Hi buddy
I was wondering what you would like me to do next, setup Teeny? From the
sounds of it, the way I've been using my M100 thus far, using Telecom. Is
only skimming the surface of what I can do with the machine. So I should
probably get remote TPDD? setup on my machine.
James
On 26 May
James,
I've never used teeny. From what I understand it's a DOS program that must have
com1-4 to load a client onto the M100. But other than that I don't know much
about it. a TPDD client like TS-DOS allows you to connect directly to your
drive. Getting one loaded is not always easy. Obviously
I have a 32bit windows xp rig to run all this on :-)
On 28 May 2015 12:42 am, John R. Hogerhuis jho...@pobox.com wrote:
On Wed, May 27, 2015 at 2:19 PM, Kurt McCullum kurt.mccul...@att.net
wrote:
James,
I've never used teeny. From what I understand it's a DOS program that
must
have
I was thinking about a TEENY.EXE alternative that may help James
(assuming he has a cassette cable). If memory serves me, his XP machine
has some issues with the com port locking up. To avoid this problem,
does anybody have a sound file of teeny.co for a model 100? Then it
could be loaded just
On Wed, May 27, 2015 at 2:19 PM, Kurt McCullum kurt.mccul...@att.net wrote:
James,
I've never used teeny. From what I understand it's a DOS program that must
have com1-4 to load a client onto the M100. But other than that I don't know
much about it. a TPDD client like TS-DOS allows you to
From what I remember Teeny is a file manager, of just a loader. It is loaded
onto your Model 100 using the DOS loader from your PC. The DOS loader is often
called teeny.exe and will only load properly if you follow the connection
instructions properly.
It is small and easy to use and there are
Mike
I'll be happy to help Mark how ever I can, I fell back on Linux mainly
because it seems to handle hardware better then XP. I dont know what the
issue is with the COM port and windows. It has to be an IRQ conflict, but
I'll be damned if I know what. I've uninstalled the port, uninstalled the