I think what we need is a video showing TS-DOS (preferably in ROM) or mcomm in 
action; I don't know why anyone would want to fool with terminal programs these 
days (especially at 300 baud ;-) with so many better alternatives around unless 
there were a special reason.

As John pointed out, LaddieAlpha (the 'server')works with all three platforms.

For actually logging into a 'NIX system (as opposed to transferring file) HTERM 
is a Telcom replacement that uses hardware handshaking to get around XON/XOFF 
issues (and run faster).

BTW, AFAIK you can't transfer 'real' .BA files with terminal programs or the 
method below, only plain text .DO versions (although of course they may be 
confusingly mislabelled as .BA) That's caused a lot of confusion and crashes if 
they're not renamed during the transfer (although I believe LaddieAlpha also 
takes care of that issue.)

m
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Roger Mullins 
  To: Model 100 Discussion 
  Sent: Friday, April 28, 2017 10:59 AM
  Subject: Re: [M100] Questions regarding Full Null Modem Cables, specif Serial 
to USB


  That cable should work fine for you - all I do is go into BASIC on the M100 
and type

  new
  load"com:38n1e" 

  ...then launch minicom on my Linux box and use 'send file' and select the .BA 
(or whatever) file that I've downloaded.  Actually I just realized I've never 
tried it in reverse but I suppose that would work as well.



  -Roger



  On Fri, Apr 28, 2017 at 7:16 AM, Paul Bucalo <[email protected]> wrote:

    Roger, what I want to accomplish at this time is what you are doing. I 
download a slew of programs from old archives and I haven't a means of getting 
them into my M100 with the hardware I have now. Today I will order the Belkin 
cable. At $2 bucks and shipping it's worth having around. 

    I appreciate all the comments and suggestions offered up here. Resurrecting 
my M100 is totally about spending time in the past. I don't need this to work 
for any project or importance. The M100 was my first working computer. It was 
the late 80s. I was a Property and Casualty Insurance Agent in a small agency, 
looking for an automated means of contact management. It worked. It worked 
well. So I look forward to playing around with the options given. It's not the 
destination that I look forward to, but how much I can learn on the way there. 
Forward to the Past! :)





    -----Original Message-----
    From: Roger Mullins <[email protected]>
    To: Model 100 Discussion <[email protected]>

    Sent: Fri, Apr 28, 2017 3:11 am
    Subject: Re: [M100] Questions regarding Full Null Modem Cables, specif 
Serial to USB


    Right, that's what it takes for minicom to work properly. My distro is 
actually a hard drive install of Puppy - I have an ancient HP laptop and Puppy 
was the only one that could find my particular Broadcom wireless adapter. 


    Anyhow, that cable works great for no more than I do with it, which is 
basically transferring downloaded files to my M100.




    Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device


    -------- Original message --------
    From: Daryl Tester <[email protected]> 
    Date: 04/27/2017 9:06 PM (GMT-05:00) 
    To: [email protected] 
    Subject: Re: [M100] Questions regarding Full Null Modem Cables, specif 
Serial to USB 

    Roger wrote:

    >     I also use Linux, running minicom to communicate with my M100 on
    >  ttyd0.  From the command line:
    >
    >     rm /dev/ttyd0
    >     ln -s ttyUSB0 /dev/ttyd0
    >     minicom

    On Thu, 27 Apr 2017 20:33:59 -0400, Paul Bucalo wrote:

    > You said you are also using Linux. What flavor of Linux are you
    > running that uses ttyd instead of ttyS for serial devices? I only 
    > know
    > of BSD/*nix that uses that device designation.

    I think he's done that for minicom default reasons, not Linux reasons.
    You can override it (of course) to point at whatever device you like,
    the caveat being that USB serial devices tend to dynamically jump all
    over the place (unless there is some udev magic).

    -- 
    Regards,
       Daryl Tester
       Handcrafted Computers Pty. Ltd.


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