do that also. >> >>The Kaypro monitor ROM has no provision for timeout on the disks. >>Micro C's ROM and TurboROM both do. > > That's because the Kaypro ROM does a physical write every time BDOS is > called to write a record. There is an option in Kaypro's configuration > program (the Write Safe flag?) to turn this off, but Kaypro warns that > this might cause some programs to trash files. This probably only > happens with files that aren't closed before the program exits. > >>I installed a TurboROM on a K-10, and once had a copy of the first >>ROM that Micro C sold. I don't recall that the BIOS needed to be >>changed with either of them. Mind you I could be wrong on that, > > I you want to use a parallel printer with a TurboROM, you have to use > the TurboBIOS. It appears that the ROM entry point was changed (at > least for my Kaypro 2X, CP/M 2.2H). Besides, you will need the > TurboBIOS to support hard drives, RAM drives, or 96 tpi floppy drives. > Or to use the Multicopy Turboset program -- lets you use almost any 5.25" > floppy disk format on your Kaypro without using memory resident software > like Uniform -- it sets up the disk parameter tables in high memory to > access other formats. Also allows you to use DosDisk for accessing > MS-DOS floppies. There is also a version of DosDisk for the KayPlus > ROM. MultiCopy and DosDisk are available from Plu*Perfect Systems. > I don't have a current address for Plu*Perfect. DosDisk is also > available from Sage MicroSystems East, 1435 Centre St., Newton Centre, MA > 02159-2469, voice: 617-965-3552, modem: 617-965-7259 (password=DDT) > (MABOS on PC-Pursuit). > > -- > Jeff Wieland > wieland@ecn.purdue.edu > > ------------------------------ > ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 26 Nov 90 21:25 EDT From: Pickled Twinkies Subject: Speaking of benchmarks... Hello! I couldn't resist sending this message. I just came upstair to my room after a long day at work, two hours of chorus rehersal, three hours of dinner preparation and dishwashing, and putting my contacts into the enzyme solution for a two-hour bath. BTW, I use Mac's at work. I came into my room to write a littel letter on my QX-10. I turned on the computer, still blind, and, behold, it finished booting before I even put my glasses on. Now, that's performance. (I did cheat: I had to clean the glasses first, but, at work, I can usually check my mailbox AND read all of the stuff by the time the sucker finishes...) -John, still slightly dazzled and very, very proud to be here. P.S. Who cares if my modem runs at 300 Baud? I can drive home and read all the messages here before the thingy at work boots and loads up the emulator. (A little exaggeration never hurts, but I stopped using my computer - not REALLY mine - as a terminal and just use a shabby old VT100 clone down the hall from my office. Will never happen with my - REALLY mine - QX-10!) ------------------------------ Date: 27 Nov 90 16:32:53 GMT From: swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!bionet!ucselx!crash!mwilson%crash.cts.com@ucsd.edu (Marc Wilson) Subject: Wanted S-100 boards Message-ID: <5910@crash.cts.com> Hello, netters! I am looking for one of two S-100 boards. Preferably used, but new would be OK. Neither of these are still made by their respective manufacturers ( who are actually still in business! ). Anyway, the boards are: (1) CompuPro/Viasyn PC-Video board. CGA or monochrome, makes no difference which. Preferably working, but, this too, is negotiable. (2) Lomas Data Products Color Magic. This is an IBM-compatible CGA board. Lives at the same memory address, control ports are at the same address, etc. I would love to find the CompuPro board, because I have software to support it. But either one will do. Might you have one of these lying around, that you're no longer using? If so, let me know! Thank you for taking the time to read this. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Marc Wilson ARPA: ...!crash!mwilson@nosc.mil ...!crash!pnet01!pro-sol!mwilson@nosc.mil UUCP: [ cbosgd | hp-sdd!hplabs | sdcsvax | nosc ]!crash!mwilson INET: mwilson@crash.CTS.COM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------------------ Date: 27 Nov 90 21:50:19 GMT From: att!linac!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!trantor.harris-atd.com!charybdis!sonny@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Bob Davis) Subject: Where info for DEC Rainbow? Message-ID: <4964@trantor.harris-atd.com> How can one best transfer DBASE files from a DEC Rainbow hard drive to a DOS machine? Currently, I have no comm software for the DEC machine. Perhaps there is a "boot" modem program available -- something simple that can be hand loaded to allow download of better comm software??? Please E-mail answers... Thanks. _____________________________________________________________________________ Bob Davis, UofALA'66 \\ INTERNET: sonny@trantor.harris-atd.com | _ _ | Harris Corporation, ESS \\ UUCP: ...!uunet!x102a!trantor!sonny |_| |_| | | Advanced Technology Dept.\\ AETHER: K4VNO |==============|_/\/\/\|_| PO Box 37, MS 3A/1912 \\ VOICE: (407) 727-5886 | I SPEAK ONLY | |_| |_| | Melbourne, FL 32902 \\ FAX: (407) 729-2537 | FOR MYSELF. |_________| ------------------------------ End of INFO-CPM Digest V90 Issue #194 *************************************