But I've always wondered - how do you get Kermit onto the target machine?

On 23 January 2018 at 20:16, Jordi Guillaumes Pons <[email protected]
> wrote:

>
> Jordi Guillaumes i Pons
> [email protected]
> HECnet: BITXOW::JGUILLAUMES
>
>
>
> On 23 Jan 2018, at 21:13, Paul Koning <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> SAV files would be binaries (RT11 format).  BAS are source files.
>
> There are a number of solutions.  Text files you could load via paper
> tape, with the text file attached to the SIMH tape reader.  That's not as
> good an answer for binaries though it could be made to work.
>
> Magtape or disk are better solutions.  Disk works well if you have a
> program that can write disk images in a format the target OS knows.  That's
> easy in this case; you can use my "flx" (RSTS File Exchange) program to do
> this.  There's an older version written in C, a newer one written in Python
> 3.  For the former, look in svn://akdesign.dyndns.org/flx/branches/V2.6,
> for the latter, in svn://akdesign.dyndns.org/flx/trunk.  There's
> documentation for both in those respective directories.  (Commments and bug
> reports, especially for the new version, would be appreciated.)
>
>
> There’s always kermit…
>
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