James,

 

No, you don’t need floppy.co. that’s only needed for systems that don’t have 
DOS in rom such as TS-DOS. Dropping the baud rate doesn’t do anything since 
TS-DOS will change it to 19200 when you try to go to DISK.

 

Two questions. What type of phone are you using? And what brand of USB to 
serial converter are you using?

 

Also, does the same USB to serial converter and cable work with the PC version?

 

Kurt

 

From: M100 [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James Zeun
Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2016 5:40 PM
To: Model 100 Discussion <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [M100] Android mcomm

 

Alright, I tried the cable and at first nothing. I then dropped baud down to 
38n1e, which is 300 kbs unless I'm mistaken. THEN i got hex appearing on my 
phone, but when I load TS-DOS and try to load DISK. It hangs, it does say disk 
not ready, instead it just sits there.

Do I need the floppy.co <http://floppy.co>  file? Where do I find it? 

 

On 31 Aug 2016 7:38 a.m., "James Zeun" <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Kurt

Nope, no data appears on the screen.

I'll try a different cable and let you know

 

On 31 Aug 2016 5:28 a.m., "Kurt McCullum" <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

James,

 

A couple things to try. First, use the full serial cable just to test the exact 
same setup that you have working on the PC. If that works, the DB9 to DB25 
adapter has the wrong pinout.

 

Second, Do you see any hexadecimal data appear on the mComm screen? If not, 
this could be caused by a bad cable or an unsupported usb to serial adapter. Do 
you know the manufacturer of the adapter?

 

Kurt

 

From: M100 [mailto:[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> ] On Behalf Of James Zeun
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 4:01 PM
To: Model 100 Discussion <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [M100] Android mcomm

 

Also should point out, I'm using the same USB to serial adapter that I use on 
my PC with mcomm.

Only difference being that I'm using a db9 to db25 adapter on the end. Instead 
of a full serial blown cable.

 

On 30 Aug 2016 10:42 p.m., "Kurt McCullum" <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Hi James,

 

There isn't much to using the app. Once it's installed on your Android device, 
attach your serial cable and press "Start TPDD Service". Once that has started, 
you should be able to use TS-DOS. Keep in mind that TS-DOS needs the DTR and 
CTS lines wired to work properly. The Android version is a bit more forgiving 
than the PC version as far as a cable goes. If you have a working cable for 
your PC, use it with the Android.

 

I've tested the app with both a FTDI and an old Prolific USB to serial adapter.

 

Kurt

 

On Tuesday, August 30, 2016 12:40 PM, James Zeun <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

John, as the title of my email suggests. was asking about Kurt's Mcomm android 
app.

 

On 30 Aug 2016 7:52 p.m., "John R. Hogerhuis" <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

 

On Tue, Aug 30, 2016 at 11:20 AM, James Zeun <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Hey guys

Might sound silly, but could someone walk me through using this app. I've got 
the TS-dos rom installed via Rex. But it says disk isn't ready, when I try to 
access disk drive.

There's no virtual TPDD drive in CloudT.

 

You can launch TS-DOS but at this point pretty much TS-DOS is only useful for 
RAM file management since it's not connected to any kind of disk drive. So you 
can use TS-DOS to rename and kill RAM files.

 

I may eventually add a TPDD emulation that will back to Google Drive and/or 
browser local storage.

 

In the meantime, the way to get your files into and out of CloudT is the "fake 
cassette"

 

So if you're in TEXT and want to save a text file, just save it to cassette.

 

Hit LABEL to see your options

Hit F3 which means "Save"

Type CAS:FNAME

where FNAME is the filename you want to Save-As

 

Scroll CloudT to bottom of screen, you should see your cassette file pop up 
there.

>From the list you can download to local which should let you "share" the file 
>with Google drive (assuming you have that App installed).

Alternatively, if you are logged into Google Drive (there's a button right 
under the main window for that), once your file pops up in the fake cassette 
list, you can click the cloud upload button and that will save directly to your 
Google Drive.

 

 

If you're in BASIC and you want to save a file, you type

 

CSAVE "FNAME"

where FNAME is the name you want to save the BA file as.

 

To load files into CloudT, you have a few options:

 

a) Add URL

If you are adding a file from Club100's file archive, it should work.

b) Add Plain Text

If you paste text into the Add Plain Text window and click the button it should 
appear in your cassette files.

c) Choose File

This should let you pick a file from your local machine. On Android, I think it 
should let you pick from Google Drive by launching the Google Drive app. Not 
sure about that. It's system dependent (Android/iOS/OSX/Windows/ Linux) what 
Choose File does.

d) Use Google Drive file picker to stage a file. This will pop up the Google 
Drive web interface from which you can select a file.

 

Whichever method you choose, the file if successfully processed will appear at 
the bottom of the page (at present, at least, you will need to scroll down to 
view the list).

 

Once it is in the list, you can use CLOAD to load the file into the Model 100 
file system just as if the file were on cassette. The file at the top of the 
list will be the next one to load when you type CLOAD.

 

Most applications can pull files from cassette. If you're not typing 
CSAVE/CLOAD from the prompt you generally need to prefix the filename with CAS:

 

 

Let me know if any of that doesn't make sense. Probably the next big thing I'll 
do on CloudT is to add HTML5 / Angular Material fanciness. And then, 
documentation. At this point the UI is rough, undocumented but functional.

 

-- John.

 

 

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