Re: [M100] Cassette-emulator ?

2021-04-03 Thread Donald Kyllo

Hi,
I record the cassette sounds into my computer and play them back into my 
M100.  It works well with one of my computers but with the other, the 
computer inverts the signal.  I solve that by connecting the tip 
connector on the output of the computer to the outside connector of the 
M100 and the outside connector of the computer to the tip connector of 
the M100.  I basically invert the signal in wiring.


Don


On 4/3/21 1:37 PM, Jan Vanden Bossche wrote:
We have several TPDD emulators, on several platforms, wich is great, 
because those relieve us from having to maintain old electromechanical 
hardware.


But is there a cassette-player-emulator ?
That would be quite handy for people that can't or don't want to 
upgrade their machine, and are content to keep using it with just 
tape-like storage. Also, you wouldn't have to load ROMware or 
client-software.


If there was, it would be compatible, not only for the Model T's, but 
virtually all across the TRS-80 line, Model I, Model III (and M4 in 
III mode) Coco 1, 2 & 3, probably a lot of pocket computers also, and 
maybe even non-Tandy computers ? (MSX maybe ?)


So, assuming one doesn't exist, would it be difficult to build? Analog 
storage ? Digital storage? AD-DA reproduction ? Arduino, perhaps ?


Just some wild thinking ...


Greetings from the TyRannoSaurus
Jan-80





Re: [M100] General PSU question

2016-04-22 Thread Donald Kyllo
I guess I should have mentioned why I said that.  If your USB power 
source can handle 400 mA or more, it should work fine with the M100s.  
It sounds like it depends on whether your USB source can "see" such a 
low load.  Thank you for that info.



On 04/22/2016 08:01 PM, Bogdan Macri wrote:

400mA is max sustained output.  That does not mean that your computer will draw 
that much current.

I tried using my USB power cable with a 12,000 mAh power bank, but the current 
draw was to low and the power bank would not activate... pity...

Bottom line is that the USB power cable can be used with any USB device on a 
laptop/USB wall wart and the current draw should be within the USB standard 
spec.


-Original Message-
From: M100 [mailto:m100-boun...@lists.bitchin100.com] On Behalf Of Donald Kyllo
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2016 16:09
To: Model 100 Discussion <m100@lists.bitchin100.com>
Subject: Re: [M100] General PSU question

My 102 and 200 wall warts say 6V 400 mA output.


On 04/22/2016 05:35 AM, Joseph Remy wrote:

The back of my M102 says (6V 1.2W)

Online calculator says that would be 0.2 Amps.

Which is a heck of a lot less then the power source I picked up.

On Fri, Apr 22, 2016 at 6:00 AM, James Zeun <james.z...@gmail.com> wrote:

I thought I was 1amp

On 22 Apr 2016 10:57 a.m., "Jan-80" <ja...@scarlet.be> wrote:

That means we can use our Model T, powered bij a general-purpose USB
wall-wart? (using that or a similar cable)

That means we can power our model T from our laptop ?

As I work in an IT-dept., I have an un-ending source of broken
USB-equipment (keyboards, mice, ...) I can cut off cables from.

Isn't the spec for a Model T power adapter 6V, 500 mA ? I should
check my original PS...



On Thu, 21 Apr 2016 21:10:19 -0700, Bogdan Macri wrote:

The adapter comes with an inline extender that swaps polarity.  Just
don't use it on our portable family of devices.

Sent from my mobile device

On Apr 21, 2016, at 19:34, Donald Kyllo <kyl...@bmi.net> wrote:

Nice cable!  What kind of adapter do you use to swap the polarity?

I know the computer guys at a hospital computer department so I
asked if they had any broken keyboards.  I got one, cut off the
cable, bought a plug at Radio Shack and soldered it on.  It's not as
nice looking as the Amazon cable but it works.  I'm sure any large
business or computer repair place would be able to give you a
keyboard or mouse cable.  However, for $10, the Amazon cable is a good deal.  I 
might buy one myself.

I'm wondering how long a USB rechargeable battery would power an
M100.  It might be something to check out.  I know a 6 volt lantern
battery will power an M100 for a week with continuous use.

On 04/20/2016 05:11 PM, Bogdan Macri wrote:

I also have a USB to 6V reversed polarity with the normal polarity
adapter
cable:




http://www.amazon.com/power-cable-Creative-70EM779006000-part/dp/B00
H01VGTQ?ie=UTF8=1=true_=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00



I think it came from the UK and it took a fair bit of time to arrive.



It works fine with the 102/200/8300…



--
Greetings from the TyRannoSaurus
Jan-80






Re: [M100] General PSU question

2016-04-22 Thread Donald Kyllo

My 102 and 200 wall warts say 6V 400 mA output.


On 04/22/2016 05:35 AM, Joseph Remy wrote:

The back of my M102 says (6V 1.2W)

Online calculator says that would be 0.2 Amps.

Which is a heck of a lot less then the power source I picked up.

On Fri, Apr 22, 2016 at 6:00 AM, James Zeun <james.z...@gmail.com> wrote:

I thought I was 1amp

On 22 Apr 2016 10:57 a.m., "Jan-80" <ja...@scarlet.be> wrote:

That means we can use our Model T, powered bij a general-purpose USB
wall-wart? (using that or a similar cable)

That means we can power our model T from our laptop ?

As I work in an IT-dept., I have an un-ending source of broken
USB-equipment (keyboards, mice, ...) I can cut off cables from.

Isn't the spec for a Model T power adapter 6V, 500 mA ? I should check my
original PS...



On Thu, 21 Apr 2016 21:10:19 -0700, Bogdan Macri wrote:

The adapter comes with an inline extender that swaps polarity.  Just don't
use it on our portable family of devices.

Sent from my mobile device

On Apr 21, 2016, at 19:34, Donald Kyllo <kyl...@bmi.net> wrote:

Nice cable!  What kind of adapter do you use to swap the polarity?

I know the computer guys at a hospital computer department so I asked if
they had any broken keyboards.  I got one, cut off the cable, bought a plug
at Radio Shack and soldered it on.  It's not as nice looking as the Amazon
cable but it works.  I'm sure any large business or computer repair place
would be able to give you a keyboard or mouse cable.  However, for $10, the
Amazon cable is a good deal.  I might buy one myself.

I'm wondering how long a USB rechargeable battery would power an M100.  It
might be something to check out.  I know a 6 volt lantern battery will power
an M100 for a week with continuous use.

On 04/20/2016 05:11 PM, Bogdan Macri wrote:

I also have a USB to 6V reversed polarity with the normal polarity adapter
cable:




http://www.amazon.com/power-cable-Creative-70EM779006000-part/dp/B00H01VGTQ?ie=UTF8=1=true_=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00



I think it came from the UK and it took a fair bit of time to arrive.



It works fine with the 102/200/8300…



--
Greetings from the TyRannoSaurus
Jan-80




Re: [M100] General PSU question

2016-04-21 Thread Donald Kyllo

Nice cable!  What kind of adapter do you use to swap the polarity?

I know the computer guys at a hospital computer department so I asked if 
they had any broken keyboards.  I got one, cut off the cable, bought a 
plug at Radio Shack and soldered it on.  It's not as nice looking as the 
Amazon cable but it works.  I'm sure any large business or computer 
repair place would be able to give you a keyboard or mouse cable.  
However, for $10, the Amazon cable is a good deal.  I might buy one myself.


I'm wondering how long a USB rechargeable battery would power an M100.  
It might be something to check out.  I know a 6 volt lantern battery 
will power an M100 for a week with continuous use.


On 04/20/2016 05:11 PM, Bogdan Macri wrote:


I also have a USB to 6V reversed polarity with the normal polarity 
adapter cable:


http://www.amazon.com/power-cable-Creative-70EM779006000-part/dp/B00H01VGTQ?ie=UTF8=1=true_=oh_aui_detailpage_o04_s00

I think it came from the UK and it took a fair bit of time to arrive.

It works fine with the 102/200/8300…






Re: [M100] General PSU question

2016-04-19 Thread Donald Kyllo
I have two of those and just tried it.  One works and one doesn't. The 
one that works has one USB port and just sends the power to the USB 
port.  The one that doesn't work has two USB ports and a circuit that 
detects which port draws the most power.  It diverts more power to the 
one that draws the most power.  It looks like it is designed to only 
work with a battery.  When I put together the solar cells, the panels 
didn't yet exist.  it was fun to tinker with.


Thank you for the suggestion!  I hadn't thought about using the solar 
charger with the M100.



On 04/19/2016 10:56 AM, Gregory McGill wrote:

or just buy one of these:
https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps=portable+solar+charger


On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 10:31 AM, Donald Kyllo <kyl...@bmi.net 
<mailto:kyl...@bmi.net>> wrote:


Several years ago, Radio Shack sold solar cells that put out
around 1/2 volt each.  I read that 14 of them would power an M100
so I bought them and soldered them together.  Around the same
time, one of my power supplies died so I cut off the cord and
connected it to the cells.  It works great in full sun.

You could probably do the same with a few of those small, solar
powered outdoor lights that you stick in the ground.



On 04/19/2016 08:45 AM, bogus maximus wrote:

My Velleman supplies enough current to handle it.  It also has
the advantage of changing the output voltage to support other
devices.

My HP 200LX uses 12v, while my NEC PC-8300 works fine at 6v, but
could go to 7.x volts (ideal).

All these are supported with that device, along with the choice
of output polarity.

On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 8:31 AM, James Zeun <james.z...@gmail.com
<mailto:james.z...@gmail.com>> wrote:

What rating does it need to be? 5v what amps? I was hoping
when I'm not using it on the M100, I could use it to power
the floppy drive.

On 19 Apr 2016 1:55 p.m., "Stephen Adolph"
<twospru...@gmail.com <mailto:twospru...@gmail.com>> wrote:

I'm using old cell phone chargers that pump out 5V on
mini USB.  I
chop off the end and put on a barrel connector.

On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 5:31 AM, Joseph Remy
<podmonk...@gmail.com <mailto:podmonk...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> I went with the "buy an adapter, chop the cable, and
re-solder to
> reverse polarity" route.
>
>

http://www.amazon.com/Power-Adapter-2-1mm-Regulated-Supply/dp/B006QYWHIM
>
> I actually have that same Vellman, but didn't think it
was working.
> Turns out it was a problem with my other M102 not
taking any sort of
> external power.
>
> ~Joe
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 1:02 AM, Bert Put
<b...@bellsouth.net <mailto:b...@bellsouth.net>> wrote:
>> I don't have a link handy because I bought my solution
in Australia, but I
>> use a 6V lantern battery in a battery case which has a
two-conductor wire
>> which terminates in a barrel connector with the
correct polarity for the
>> M-100.  There's also a push button power switch on top
of the battery frame.
>>
>> Hope that helps...
>>
>> Cheers/73Bert/KG4BEC
>>
>>
>> On 04/18/2016 11:45 PM, Bogdan Macri wrote:
>>
>> FWIW, I use this:
>>
>>
>>

http://www.amazon.com/Velleman-PSSMV1USA-3-12Vdc-Switching-Supply/dp/B00068U44I/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8=1461040993=8-5=multi+voltage+power+adapter
>>
>>
>>
>> I have several of them and they work fine at 6V.  You
can also reverse
>> polarity and have the (+) on the outside, as required
by the Tandy portables
>> and the TPDD1/2.
>>
>>
>>
>> Yes, the TPDD1/2 uses the same power adapter as the
M100/T102.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> From: M100 [mailto:m100-boun...@lists.bitchin100.com
<mailto:m100-boun...@lists.bitchin100.com>] On Behalf Of
James
>> Zeun
>> Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2016 17:34
>> To: Model 100 Discussion <m100@lists.bitchin100.com
 

Re: [M100] General PSU question

2016-04-19 Thread Donald Kyllo
Several years ago, Radio Shack sold solar cells that put out around 1/2 
volt each.  I read that 14 of them would power an M100 so I bought them 
and soldered them together.  Around the same time, one of my power 
supplies died so I cut off the cord and connected it to the cells.  It 
works great in full sun.


You could probably do the same with a few of those small, solar powered 
outdoor lights that you stick in the ground.



On 04/19/2016 08:45 AM, bogus maximus wrote:
My Velleman supplies enough current to handle it.  It also has the 
advantage of changing the output voltage to support other devices.


My HP 200LX uses 12v, while my NEC PC-8300 works fine at 6v, but could 
go to 7.x volts (ideal).


All these are supported with that device, along with the choice of 
output polarity.


On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 8:31 AM, James Zeun > wrote:


What rating does it need to be? 5v what amps? I was hoping when
I'm not using it on the M100, I could use it to power the floppy
drive.

On 19 Apr 2016 1:55 p.m., "Stephen Adolph" > wrote:

I'm using old cell phone chargers that pump out 5V on mini USB.  I
chop off the end and put on a barrel connector.

On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 5:31 AM, Joseph Remy
> wrote:
> I went with the "buy an adapter, chop the cable, and
re-solder to
> reverse polarity" route.
>
>
http://www.amazon.com/Power-Adapter-2-1mm-Regulated-Supply/dp/B006QYWHIM
>
> I actually have that same Vellman, but didn't think it was
working.
> Turns out it was a problem with my other M102 not taking any
sort of
> external power.
>
> ~Joe
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 1:02 AM, Bert Put
> wrote:
>> I don't have a link handy because I bought my solution in
Australia, but I
>> use a 6V lantern battery in a battery case which has a
two-conductor wire
>> which terminates in a barrel connector with the correct
polarity for the
>> M-100.  There's also a push button power switch on top of
the battery frame.
>>
>> Hope that helps...
>>
>> Cheers/73Bert/KG4BEC
>>
>>
>> On 04/18/2016 11:45 PM, Bogdan Macri wrote:
>>
>> FWIW, I use this:
>>
>>
>>

http://www.amazon.com/Velleman-PSSMV1USA-3-12Vdc-Switching-Supply/dp/B00068U44I/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8=1461040993=8-5=multi+voltage+power+adapter
>>
>>
>>
>> I have several of them and they work fine at 6V.  You can
also reverse
>> polarity and have the (+) on the outside, as required by
the Tandy portables
>> and the TPDD1/2.
>>
>>
>>
>> Yes, the TPDD1/2 uses the same power adapter as the M100/T102.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> From: M100 [mailto:m100-boun...@lists.bitchin100.com
] On Behalf Of James
>> Zeun
>> Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2016 17:34
>> To: Model 100 Discussion >
>> Subject: [M100] General PSU question
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> So I now have a TPDD2 and I'm using a lot of AA batteries.
Looking at the
>> M100 and the disk drive. It appears both could use the same
PSU.
>>
>> I've looked on evilbay and found something that might do
the trick. But I
>> was curious, does the Club100 stock an official m100 power
supply?
>>
>>






Re: [M100] USB power for Model T

2016-01-12 Thread Donald Kyllo
Would the M100s run on 5 volts or do they require 6 volts?  I'm 
wondering if they could be connected directly to the USB 5 volt lines.



On 01/12/2016 02:59 PM, DRogers wrote:

The title of the ad for it is:


  6V USB power cable for Creative 70EM779006000 PSU part


A quick search of "6V USB power cable" should find it.

David, WA7ZYQ

1.
C'est la vie, c'est la guerre, c'est la pomme de terre


On Jan 12, 2016, at 2:52 PM, DRogers > wrote:



USofA.

1.
C'est la vie, c'est la guerre, c'est la pomme de terre


On Jan 12, 2016, at 2:45 PM, John R. Hogerhuis > wrote:



Amazon US or UK?

-- John.




Re: [M100] Full Null Modem Cable Cottage Industry?

2015-12-02 Thread Donald Kyllo

Hi Kurt,
I have one of these cables and yes, the housing is too thick for the 
M100.  It works fine for the 102 and 200.


Don

On 12/02/2015 09:50 AM, Kurt McCullum wrote:
I can't check all the details right now but I believe this is the USB 
to db25 male null modem cable I posted about a few months back. Though 
the price at that time was $25 not $45.


http://www.ebay.com/itm/FTDI-USB-DB-25-Male-Serial-RS-232-Null-Modem-with-Full-Modem-Handshake-Cable-/161782416490?hash=item25aafbc46a:g:U84AAOSwyQtV2kfV 



Also, I think the housing is too thick for the M100 but there was 
somebody on the list that tested it with both the 102 and 200 and it 
worked fine.


Kurt

On 12/2/2015 9:00 AM, John R. Hogerhuis wrote:
If you were building one I would recommend an all in one cable that 
hooks straight from a USB port to any model t particularly the model 
100 with no adapters necessary.


Also it should be full null rather than defeating flow control as the 
old complink cable did in order to support programs like HTERM which 
rely on flow control.


And ftdi is the only way to go on Windows.

Maybe a very small pcb that can be built into a thin hood shell with 
a surface mounted ftdi chip and max232?


All that said you could accomplish mostly the same thing by simply 
aggregating the proper OTS parts and software and offering it for 
sale as a package with documentation. That way it takes out all the 
research and guesswork and that's the real trouble.


-- John.







Re: [M100] time

2015-10-23 Thread Donald Kyllo
While the time is being displayed, press the ? to get a description of 
all the numbers in the string.


Don

On 10/23/2015 07:09 PM, Kurt McCullum wrote:
I just tested this on my T200 with mComm. Works fine. From the file 
viewer Press ! and then the Telnet URL prompt comes up. Entering 
time.nist.gov:13 and pressing ENTER gives the time. I'm not sure what 
the numbers before the date or after the seconds are but it gives a 
single time entry.


Kurt

On 10/23/2015 6:14 PM, Donald Kyllo wrote:
time.nist.gov 13 







Re: [M100] time

2015-10-23 Thread Donald Kyllo

Here's the description from the modem:

   DESCRIPTION OF THE
  AUTOMATED COMPUTER TIME SERVICE (ACTS)

The service uses multi-speed modems which should automatically adapt to
the speed of the originating modem.  All messages are sent using standard
ASCII characters with 8 bits, no parity and 1 stop bit.

Format of the time message:

 D  L D
  MJD  YR MO DA H  M  S  ST S UT1 msADV 
 47999 90-04-18 21:39:17 50 0 +.1 045.0 UTC(NIST) *
 47999 90-04-18 21:39:18 50 0 +.1 045.0 UTC(NIST) *
 etc...

 The message transmits Universal Coordinated Time (UTC), the
official world time referred to the zero meridian of longitude.

The MJD is the modified Julian Day number, which advances by 1 at 
UTC every day.

The DST parameter provides information about Daylight Saving Time, using
the model valid for the continental US:

  00 = US is on standard time (ST).50 = US is on DST.
  99 to 51 = Now on ST, go to DST when your local time is 2:00 am and the
 count is 51.  The count is decremented daily at 00 (UTC).
  49 to 01 = Now on DST, go to ST when your local time is 2:00 am and the
 count is 01.  The count is decremented daily at 00 (UTC).

LS = Leap second flag is set to "1" to indicate that a leap second is to be
added as 23:59:60 UTC on the last day of the current month (usually June or
December).  The flag will be set to "2" if the last second of the current
month is to be dropped. The second following 23:59:58 UTC on the last day
of the month will be 00:00:00 of the next day in that case.  The flag will
remain on for the entire month before a leap-second event; it will be 0
otherwise.

DUT1 = Approximate difference between earth rotation time (UT1) and UTC, in
steps of 0.1 second. DUT1 = UT1 - UTC

The specified time is valid when the "*" on-time marker is received.  This
character will be transmitted 45 ms early to compensate for the nominal
delay in the modems and the telephone connection.

The maximum connection time will be 40 seconds unless you transmit a
"%" character before then.  If this character is received, the transmitter
will break the connection at the next on-time marker.

For more information write:
NIST-ACTS
Time and Frequency Division
Mail Stop 847
325 Broadway
Boulder, CO  80303

e-mail: t...@time.nist.gov

The software and additional information on ACTS and other
services are also available on the web at
www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq.


On 10/23/2015 07:39 PM, Kurt McCullum wrote:
Well maybe ? works with a modem connection but with Telnet it 
disconnects after giving the time. But the link I sent has all the 
information of the fields.


I could build something into mComm to accept a time request from the 
model-t. A simple Basic program could open up the port, request the 
time and set the time & date of the model-T with the information that 
is sent back. But realistically, how useful is that?


Kurt

On 10/23/2015 7:30 PM, Donald Kyllo wrote:
While the time is being displayed, press the ? to get a description 
of all the numbers in the string.


Don

On 10/23/2015 07:09 PM, Kurt McCullum wrote:
I just tested this on my T200 with mComm. Works fine. From the file 
viewer Press ! and then the Telnet URL prompt comes up. Entering 
time.nist.gov:13 and pressing ENTER gives the time. I'm not sure 
what the numbers before the date or after the seconds are but it 
gives a single time entry.


Kurt

On 10/23/2015 6:14 PM, Donald Kyllo wrote:
time.nist.gov 13 













Re: [M100] Model T Basic Help Needed!

2015-07-09 Thread Donald Kyllo

Hi Ray,
What is your HIMEM set to?  It should be set to just below where TS-DOS 
loads.  Otherwise, loading a program could overwrite TS-DOS and crash it.


Don


On 07/09/2015 08:48 AM, Ray Lopez wrote:

Hi All,

I've been having to do a lot of writing lately, so I decided to dust 
off one of my lovely Tandy 102s.


I had used it heavily about 3 years ago, and never had a problem with 
saving and retrieving files from my NADSBox, using TS-DOS.


I installed TS-DOS using the DSKMGR.100 BASIC file.  The install went 
smoothly, and all seemed OK.  I was able to save and retrieve *.DO 
files easily to and from the 102 and my NADSBox.


Then I tried to load a *.BA program from the NADSBox to my 102, and 
this is where everything went wrong.  The *.BA program loaded onto my 
102, but it wrote itself into RAM that was being used by another *.BA 
program I had there, or by the TS-DOS *.CO file itself!


I tried doing some CLEAR commands in the BASIC interpreter prior to 
loading *.BA files, to no avail.  The *.BA files would get loaded, 
then would eventually cause the 102 to do a hard reset, taking me back 
to January 1, 1900.  :-)


I know this is really basic stuff, but I have spent hours combing 
through the references on club100.org and bitchin100.com and have not 
had any luck.  It's weird because I never had this problem before, but 
I am clearly forgetting something very basic.


If anyone has any advice on what I am doing wrong in this scenario, I 
would be much obliged.  thanks!


RL





Re: [M100] Model T Basic Help Needed!

2015-07-09 Thread Donald Kyllo

Hi Ray,
I should have added, if TS-DOS starts at 5, then type in:
   CLEAR 200,5
You can change the 200 to however much string space you need for your 
program.


Don


On 07/09/2015 01:58 PM, Donald Kyllo wrote:

Hi Ray,
What is your HIMEM set to?  It should be set to just below where 
TS-DOS loads.  Otherwise, loading a program could overwrite TS-DOS and 
crash it.


Don


On 07/09/2015 08:48 AM, Ray Lopez wrote:

Hi All,

I've been having to do a lot of writing lately, so I decided to dust 
off one of my lovely Tandy 102s.


I had used it heavily about 3 years ago, and never had a problem with 
saving and retrieving files from my NADSBox, using TS-DOS.


I installed TS-DOS using the DSKMGR.100 BASIC file.  The install went 
smoothly, and all seemed OK.  I was able to save and retrieve *.DO 
files easily to and from the 102 and my NADSBox.


Then I tried to load a *.BA program from the NADSBox to my 102, and 
this is where everything went wrong.  The *.BA program loaded onto my 
102, but it wrote itself into RAM that was being used by another *.BA 
program I had there, or by the TS-DOS *.CO file itself!


I tried doing some CLEAR commands in the BASIC interpreter prior to 
loading *.BA files, to no avail.  The *.BA files would get loaded, 
then would eventually cause the 102 to do a hard reset, taking me 
back to January 1, 1900.  :-)


I know this is really basic stuff, but I have spent hours combing 
through the references on club100.org and bitchin100.com and have not 
had any luck.  It's weird because I never had this problem before, 
but I am clearly forgetting something very basic.


If anyone has any advice on what I am doing wrong in this scenario, I 
would be much obliged.  thanks!


RL








Re: [M100] Shortcut to end of .DO file?

2015-03-22 Thread Donald Kyllo

No problem Sebastian.  Glad to help.


On 3/22/2015 7:38 PM, scoci...@gmail.com wrote:
Worked perfectly. Thanks and sorry for not consulting the manual 
first. Amazingly fast response time, btw.


Sebastian S. Cocioba
CEO  Founder
New York Botanics, LLC
Plant Biotech RD

From: Donald Kyllo mailto:kyl...@bmi.net
Sent: ‎3/‎22/‎2015 10:28 PM
To: m100@lists.bitchin100.com mailto:m100@lists.bitchin100.com
Subject: Re: [M100] Shortcut to end of .DO file?

Hi Sebastian,
Hold down the control (CTRL) key and press the down arrow.

Don


On 3/22/2015 7:17 PM, scoci...@gmail.com wrote:
Pardon the lack of RTFM but does anyone know how to get to the end of 
a .DO file without scrolling through? I'm keeping a daily journal of 
lab work and its going to get fairly long. Getting to the end quickly 
would be great. There has to be a keyboard shortcut, right?


Sebastian S. Cocioba
CEO  Founder
New York Botanics, LLC
Plant Biotech RD