The Covington map is from the CompuServe SIG archive.  I assume he was just
a guy that disassembled/reverse engineered the ROM. It was a common thing
for hobbyists to do when they got a new microcomputer.

-- John.

On Wed, May 6, 2026, 1:05 AM Peter Noeth <[email protected]> wrote:

> B9,
>
>   I was working on a RTTY decoder, and I was using the BASIC program "
> RTTY.BA (https://ftp.whtech.com/club100/tel/rtty.ba)" and "RTTY.DO (
> https://ftp.whtech.com/club100/tel/rtty.do)" as a guide. This program
> will receive a serial data string on the RS232 port from the "Terminal
> Unit" (which converts two alternating audio tones to digital "1" and "0"
> levels. It can also send data to the "Terminal Unit" to change the digital
> "1" and "0" levels to the same two audio tones.
>
>   I wanted to make a program only for receive. I was using the "RTTY"
> program to understand how the PIO timer, which is used for the UART baud
> clock, was set to make the UART work at the odd speeds that were used "in
> the old days" by the BAUDOT encoded teletypes.
>
> John,
>
>   The "Inside the Model 100" book by Carl Oppedahl does not list FF8Dh.
> The last address noted is FF8B which is noted as "address of baud rate".
>
>   I have seen the notation in the "Covington ROM Map", and I believe this
> is where Ken got the same notation in his ROM listing (in his personal
> library on the Club100 page).  But it doesn't seem that Robert Covington
> ever wrote a book on the Model 100. For such a detailed ROM listing, I
> would have expected that he would have. He must have been involved in
> accessories for the Model 100 in some capacity.
>
> Regards,
> PeterN
>
>

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