I'm going to have to see if I can find one; maybe Walt can tell us
more, i.e. the speed and the magazines that used them. I couldn't find
any info except for this snippet from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type-in_program

"Some UK magazines occasionally offered a free flexi disc that played
on a turntable connected to the microcomputer's cassette input. Other
input methods, such as the Cauzin Softstrip, were tried, without much
success."

I don't know about commercial muli-ROMs but before Steve's popular REX
and its predecessor came along many folks DIY'd it by replacing the
system ROM or the option ROM with larger EPROMs containing the
original (or modified) system ROM along with one or more ROM images
and a switch on the back to select one; a  simple adapter took care of
the non-standard sockets in the M100.



On Mon, Jul 8, 2024 at 2:43 PM B 9 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Sun, Jul 7, 2024 at 9:13 PM Mike Stein <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> I don't know about outer space but that was a fairly popular medium
>> for distributing audio files including computer programs; they were
>> real grooved audio disks similar but smaller than a 45 RPM record but
>> on a thin flexible medium similar to the cookie in a 5 1/4" diskette.
>> [...] I think that's the 'floppy ROM' that Walt is
>> talking about.
>
>
> What! That's extraordinary. I had presumed "floppy ROM" was just an old 
> Altair term for a ROM one could use to replace a floppy drive (a ROM 
> cartridge). How well did "Floppy ROMs" work? Did they run at 16⅔ RPM, like 
> Voyager's Golden Disk to maximize length? I wonder how common it was to press 
> records (vinyl or otherwise) with executable code.
>
> —b9
>
> P.S. Wasn't there an expansion for the Tandy 200 that added a ROM cartridge 
> port (as well as allowing switching between ROMs)?
>

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