Hello,
When I looked at this, I saw that it was based on the z80 code written by Parag
Patel that I had been using. It compiled for me without any issues, and uses
the same image structure (for the A-Hdrive) as the one I had been using, so it
could open the cpm disk images I had already
Windows 10. And btw, my desktop computer has an actual serial port, the 9
pin kind, so I'm not using any kind of DB9/25-to-USB device or anything.
On Thu, Nov 12, 2020 at 8:30 PM MikeS wrote:
> Just curious: Which version of Windows were you using for this?
>
> m
>
> - Original Message
Just curious: Which version of Windows were you using for this?
m
- Original Message -
From: Russell Flowers
To: m...@bitchin100.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 2020 9:24 PM
Subject: Re: [M100] Simple communication, M100 -> com1: ... can download from
PC, but can't upload
with teraterm I had to specify 8 bit transfer. frustrating till i figured
that out!
On Thu, Nov 12, 2020 at 4:37 PM Desi Villaescusa wrote:
> I've also found the terminal software can make a difference for me...
> I wasn't haveing great luck with Putty or Teraterm at all... (First
> things I
I've also found the terminal software can make a difference for me...
I wasn't haveing great luck with Putty or Teraterm at all... (First things I tried with my Win10 laptop)
So I pulled out an old CD and copied Hyperterm to my Wn10 machine, and that worked great (as it used to when I used
G'day Philip,
Yep, I've read through that section several times in an attempt to
reconfigure the drive parameters on the Kaypro to support a larger disk
on the SD card reader. But that one is currently beyond me. :-)
That's why I was so happy when you built a 3.5Mb drive on REXCPM. And
I'll
Exactly, altering the drive tables of the Linux emulator should enable
execution of an M100 CP/M image I would think. Conversely, massaging the
image to suit what the emulator expects might be the way to go. You'd
need to be conversant with "CP/M Alteration Guide" - it contains all
info
keeping my experiment rolling ;)
I just received the "high speed rated" NSC800, supporting 4MHz.
Now, I did successfully run the 2.5 MHz rated part at 5MHz, so I will be
interested to see if the 4MHz part is really any faster in the M100.
as usual, I will report back.
On Fri, Nov 6, 2020 at
Since I asked the original question about CP/M emulation I thought I should
share what I had been using to prompt it:
This emulator has BDOS integration directly to the filesystem (no
getunix/putunix because it just sees the host directory):
https://github.com/jhallen/cpm
It seems to work
Hello,
That's interesting because my 'ancient code' compiles and even works with
putunix and getunix. But when I looked at what was on github and what I have,
there are differences. As you stated, if I took out the -DPOSIX_TTY from the
Makefile, the github source compiled for me, and I could
Perhaps Philip can comment when he sees this.
The tool I wrote to do backups, isn't purely a binary dump of the disk
contents.
It could be, though.
What RXCUTL does (by memory here... ;) ) is there is a first byte providing
the block #, followed by 16k of block data. (or 32k, not sure now).
> -Original Message-
> I wonder if you changed the drive geometry info in CP/M to match the
> M100 definition, if it would work?
Probably - the readme says A: and B: emulate the 'ST-506 5Mb 5" 5Mb drive' and
any other drives (C: and down) emulate 'traditional 8" 256k drives'.
I have no
I wonder if you changed the drive geometry info in CP/M to match the M100
definition, if it would work?
On Thu, Nov 12, 2020 at 9:02 AM Jim Anderson wrote:
> (On a lark, I also tried taking my REXCPM backup file and dropping it in
> place of the emulator's A: virtual disk file but as I
> -Original Message-
> It was written ages ago by someone named Pareg Patel. I lost contact
> with him after a while but I recently found the source on github:
> [...]
> Just for a lark, I tried to compile just now and while it gave some
> errors, it did produce a useable binary (gcc
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