564 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
564 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
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CIS Threads #1
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This document contains some interesting threads from the M100 fourm on CIS from long ago. They may answer some
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questions that you have.
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* Invisible- turning files invisible
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* Assemby Books - some books that were written about the 8085 chip
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* Development Tips for old computers
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* Cleaning the Screen
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* Assembler comparison
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* Is the Tandy laptop still useful?
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* Whats better, a M102 or a M100?
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_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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INVISI.THD
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--- Copyright 1987 by Phil Wheeler
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An original compilation of Compuserve Model 100 Forum messages for use by Forum members only.
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Users of the Model 100/102/200 often find it desirable to make certain files invisible. Some make SCHEDL and ADDRSS
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invisible to clean up the menu. Other programs are made invisible to avoid inadverently killing of them. And in other
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cases security is a factor. These messages discuss some of the pitfalls and cautions to be considered in using programs
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such as INVISI.100 to make files disappear from the menu.
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Message range: 141784 to 142156 Dates: 2/26/87 to 3/2/87
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Fm: Mark Lutton 73106,1627 To: DARYL J.D. STOUT 72716,2110 (X)
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Just don't make BASIC invisible!!!
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Fm: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 To: Mark Lutton 73106,1627 (X)
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OK; I give. Why not? Don Ps..I know it's dangerous to make Hyashi and Suzuki VISIBLE.
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Fm: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 To: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 (X)
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Because if you make it invisible, you may not be able to access it.
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Fm: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 To: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 (X)
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Oh! Dat was so OBVIOUS... Or, do you mean it won't run when you type it at the bottom of the main menu?
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Fm: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 To: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 (X)
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Yeah, as a matter of fact it will. Except on the 200, which doesn't allow typed input at the bottom... But lots of folks
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forget that.
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Fm: Mark Lutton 73106,1627 To: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 (X)
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For real fun, make both BASIC and INVISI invisible -- but first load up your machine with programs and make THEM invisible
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-- you'll have an "empty" machine with only 200 bytes free! Then run "USEFUL"...
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Fm: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 To: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 (X)
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On the 100, if you access an invisible TEXT file by typing in the name at the bottom of the menu, it will corrupt the
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beginning of the file.
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Fm: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 To: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 (X)
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That's interesting. How come nobody's ever done a TXTTIP file on that one for DL2? (hint hint)
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Has anyone ever figured out how come?
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Fm: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 To: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 (X)
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I've never seen an explanation.
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Fm: ROBI 75765,762 To: Don Zeikel 75775,1430 (X)
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There is no tip because the sig had no tips when I put the first INVISI here. The problem is that the OS does not mask the
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invisible bit in the attribute so it thinks as follows:
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the attribute is not a (visible) .DO file the attribute is not a (visible) .CO file it must be a .BA file let's reset all
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all the line pointers and walks through memory until it (maybe) finds something that it thinks is a line pointer that
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points to two 0's in a row, mucking memory as it goes.
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Fm: Neil Smith 76257,3227 To: ROBI 75765,762
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Hmmm...I'm pretty sure the same problem occurs when running an invisible .CO program from that window. I vaguely recall
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running into that problem a couple years ago and getting cold-starts, which you wouldn't get with a .DO file.
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DEVEL.THD
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--- Copyright 1987 by Phil Wheeler
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An original compilation of Compuserve Model 100 Forum messages for use by Forum members only.
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When doing assembly of Model 100/102/200/Kyo machine language programs on my Model 100 with TDD2, I've often considered
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setting up a development environment on a bigger, faster desktop. These messages discuss approaches to doing just that.
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Message range: 161793 to 161912 Dates: 12/1/87 to 12/3/87
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Fm: Mo Budlong 76167,3310 To: all
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Re 100/102 Telcom Differences
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I've done a lot of development on the 100, Option Roms, Assembly type stuff and have hit a bug/snag/anomaly etc in the
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102.
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I develop large .CO programs using CPM's MAC assembler and use an RS-232 loader to load the Intel Hex file and translate
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it and poke it into memory.
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The procedure is download a short BASIC loader using RUN "COM:88n1e". The BASIC loader is too slow for large files, so the
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first file I down load is an Intel Hex file for a machine code loader. This loader is poked into memory by the BASIC
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program and then CALL'ed. The machine loader is very fast and I can transfer 20k .CO files in no time.
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Problem: This technique works 100% of the time for the Model 100. For the 102 which I recently started working on the
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result is erratic. It seems to depend on the telcom program running on the Host computer.
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The Wang PC PCTTY program always worked for the 100 and the 102.
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SmartCom running on an AT clone always works on the 100 but frequently fails (75% of the time) on the 102.
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The error always appears in the first 100 or so bytes of the final .HEX file that is downloaded.
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Why is there a difference between the 100/102? The Disassemblies I have done do not appear to show any significant
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difference, but I haven't been through all the COM code in detail.
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I'm scraping up another 102 to test to see if the one I have is unique.
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Can anyone help?? Has anyone heard of a difference in the 100/102 in the RS232 handler?
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Fm: Phil Wheeler 71266,125 To: Mo Budlong 76167,3310
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There are some difference files, I think in DL8. Diff is mainly in the keyboard matrix -- and I think there are others.
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Not that I know of in Telcom, tho.
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I always use FLTIBM.COM (see FLTIBM.DES, DL3) for such chores. Works on PC-compatibles. Versions for COM1: & COM2:. Give
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it a try and let me know if it doesn't do what you want, reliuably.
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Now -- what computer are you running MAC on? Do you have a V-20 or one thos NEC chips that will run CP/M, or what??
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Fm: Mo Budlong 76167,3310 To: Phil Wheeler 71266,125
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Thanks for the tip Phil. I'm out of town for a few days and will check it out when I get back.
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I'm running UniDos on an Equity III+. It comes with a Z80 chip on a plug in board. Unidos is a TSR. Once installed I
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presume it filters the DOS command line if DOS fails to find a program you requested. Anything named with a .CPM extension
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is picked up and run under a CPM emulation using the Z80 board. It is very fast.
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I also have Wang PC. The Wang runs a non-IBM DOS. The PC comes with what they call a 928 Com board that allows the PC to
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be used as a standard Wang terminal on the Wang VS Mini Computer. The 928 board is a Z80 that takes control of the
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terminal when you are logged on to the big VS.
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Wang provides software that also allows you to use the board for a CPM emulator.
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Since most compiled languages (aside from Borland's stuff) is MS-DOS rather than IBM PC based, Iworked on that Wang PC
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happily for years.
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I have a collection of development tools for the Model 100 all developed under CPM (emulations) including a C compiler. I
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have since ported the C compiler over to MS-DOS so that it runs in native DOS mode rather than under a CPM Emulation. The
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output is 8080 Assembler. I haven't finished writing the cross assembler yet, so I still use MAC.
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Anyway I'll check the notes on telcom differences and thanks for your help.
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Fm: Phil Wheeler 71266,125 To: Denny 76701,40
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Hmmmm..just discovered that I have a cross-assembler in my Z-150 and did not knwo it. I'm running with a V-20 which
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emulates an 8080. And (which I had forgotten) in my CPM directory I have MAC.COM, the standard CP/M macro assembler. It
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will assemble M100 source files (tho they must be in the ROM2/Cleaseau style, it seems) and make an Intel Hex file, to be
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laoded with HEX2CO.BA (or such) in DL8. The last part may be the rub: Slow, I suspect.
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But this is a possible alternative to the use of CS asm with the TDD -- and would let me deal with big sources in the PC.
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SCRCLN.THD
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--- Copyright 1988 by Phil Wheeler
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An original compilation of Compuserve Model 100 Forum messages for use by Forum members only.
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Have you ever wondered how to clean the screen of your Tandy laptop? This file reports the experiences of one user who did
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it with a well-known commercial window-cleaning product. Woe is he! A short thread, with potential for further addenda.
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Message range: 167938 to 167969 Dates: 4/22/88 to 4/23/88
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Sb: #screen of 102-help Fm: steven kimmelman 73720,3546 To: 73720,3546
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I am a Tandy 102 owner. I just cleaned the screen of the 102 with windex. After that I turned on the computer only to find
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dark lines all over the screen on the main menu and even in files. I would like to know what is wrong and is there
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anything I can do about it. I really need my computer the next two weeks and cannpt afford to be without it. Also I would
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like some tips on cleaning the screen of the 102.
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Fm: Alan Rowberg 76703,4421 To: steven kimmelman 73720,3546
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Sound like you really scrubbed the little guy!! Windex is awful stuff. Use 1 drop of a detergent in a quart of water then
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use 2 drops on the screen, wipe gently with a kleenex until it is dry. Don't let any moisture get inside. Either you built
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up a lot of static electricity, or you dripped liquid inside, or you pressed so hard you cracked the inside layer of
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glass. Just 'dark lines' is a little on the non-descriptive side so it is hard to tell. If you are good with tools and
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clever you can take it apart and dry it out, but if you have to ask how then you are probably not clever enough even with
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directions -- it isn't easy nor really recommended. Hint: turn the M100 over and find 4 screws, then pry case apart gently
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from the sides. By the way, I have four M100's and have never cleaned any of them in about 4 years (or is it 5 -- bought
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my first M100 the week they came out). Why do you need to clean it at all -- short of strawberry jam?
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Fm: Wilson Van Alst 76576,2735 To: steven kimmelman 73720,3546
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Possible that some of the cleaning solution leaked into the screen electronics and is causing electrical shorts. For
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starters, I would do nothing: the problem may go away as the fluid evaporates. If you see no change in a couple of days,
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you could open up the computer case and try a blow-dryer ( medium heat recommended) in the area where the cleaning
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solution might have penetrated. I have used Windex previously with no ill effects -- but I spray it on a cloth or paper
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towell, never directoy on the computer itself. I have also used *toothpaste* to clean the screen; if you work at it, the
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toothpaste abrasives will get rid of hairline scratches on the screen surface.
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Fm: Bill Brandon [DPTRAIN] 76701,256 To: steven kimmelman 73720,3546
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I bet what you have is just a case of static. On the rare occasions when I've needed to clean the finger smudges off of my
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screen, I use a single drop of eyeglass cleaner on a piece of lens tissue. Sometimes I get the "dark lines" you're talking
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about, but they go away pretty quickly. Don't panic. If the lines are still there next week, you may have cause for
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concern (might mean you got some windex around behind the cover over the LCD). The 100/102 is a tough little critter - it
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should take more than a shot of windex in the eye to take it out of action.
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Fm: Alan Rowberg 76703,4421 To: steven kimmelman 73720,3546
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Well, we are dying to know what happened. Liquid is more likely to make blobs than lines, and would get smaller with time.
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Did the lines go away like static lines, or does it look like a spider-web of a fracture. (one of mine looked that way
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after I dropped it 30 feet onto concrete -it still worked OK, but was mighty hard to read.)
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ASMBLR.THD
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--- Copyright 1987 by Phil Wheeler
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An original compilation of Compuserve Model 100 Forum messages for use by Forum members only.
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An increasing number of Froum members are moving toward machine language programming for the Model 100 and its relatives.
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A good assembler can make the experience a pleasant one, while a bad one can result in drudgery and pain. This is a short
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set of messages discussing the selection of a Model 100 assembler.
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Message range: 146916 to 147168 Dates: 5/1/87 to 5/4/87
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Fm: Greg Limes 76606,3202 To: All
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Does anyone know of a good assembler package for the Model 100, or even a not so good package? I am about to start
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development on a piece of code that needs to be much faster than BASIC interpreted on the M100 ...
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Fm: Phil Wheeler 71266,125 To: Greg Limes 76606,3202
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Greg, there is a new assembler in DL8 called BYTEIT. I have not tried it, and it is in Basic and therefore slow -- but it
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looks good and the price is right.
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I use the Custom Software assembler -- but I've heard that it is no longer for sale; but if you can get it, it is about
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the best m/l assembler and has blazing speed. Assembles to menu, so you don't have to assemble to operating location.
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Many swear by Polar Engineering's ROM2 package -- which is much more than just an assembler, I believe. Buu it does occupy
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the ROM socket -- a problem for me, since I use ROM's for my "business" programs.
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Lots of choices -- one of them availagle here (actually, there is another one here -- but I've forgotten its name.
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ASM.BA?).
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Fm: Paul Papanek Stork 75515,1651 To: Greg Limes 76606,3202
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There is an M/L assembler in the DL8 that I uploaded here called BYTEIT.BA. I developed it to program a wordprocessor for
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the 100 which is also here called TXTFMT.CO. It supports all INTEL codes, and data types. It's slow (it's written in
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BASIC), but a lot faster than other BASIC assemblers I've tried. Try it out for a few days. If you have questions let me
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know. PAUL
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Fm: Greg Limes 76606,3202 To: Paul Papanek Stork 75515,1651
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Paul, thanks for the line on BYTEIT. You are quite right about the speed, but it is certainly the best assembler in its
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price range! In fact, right now I am talking with CompuServe via a little (134 byte) terminal program written using
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BYTEIT. It is tempting to consider rewriting BYTEIT in assembly code -- then it would truely blaze! Perhaps when this
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program is done.
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Would you object if I uploaded this assembler to the local BBS that M100 types hang out on here in Santa Barbara? My query
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there about assemblers only turned up the standard ones you pay many dollars for, and something like BYTEIT would be just
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right for experimentation and small programs.
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Fm: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 To: Greg Limes 76606,3202
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There are assembly language assemblers available. One of the best was written by Greg Susong, and early supporter of the
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Model 100, and was sold through Custom Software in Kansas. You'll find a file describing it in DL13, ASM100.PRD. It
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included a well written, manual with documented ROM calls. Cost, $10.
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Another is from Micro Demon (David Sumner, and is described in the file ASM.PRD (DL13).
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Several of us use the one by Greg Susong.
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Fm: Greg Limes 76606,3202 To: Tony Anderson 76703,4062
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Tony, thanks for the info on Custom Software's assembler. Why do you say "was sold" and "included" -- have they stopped
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selling this product?
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Fm: Paul Papanek Stork 75515,1651 To: Greg Limes 76606,3202
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Feel free to upload any of my stuff to local bulletin boards. I have been working on writing it as M/L myself, but have
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too many other projects going as well. You might want to check out TXTFMT.LDR as well if you are looking for uploads. It's
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an M/L Text formatter that I wrote using BYTEIT. PAUL
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Fm: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 To: Greg Limes 76606,3202
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Last time I talked to Greg, he was attempting to sell his Model 100 interestes and move on to newer computers. I don't
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know if they're still available. I asked if we should withdraw the file from DL13, and he said no, not at the present
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time. So, maybe yes, maybe no.
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Assembly Books
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Fm: Mike Borman To: all
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I am looking for a book on assemby language programming for the 8085 chip used in the Tandy 102. I haven't had any luck
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finding one at my local bookstores. If anyone knows where I can order one, please let me Know. I believe the 8085 uses the
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same instruction set as the 8080, so I would settle for a book on that chip instead.
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- 0 -
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Fm: Tony Anderson To: Mike Borman
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You can "order" any book you like, at any good bookstore, or any chain, such as Walden Books, B. Dalton, Crown Books, or
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The Little Professor. They have a big catalog, which may even by computerized by now, which lists all the books in print,
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gives the author, publisher, and ordering information. Assembly language books would be listed under generic titles, like
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"Assembly Language for the 8080/8085" or "8080/8085 Assembly Language".
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You can also find stacks of such books in college bookstores which have any sort of computer courses. Here's a list of
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some recommended ones:
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Title Author(s) published by ISBN
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8080A-8085 Assembly Language Programming Lance A. Leventhal Osborne/McGraw-Hill 0-931988-10-1
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8080/8085 Assembly Language Subroutines Lance A. Leventhal and Winthrop Saville Osborne/McGraw-Hill 0-07-931058-3
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Z-80 and 8080 Assembly Language Programming Kathe Spracklen Hayden Book Company 0-8104-5167-0
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Introduction to 8080/8085 Assembly Language Programming Judi Fernandez and Ruth Ashley John Wiley and Sons
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0-471-08009-8
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Additionally, the following two books, which are available from Granite Street Portables, Box 651, Peterborough NH 03458.
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Hidden Powers of the TRS-80 Model 100 Christopher Morgan Plume/Waite Group 0-452-25578-3
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Inside the Model 100 Carl Oppedahl Weber Systems 0938862-31-6
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- 0 -
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Fm: Wilson Van Alst To: Mike Borman
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Tony's list pretty much covers the spectrum. If you already program in m/l, and just need a reference work for the
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8080/8085, the first of those Leventhal books is probably your best bet. On the other hand, if you're new to machine
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language, the Fernandez/Ashley work (if you can find it!) is a very good introduction. One of the few works I've
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encountered that deserves the phrase "self-teaching guide" in its title.
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- 0 -
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Fm: Mike Borman To:
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Today I went to Walden Bookstore to order one of the books you recommended. The clerk got out her microfiche reader and
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started searching. She claimed they were all out of print! Next I went to B. Dalton, and none of the books were on their
|
||
|
list either! They then told me that maybe she could get one of the books directly from the publisher, so I filled out a
|
||
|
form to order "8080A-8085 Assembly Language Programming" by Lance A. Leventhal. It will be 6 to 8 weeks before I get it.
|
||
|
Thanks for the tip on the BASIC compiler - it sounds good.
|
||
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|
||
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- 0 -
|
||
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|
||
|
Fm: Wilson Van Alst To: Mike Borman
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mike, With your background, you may find the Leventhal book is all you need. It describes each of the 8085 opcodes in
|
||
|
significant detail, then takes you through some "typical" application programs. What Leventhal =doesn't= do, of course, is
|
||
|
tell you how to interface your programs with various system routines in the M100 ROM. If I haven't already recommended the
|
||
|
Robert Covington ROM maps in Lib 8, let me mention them here: you'll find them invaluable. In fact, I'd suggest that you
|
||
|
download a set of all the catalog files in Lib 8, for a decent overview of other material that will be useful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Tony Anderson To: Mike Borman
|
||
|
|
||
|
For an extensive list of 8080-8085 Assembly Language books, contact Opamp Technical Books, Inc., in Los Angeles; (213)
|
||
|
464-4322. They advertise "Always in Stock". (whatever that means....)
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Bill Boyd To: Mike Borman
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm sure that the suggestions that others have made are good ones, but I have one more to add to your list: If you want to
|
||
|
go straight to the source, in April I bought the Intel book on the 8080/85 family directly from Intel for $16.40. It is
|
||
|
probably still available. Info:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Order Number 205775-003 The MCS-80/85 Family User's Manual Phone 800-548-4725
|
||
|
|
||
|
This book is quite technical, but maybe that's what you want. It describes each instruction in detail, including number of
|
||
|
clock cycles. It also describes hardware details about the chip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
M100/102 Useful??
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Mike Wright To: all
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm a free-lance writer doing some research on older computers that are still in use. I'd appreciate anyone here writing
|
||
|
to me with your comments about the Model 100/102. Is it still useful? How do you use it? What is its appeal in a world of
|
||
|
tiny powerhouses like the Compaq LTE's and Toshiba 1100se's?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Any comments you'd like to make would be appreciated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: David J. Campbell To: Mike Wright
|
||
|
|
||
|
You can still buy a 102 at your local Radio Shack. I wouldn't call it an 'older computer'. Not yet, anyways. <grin> I
|
||
|
still have an original Imsai 8080 running, now that's an old computer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: PETER ROSS To: David J. Campbell
|
||
|
|
||
|
You tell 'im! Them's fightin' words, ain't they. Model 100. Dinosaur! Humbug!
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Tony Anderson To: Mike Wright
|
||
|
|
||
|
You've probably asked a dangerous question... most portable owners are somewhat fanatical about their portables. What is
|
||
|
the appeal? It's my guess you've never used one...
|
||
|
|
||
|
First, when you turn it on, it's at the main menu, ready to use - IMMEDIATELY. You don't have to wait for two minutes
|
||
|
while it "boots up", then wait another minute or two while you load your application.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Second, a set of four AA batteries will give you 20 hours or more of use, and can be replaced with internal nicads if you
|
||
|
prefer, for less than ten dollars. AA cells are available everywhere in the world. How much does it cost to replace a dead
|
||
|
or defective battery in a PC "laptop", how easy is it to get, and how much actual use do you get from each "charge"? Can
|
||
|
you replace it with readily available batteries if it goes dead in some out of the way place?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Third, what is a laptop use for most? Probably 80% of portable use is in writing and telecommunications; both of which the
|
||
|
Tandy portable class of computers do real well. (REAL portables, by the way...) Professional writers, many journalists,
|
||
|
and business travelers wouldn't take a PC "laptop" if you offered it to them. There's nothing that equals a two to three
|
||
|
pound workhorse like the 100/102 or 200. An whatever you may need to do, if a program isn't available to do it, you can
|
||
|
probably whip it up yourself in a matter of minutes to do exactly what you need. PC's do not lend themselves to "quick and
|
||
|
dirty" programming efforts - especially by marginally computer literate users.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Try one - you'll like it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Wilson Van Alst To: Mike Wright
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm a reporter for the NBC-TV station in San Francisco. I use the Tandy 200 every workday, and I haven't seen an MS-DOS
|
||
|
machine I'd be willing to trade it for -- regardless of price. Before I had the the T200, I used the Model 100 and would
|
||
|
say the same thing about it. Tony Anderson has already mentioned some of these computers' most prized features: light
|
||
|
weight, instant power-up access to files and application software, a universally available, inexpensive, and long-lasting
|
||
|
set of batteries, and a very capable built-in version of BASIC. I will add a couple of items to that list. First, the
|
||
|
physical ruggedness of these computers is incredible. I have carried mine for more than three years now in an unpadded
|
||
|
leather briefcase that gets slammed around constantly in the field. The unit has been dropped, sat upon, and even buried
|
||
|
under the contents of a bookcase that fell during the October earthquake. Through it all, the computer has always been
|
||
|
ready to go whenever I am -- and even when I'm not. Next, the Tandy 100/102/200 laptops are remarkable for their ability
|
||
|
to connect with the rest of the world. They offer parallel and serial ports, and a barcode interface, in addition to the
|
||
|
built-in modem. Internal software supporting these ports is, for the most part, quirkless. Then there is the large base of
|
||
|
both public and commercial programs that supports these computers. It will never turn them into powerhouse desktop
|
||
|
machines; but it means their users can do virtually anything they really =need= to do with a portable. That last point,
|
||
|
for me, best answers your question about the "appeal in a world of ... LTE's ...." My T200 does all the things I need a
|
||
|
portable computer to do. I use it to write scripts, log video tapes (a program to read television "time code" with the
|
||
|
T200 costs less than $100, compared with hardware needed to do the same job on a PC and priced at $700 or more),
|
||
|
telecommunicate with my station's newsroom computer, maintain my expense account, keep a database of phone numbers, and
|
||
|
entertain me occasionally with a game of chess. When somebody thinks of something I need to do with a laptop, and can't do
|
||
|
with the T200, I'll consider a Compaq or Toshiba. Or, I may just write a program to do it on the Tandy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: PETER ROSS To: David J. Campbell
|
||
|
|
||
|
These Tandy computers may have pea brains, but they are in fact all that most of us really need to do most of our
|
||
|
business. I've gotten by for four years on my Model 100 very happily, only occasionally resorting to a desktop when I have
|
||
|
an impossibly large file to deal with. This occurs, oh say, maybe once every six months. At those times I just go to my
|
||
|
college's computer center. Hardly a reason to own a desktop.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: PETER ROSS To: David J. Campbell
|
||
|
|
||
|
And in fact, with all of the third party support, free-ware on CIS and people like Tony Anderson and the other very
|
||
|
helpful SYSOPs on this FORUM, you can do almost anything you want to with a Model 100, as long as you're dealing in
|
||
|
smaller data files.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: David J. Campbell To: PETER ROSS
|
||
|
|
||
|
I've had a 100 for years, and have been happy with it. I know it's limitations and strong points. My 100 was an upgrade
|
||
|
from a PC-1 that I used for field work. (PC-1 is still kicking) The 100 has also served me well in the machine and wood
|
||
|
shop, where it has stored formulas and figured all sorts of calculations. And you can get them cheap too!
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Gene Nestro To: PETER ROSS
|
||
|
|
||
|
re: Dealing with smaller files...What is a smaller file? With the laptop add-ons - disk drives(s) and Powr-Dos' "D-text" a
|
||
|
90+K or 190+K can be edited. With Gold Card System and "Gold Text" a file of up to 20-30meg can be edited...kinda
|
||
|
expensive tho!. I sit here with 2 ea 256K Gold Cards-easily accessable and 2 TDD drives all very easy to utilize...don't
|
||
|
have the portability of the drives but, 512K + 32K is enough for me...so it is there, if you want to spend the $$$. Best,
|
||
|
Gene
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: PETER ROSS To: Gene Nestro
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, if you've got the gold card, or perhaps the forthcoming Ultracard, but most of us are limited to working in text
|
||
|
files of no more than about 29.5K. Of course, as you suggest, if you're willingaccess to much more.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: TRACY ALLEN To: Mike Wright
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mike, I use the M100 and T102, as the brains in scientific instruments and in data loggers out in the field. They have so
|
||
|
many options to connect to the outside world, and a truly marvelous programming capability. They are rugged. To buy an
|
||
|
intelligent instrument, you'd expect to pay $2000 for a custom-designed computer with a stunted keyboard and a diddly
|
||
|
little screen, along with a Byzantine programming language. And you'd expect to pay out the nose for every
|
||
|
addition--printer interface, serial interface, modem. In the M100 series, you have a mass-produced, and therefore
|
||
|
economical alternative. Maybe you could devote a PC or a Mac to the purpose, but you'd lose the easy battery backup and
|
||
|
most of the portability. Lots of applications don't need speed overkill, and in lots of applications mechanical parts like
|
||
|
a disk drive are a liability. That's true even of the Toshiba or other portables of the latest generation. I hope to see
|
||
|
the 100/102/200 or something very much like them on the market for many years to come.
|
||
|
|
||
|
- 0 -
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fm: Mike Wright To: Tony Anderson
|
||
|
|
||
|
tony, Thanks for responding to my query. I'm sorry to take so long to respond.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My "day job" is with a national insurance company in our premium audit department. We have been using laptop computers for
|
||
|
over five years now for field audits. Although I have an M100, unfortunately, its small memory makes it impossible for our
|
||
|
field team to use. Instead we have been using Hewlett Packard laptops--the HP110 at first, and the Portable Plus since.
|
||
|
I'm writing this on my P+ in a motel while on a business trip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We just selected new units for our field use. HP got out of the portable business, you see. We selected the Compaq LTE
|
||
|
because of its long battery life (3 hours), compared with the HP's 16 hours ( or the M100 20 hours). Of course, HP uses a
|
||
|
specialized battery at about $50 a pop, not the four AA's in the Tandy. The LTE has a large memory--640K of RAM and 20meg
|
||
|
hard disk (internal no less). Now that is really impressive. For our use it is an absolute. Yet our old HP's could easily
|
||
|
store a day's work before transmitting into the office. What more could be asked for?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alas, HP's best minds decided that fragile, oversized units with no battery life, but which were IBM compatible, are
|
||
|
really what people need. Eventually, when that's all people can buy, the purveyors of those units can say, "We were right.
|
||
|
Look. No one buys those old style little machines anymore."
|
||
|
|
||
|
That's why I'm interested in writing about the units that really do the job that people want. Now that computers have
|
||
|
become a business tool, the market is being driven by business. In the '90s, that means mostly glitz before substance,
|
||
|
hype before facts. So, if I'm out to impress a client, a fancy box that'll whistle and sing in the background while I do
|
||
|
my song an dance will sell better than a box that simply allows me to write a report or prepare an accounting summary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, I own a M102, and a HP P+, and I use a lot of those other fancy boxes. When I have my choice, its the Tandy. I hope
|
||
|
they continue.--mcw
|
||
|
|
||
|
Starting message #: 24378 Starting date: 19-Apr-90 18:18:27 Participants: Mike Wright 76274,14 David J. Campbell
|
||
|
72707,1346 PETER ROSS 72027,3653 Tony Anderson 76703,4062 Wilson Van Alst 76576,2735 Gene Nestro 73727,1015 TRACY ALLEN
|
||
|
76670,326
|
||
|
|
||
|
LUV100.THD (c)1989 Golden Triangle, Inc. (c)1989 Wilson Van Alst
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: 189074 S14/Private For-Sales 25-Oct-89 13:40:21 Sb: #189068-#Model 100/600 Sale Fm: MEL ZWILLENBERG 75746,3705 To: Tony
|
||
|
Anderson 76703,4062 (X)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tony, Interesting comment. Could you tell me why anyone would prefer an M100 to an M102 if price were the same? ---Mel
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: 189075 S14/Private For-Sales 25-Oct-89 15:18:25 Sb: #189074-#Model 100/600 Sale Fm: Tony Anderson 76703,4062 To: MEL
|
||
|
ZWILLENBERG 75746,3705 (X)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well, the biggest reason would be to replace an existing 100, or to keep handy as a backup for an existing 100 machine
|
||
|
which already had several Model 100-only accessories. Example, P.G. Design's and P.C.S.G's original RAM expansion units
|
||
|
that fit inside the computer, under the hatch door in the bottom, and connected to the system buss. Likewise a Chipmunk
|
||
|
disk drive header that fit the same system buss connector, or mated with a socket on the RAm expansion board. Likewise an
|
||
|
early D/VI, before it became available with multiple cables. If such an owner switched to a 102, all those accessories
|
||
|
would immediately become obsolete.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Second, esthetics. There are a number of users who prefer the "feel" of the 100... it's a bit heavier, and feels more
|
||
|
substantial. The 102, by contrast doesn't "feel" like it can take rough handling. Of course, that's purely subjective.
|
||
|
Lots of users prefer the 102, for the one pound weight difference and the 1/2 inch thinner size.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Third, there may be some folks who like that random changing of the calendar knows as the Date Bug. (grin) If it were a
|
||
|
matter of a first computer, or with no existing accessories to consider, then the 102 would probably be the better choice,
|
||
|
if only for elimination of the Date Bug problem.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But an additional consideration is that there are more 100-only accessories on the used market, and it might cost less to
|
||
|
expand a 100 than a 102.
|