1051 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
1051 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
--------------------------------------
|
|
SYNDICATE ZMAGAZINE ISSUE #87
|
|
January 4, 1988 Volume 3 Number 1
|
|
|
|
(c)1988 Syndicate Publications
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
Editor
|
|
Ron Kovacs
|
|
|
|
Circulation Assistants
|
|
Ken Kirchner
|
|
Susan Perry
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
Xx Index 87
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
[Learning to Program in Basic]
|
|
by Jackson Beebe
|
|
|
|
[Commodore PC Reviewed]
|
|
by Ernest Mau
|
|
|
|
[Disk Drives For Your Atari]
|
|
by Bill Wilkinson
|
|
|
|
[Have Every Program Ever Written]
|
|
submitted by John Nagy
|
|
|
|
[Marshals Seize Fake 2600 Games]
|
|
from Buisness News
|
|
|
|
[Other Atari News]
|
|
by Antic Online
|
|
|
|
[Cable-Tec Expo Sold Out]
|
|
by Howard Whitman
|
|
|
|
[Bullet Proof RamDisk]
|
|
by Tony Hursh
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx LEARNING TO PROGRAM IN ATARI BASIC
|
|
...Part 1 of a continuing series...
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
LESSON 1.A Version 1.02
|
|
|
|
Getting Started in Atari BASIC
|
|
|
|
(C)1986 by Jackson Beebe
|
|
|
|
This lesson is placed in the Public
|
|
Domain. Individuals, user groups and
|
|
BBS's may reprint, copy or distribute
|
|
it, as long as this notice remains
|
|
intact with the lesson.
|
|
|
|
CONTENTS:
|
|
Line numbers
|
|
REM statement
|
|
PRINT statement
|
|
Multiple statements on a line
|
|
NEW command
|
|
Line editing
|
|
RUN command
|
|
SAVEing a program
|
|
Directory
|
|
LOADing a program
|
|
|
|
This series assumes no prior knowledge
|
|
of BASIC, or programming. Each lesson
|
|
ends with Sample programs. Writing the
|
|
sample programs is STRONGLY
|
|
recommended, as the main learning in
|
|
BASIC takes place during the writing
|
|
of programs. ATARI BASIC is the BASIC
|
|
used in these lessons.
|
|
|
|
WHAT'S NEEDED:
|
|
--------------
|
|
You need an 8-bit Atari computer, with
|
|
ATARI BASIC (cartridge with 400/800 or
|
|
built-in with 800XL/130XE), and
|
|
preferably a disk drive. A printer is
|
|
a definite plus, as it gives you the
|
|
ability to print out the lessons, and
|
|
make printouts of your program. This
|
|
is handy in development and debugging.
|
|
Beg borrow or check out a copy of some
|
|
BASIC textbook. Examples are USING
|
|
BASIC by Julien Hennefeld (lots of
|
|
copies around in campus bookstores) or
|
|
INSIDE ATARI BASIC by Bill Carris. The
|
|
ATARI BASIC REFERENCE GUIDE, a 15 page
|
|
booklet that comes with the computer
|
|
is excellent, and nearly necessary for
|
|
the Atari versions of BASIC commands.
|
|
|
|
One of the handiest of all things to
|
|
keep beside your computer, is the
|
|
ANALOG Computing POCKET REFERENCE
|
|
CARD, an 8 1/2 by 28 inch folded 16
|
|
page collection of BASIC commands,
|
|
PEEKS, POKES, keyboard values,
|
|
graphics, error codes, etc. They sell
|
|
it for $7.95, which is a bit pricey,
|
|
but worth it.
|
|
|
|
BOOTING UP IN BASIC:
|
|
====================
|
|
If you have a 400/800, turn everything
|
|
off. Install the BASIC cartridge. Turn
|
|
on the disk drive. Install a disc with
|
|
DOS. Set top of form, and turn on
|
|
printer. Turn on the computer. For an
|
|
800XL/130XE, you don't need to install
|
|
a cartridge, as BASIC is built in.
|
|
When you see the READY prompt, you are
|
|
in BASIC. You are now ready to write a
|
|
BASIC program in the Random Access
|
|
Memory (RAM) of your computer.
|
|
|
|
Turning on a computer with BASIC, and
|
|
NO disk, takes you right to BASIC, as
|
|
shown by the READY prompt, but you
|
|
can't save your programs without a
|
|
disk drive or cassette recorder.
|
|
|
|
You can boot up right to the DOS menu,
|
|
by removing thE BASIC cartridge in a
|
|
400/800, or switching BASIC out of the
|
|
system by holding down the OPTION key
|
|
while turning on your 800XL/130XE.
|
|
Hold down OPTION until you see
|
|
printing on the screen.
|
|
|
|
There are three versions of BASIC in
|
|
Atari 8 bits: A, B, and C. A and B
|
|
each have problems, for example
|
|
version B's adding an extra 16 bytes
|
|
each time you save a file, over and
|
|
over, or it's fatal lockup. Version C
|
|
is very nice, and behaves perfectly.
|
|
It is available as a cartridge from:
|
|
|
|
Atari Customer Relations
|
|
1196 Borregas Avenue
|
|
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
|
|
|
|
The price is $15 + 2.50 postage. Well
|
|
worth it.
|
|
|
|
To find which BASIC you have, type:
|
|
|
|
PRINT PEEK(43234)
|
|
|
|
If you get 162 you have A
|
|
96 B
|
|
234 C
|
|
|
|
Fixes to B are available as type-in
|
|
programs from the magazines.
|
|
|
|
INTRODUCTION:
|
|
=============
|
|
All novices or beginners face three
|
|
tasks in learning how to program:
|
|
|
|
1. Learning to operate the hardware.
|
|
2. Learning to program.
|
|
3. Learning the BASIC language.
|
|
|
|
Those of you familiar with your
|
|
computers, or who already know another
|
|
programming language, are already part
|
|
way there!
|
|
|
|
BASIC stands for Beginners All Purpose
|
|
Symbolic Instruction Code, and was
|
|
formulated in 1963 by John Kemeny and
|
|
Thomas Kurtz at Darthmouth College.
|
|
BASIC is closely related to FORTRAN,
|
|
having similar features. If you know
|
|
FORTRAN, you nearly know BASIC.
|
|
|
|
BASIC is a HIGH level language, so
|
|
called because it operates -high- up,
|
|
away from the machine. You can issue
|
|
complex commands such as PRINT,
|
|
without having to worry about how many
|
|
bytes you will need, or clearing space
|
|
out in RAM for print, etc. These are
|
|
concerns in LOW level languages, such
|
|
as machine language, or assembler
|
|
language. A lot of housekeeping has
|
|
been done for us in BASIC, and we can
|
|
concentrate on using the language,
|
|
without having to understand how the
|
|
machine actually works internally.
|
|
|
|
The price paid, is that BASIC runs
|
|
much slower that most other languages,
|
|
mainly because the software that makes
|
|
addressing the machine so convenient,
|
|
takes up time.
|
|
|
|
A prime reason for learning BASIC is
|
|
that it's a very flexible, easy to
|
|
learn language that you already own.
|
|
|
|
Next week Part 2
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Commodore Review
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
by Ernest Mau
|
|
|
|
Commodore PC10
|
|
(compatible with IBM PC-XT).
|
|
|
|
MS-DOS version 3.20 (supplied).
|
|
|
|
Features:
|
|
Models PC10-1 and PC10-2 feature Intel
|
|
8088 processor running at 4.77 MHz;
|
|
socket for math coprocessor chip;
|
|
|
|
PC-XT compatible Commodore
|
|
implementation of Phoenix BIOS;
|
|
|
|
ATI Graphics Solution video adapter
|
|
manufactured to Commodore
|
|
specifications; one Centronics-
|
|
compatible parallel port (LPT1); one
|
|
RS-232 serial port (COM1); five full-
|
|
length expansion slots (four free);
|
|
supplied with MS-DOS 3.20, GW-BASIC
|
|
3.2 and Borland International's
|
|
SideKick software.
|
|
|
|
Model PC10-1 has 512K RAM expandable
|
|
to 640K and one 360K 5.25-inch disk
|
|
drive.
|
|
|
|
Model PC10-2 has 640K RAM and two 360K
|
|
5.25-inch disk drives.
|
|
|
|
Options:
|
|
Commodore monochrome or color monitor;
|
|
hard disk.
|
|
|
|
Base Prices:
|
|
$799.95 (PC10-1) or $899.95 (PC10-2)
|
|
with Commodore 1901 monochrome
|
|
monitor; $999.95 (PC10-1) or $1099.95
|
|
(PC10-2) with Commodore 1902 RGB color
|
|
monitor.
|
|
|
|
Commodore's name conjures images of
|
|
Commodore 64, 128 and Amiga computers.
|
|
What doesn't come to mind immediately
|
|
is that Commodore also has MS-DOS
|
|
computers.
|
|
|
|
One and two drive Commodore PCs are
|
|
designated PC10-1 and PC10-2. They
|
|
work like IBM PC-XT computers.
|
|
Although there are physical
|
|
differences between Commodore and IBM
|
|
machines, a user shouldn't notice
|
|
significant operational differences.
|
|
Yet that may be both a disadvantage
|
|
and an advantage. While Commodore's
|
|
PCs demonstrate excellent hardware and
|
|
software compatibility with IBM-
|
|
oriented products, they're slow by
|
|
today's standards.
|
|
|
|
In a market crowded with turbocharged
|
|
dual-speed computers, Commodore's
|
|
PC10s provide just one speed. Norton
|
|
Utilities 4.0 System Information tests
|
|
report a Computing Index (CI) for the
|
|
PC10-2 at exactly 1.0 times a PC-XT.
|
|
Other applications confirm that
|
|
there's no real speed difference
|
|
between the two.
|
|
|
|
While the PC10's speed seems slightly
|
|
antiquated alongside some computers,
|
|
that's disturbing only when high speed
|
|
is crucial to an application. PC10s
|
|
are fine for keyboard intensive word
|
|
processing, spreadsheet preparation
|
|
and database record entry where the
|
|
computer waits for user input. It's
|
|
less effective for recalculating large
|
|
spreadsheets or sorting large
|
|
databases, and it's not particularly
|
|
appealing for high-level graphics or
|
|
computer aided design tasks, though a
|
|
math coprocessor and a hard disk might
|
|
help.
|
|
|
|
Yet extreme compatibility offsets lack
|
|
of speed, and I cannot fault the
|
|
computer at software or hardware
|
|
levels.
|
|
|
|
Every program tried ran without a
|
|
hitch, including randomly selected
|
|
word processing, spreadsheet,
|
|
database, communication and
|
|
recreational programs. I've even run
|
|
Compaq's MS-DOS 2.02 and IBM's PC-DOS
|
|
2.10 and 3.10 instead of the MS-DOS
|
|
3.20 provided by Commodore. Since DOS
|
|
3.x imposes extra memory overhead in
|
|
some applications, it's sometimes an
|
|
advantage to use other DOS versions.
|
|
|
|
Hardware compatibility is equally
|
|
good. I've installed EGA video cards,
|
|
external drive subsystems, mice,
|
|
replacement keyboards and other
|
|
devices without problems. Acceptance
|
|
of EGA cards is notable because I've
|
|
seen other -clones- not able to use
|
|
them. As far as I can tell, any 8-bit
|
|
card for an IBM PC or PC-XT should
|
|
work in the Commodore.
|
|
|
|
Internally, the PC10 is clean and free
|
|
of clutter. Its five expansion slots
|
|
all accept full-length cards. One
|
|
slot is taken by a video card, leaving
|
|
four for other uses. Circuitry for one
|
|
serial port and one parallel port is
|
|
on the system board, with connectors
|
|
mounted on the rear panel, taking no
|
|
expansion slot. Control circuitry for
|
|
two diskette drives also is on the
|
|
system board, so a floppy-only system
|
|
doesn't lose a slot to a disk
|
|
controller.
|
|
|
|
The supplied video card is an ATI
|
|
Graphics Solution board built to
|
|
Commodore specifications. It's similar
|
|
but not identical to an ATI card I've
|
|
used for two years. This versatile
|
|
adapter can drive monochrome,
|
|
composite color or RGB color monitors.
|
|
It provides IBM Monochrome Display
|
|
Adapter (MDA), Hercules Monochrome,
|
|
IBM Color Graphics Adapter (CGA) and
|
|
Plantronics color modes, and it can
|
|
output 132-column text for some
|
|
programs. Instructions to modify
|
|
WordStar for 132 columns are included,
|
|
as is useful mode selection software.
|
|
|
|
Commodore's 1902A color monitor is
|
|
disappointing. It's versatile and
|
|
accepts digital TTL signals from the
|
|
PC10 or 40-column separated LCA or 40-
|
|
column composite inputs from other
|
|
Commodore computers. But it isn't
|
|
sharp enough. Sharpness controls
|
|
couldn't make 132-column text easily
|
|
readable, and I never eliminated a
|
|
bothersome fuzziness in every mode.
|
|
Brightness and contrast controls
|
|
couldn't display medium gray without
|
|
making the background gray instead of
|
|
black. The 1902A was no match for
|
|
other RGB monitors I tried with the
|
|
PC10, so I'd prefer some other
|
|
monitor. Too bad Commodore now
|
|
bundles their own monitors with their
|
|
computers.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, the PC10 is a quality
|
|
computer that's adequate for many
|
|
applications. It isn't a speed demon
|
|
and it has some flaws, but anyone
|
|
shopping for PC-XT performance
|
|
probably would be happy with it.
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Disk Drives For Your Atari
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Submitted by: Bruce Kennedy
|
|
Written by: Bill Wilkinson [OSS]
|
|
|
|
ATARI DRIVES
|
|
Fm: Bill Wilkinson [OSS] 73177,2714
|
|
|
|
Bill offers the following summary of
|
|
drives available for Atari computers,
|
|
based on a question on Compuserve. If
|
|
you haven't tried Compuserve, ask a
|
|
computer friend about it, get a hold
|
|
of an issue of Compuserve's fabulous
|
|
ON-LINE magazine, or better, yet get
|
|
online with a friend.
|
|
|
|
Here's Bill's fabulous knowledge of
|
|
Atari at it's best, and I'll bet most
|
|
of it is off the top of his head! -I
|
|
will give you all I remember, even
|
|
though I will duplicate ones given by
|
|
others:
|
|
|
|
Percom:
|
|
-------
|
|
3 models, SSSD, SSDD, DSDD. I don't
|
|
remember all the model numbers.
|
|
|
|
Indus:
|
|
------
|
|
Just the GT (SSDD), though they did
|
|
have a couple of versions of the ROMs.
|
|
Now sold by Future Systems.
|
|
|
|
Trak:
|
|
-----
|
|
Two models, as I recall. Same drives
|
|
(SSDD) but either 1 or 2 in a cabinet.
|
|
|
|
(Oh, yes...Percom offered a two-drive
|
|
system for a short while..in any case,
|
|
Percoms had a controller that could
|
|
handle a total of up to 4 drives...you
|
|
could add your own industry standard
|
|
drives.)
|
|
|
|
Amdek:
|
|
------
|
|
Perhaps the best Atari-compatible
|
|
controller ever done (able to read
|
|
just about anything, including off-
|
|
speed disks), but it came with one or
|
|
two 3-inch (_NOT_ current 3.5-
|
|
standard!) drives. You could hook up a
|
|
total of 4 drives, any mix, 3-inch,
|
|
5.25-, 8-.
|
|
|
|
SWP's ATR8000:
|
|
--------------
|
|
This was/is considered the elite of
|
|
controllers. It could run CP/M (or,
|
|
with add-on board, MS-DOS!) _in the
|
|
controller_! The Atari computer
|
|
functions as a terminal to the
|
|
controller. It could/can take
|
|
virtually any kind of drives, since it
|
|
is only a controller. Many early Atari
|
|
users put 8- CP/M drives on their
|
|
machines this way...and the 8- drives
|
|
had capacities up to 1 MB.
|
|
|
|
(Almost forgot: Indus GT has an
|
|
optional add-on 64KB memory board.
|
|
With it, you can run CP/M inside Indus
|
|
in same manner as SWP).
|
|
|
|
Concorde:
|
|
---------
|
|
Went bankrupt (owing us money, sigh)
|
|
before ever got into full production.
|
|
Heard about a few people who found
|
|
this drive at surplus sales. SSDD,
|
|
similar to Indus, with DSDD planned.
|
|
|
|
Back to TRAK:
|
|
-------------
|
|
Found model numbers: ATD1, ATD2, ATS1.
|
|
|
|
Rana:
|
|
-----
|
|
Model 1000. SSDD, similar to Indus.
|
|
Designed by same people, I think.
|
|
|
|
Astra:
|
|
------
|
|
1620, a dual-drive, SSDD machine. -The
|
|
One---DSDD. A dual drive version of
|
|
-the one- but I don't remember model
|
|
number.
|
|
|
|
There was a company in CA (Sacramento,
|
|
CA, I think) that had an early SSDD
|
|
drive that competed with Percom.
|
|
California Peripherals? I forget. But
|
|
they did sell a few. Saw a question
|
|
about one up here recently.
|
|
|
|
As for Atari:
|
|
-------------
|
|
810, of course. SSSD only, though a
|
|
company in Southern Calif made a board
|
|
to turn it into SSDD.
|
|
|
|
1050:
|
|
-----
|
|
SSED (Enhanced Density, a kludge.)
|
|
Happy and ICD both make add-ons to
|
|
turn this into true SSDD instead. Buy
|
|
one!! The ICD US Doubler is most
|
|
popular (price is fantastic!!). The
|
|
Happy is favored by pirates and others
|
|
who want to copy protected disks.
|
|
|
|
815:
|
|
----
|
|
Almost forgot this ghost. Never
|
|
produced in quantity. A few (100??)
|
|
floating around.
|
|
|
|
XF551:
|
|
------
|
|
Newest.
|
|
======================================
|
|
Hard drives:
|
|
------------
|
|
MPP, later Supra:
|
|
-----------------
|
|
5, 10, 20 MB. Only hooks up to 800XL
|
|
or 130XE.
|
|
|
|
ICD:
|
|
----
|
|
MIO, gives 256KB to 1MB of RamDisk
|
|
plus printer port plus serial port
|
|
plus hooks to most hard disks.
|
|
|
|
The one from our friends in Southern
|
|
Cal, as mentioned before is the lowest
|
|
cost way to go. Definitely roll your
|
|
own (don't think it even has a case).
|
|
======================================
|
|
Definitions
|
|
-----------
|
|
SSSD
|
|
----
|
|
40 tracks, 18 sectors, 128 bytes per
|
|
sector.
|
|
|
|
SSED
|
|
----
|
|
40 tracks, 26 sectors, 128 bytes per
|
|
sector.
|
|
|
|
SSDD
|
|
----
|
|
40 tracks, 18 sectors, 256 bytes per
|
|
sector.
|
|
|
|
DSDD
|
|
----
|
|
2 sides of 40 tracks each, 18 sectors,
|
|
256 bytes per sector.
|
|
|
|
Other formats are possible with Amdek
|
|
and ATR8000: e.g., DSQD == 2 sides,
|
|
80 tracks per side, 18 sectors, 256
|
|
bytes per sector.
|
|
======================================
|
|
Only drives currently on market:
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
All the hard drives, Atari XF551, a
|
|
few Atari 1050's still floating
|
|
around, INDUS GT, Astra -the one-. Buy
|
|
a USDoubler or Happy Doubler _NOW_ if
|
|
you have a 1050!!!
|
|
|
|
Best bargains in Atari market.
|
|
|
|
Downloaded with permission from
|
|
Compuserve. Posted by Bill Wilkinson,
|
|
guru of the Atari DOS, and wizard of
|
|
all Atarians want to know (look for
|
|
his column in Compute! magazine).
|
|
Submitted here by Bruce Kennedy of
|
|
Rhode Island ACE.
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Have Every Program Ever Written!
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
As ATARI clubs have matured, they have
|
|
amassed HUGE stocks of PD library
|
|
software. At least one, C.H.A.O.S. of
|
|
LANSING, MICHIGAN, has gone a step
|
|
beyond the -trades- that many clubs
|
|
have done for years now. C.H.A.O.S.
|
|
RENTS their entire library to any
|
|
individual or CLUB, a month for $65,
|
|
your choice of the 400-plus disk side
|
|
8-bit library or 100-plus disk ST
|
|
library. $100 rents both. The rental
|
|
includes extra copies of their
|
|
remarkable 40+ page disk catalog,
|
|
suitable for reworking for any club.
|
|
This library differs from most club
|
|
libraries in that it is 100%
|
|
catagorized. Want Sports Games? See
|
|
GAMES E1 and E2. Space arcade items,
|
|
board games, adventures... each set
|
|
apart and each documented. Or maybe
|
|
you want a disk full of Printer
|
|
utilities. Or WORD PROCESSORS or
|
|
accessories. Or 40 disks of AMS
|
|
files... sorted by type of music!
|
|
Educational, business, PRINTSHOP,
|
|
demos, upgrades... you get the idea.
|
|
|
|
The ST library is set up the same,
|
|
just more to each disk. Says chief
|
|
club librarian JOHN BAKER, -We want
|
|
this stuff to get into circulation
|
|
while it still can be used. Our years
|
|
of effort testing and organizing the
|
|
library are a huge benefit to clubs or
|
|
individuals.- John says he stopped
|
|
doing mass trades a while back
|
|
-because we've seen 98% of everything
|
|
already, and we threw out all the
|
|
junky stuff. We probably ditched as
|
|
much as we saved. We get nothing but
|
|
raves from the people that rented so
|
|
far.- The income from the rentals
|
|
goes to support the club's investment
|
|
in hardware to maintain the library
|
|
and defray expenses in keeping current
|
|
using PC PURSUIT, GEnie, and limited
|
|
list trades.
|
|
|
|
Contact:
|
|
|
|
C.H.A.O.S.
|
|
P.O. Box 16132
|
|
LANSING, MI 48901
|
|
|
|
or the C.H.A.O.S. BBS, 517-371-1106.
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Marshals seize counterfeiters
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
SUNNYVALE, Calif.--(BW)--
|
|
|
|
In a unique, highly coordinated effort
|
|
with U.S. government officials, Atari
|
|
Corp. 12/20/87 seized 2,000 pirated
|
|
model -2600- video game machines and
|
|
accessories.
|
|
|
|
In an aggressive attempt to stop Fund
|
|
International Co. Ltd. of Taiwan from
|
|
further production and importation of
|
|
counterfeit Atari game products, Atari
|
|
enlisted the aid of the U.S. Customs
|
|
Service, agents of the U.S. Marshal
|
|
and Congressman Ernie Konnyu of the
|
|
12th District and his staff to seize
|
|
the counterfeit products at Terminal
|
|
Island in the Port of Los Angeles,
|
|
before they could be returned to
|
|
Taiwan.
|
|
|
|
The seizure was made pursuant to a
|
|
court order issued by federal District
|
|
Judge Terry Hatter in conjunction with
|
|
a raid on the Los Angeles warehouse of
|
|
P.S.D. Inc. on Tuesday, Dec. 8.
|
|
|
|
Atari and many other manufacturers of
|
|
electronic equipment have had to deal
|
|
with an increasing problem of the
|
|
production of pirated products which
|
|
infringe upon U.S. patents, trademarks
|
|
and copyrights.
|
|
|
|
-It's hurting our country's industry,
|
|
depressing sales and effecting the
|
|
development of new technology,-
|
|
remarked Sam Tramiel, president of
|
|
Atari Corp.
|
|
|
|
Tramiel, who has instructed his staff
|
|
to take all measures necessary to stop
|
|
the counterfeit production of Atari
|
|
products, stated, -We must let the
|
|
manufacturers of pirate products know
|
|
that we are very serious and will not
|
|
tolerate their criminal behavior.
|
|
Atari will cooperate wherever possible
|
|
with U.S. government officials to stop
|
|
the infringing actions immediately.-
|
|
|
|
The goods, which had entered the Los
|
|
Angeles port, had apparently been
|
|
ordered for sale through the U.S.
|
|
based company, P.S.D. Inc. in Los
|
|
Angeles, but had not been cleared
|
|
through customs.
|
|
|
|
Officials at Atari Corp. believe that
|
|
after the raid on P.S.D., P.S.D.
|
|
officials sought to stop the pirate
|
|
goods enroute from Taiwan from
|
|
entering the United States to avoid
|
|
further incrimination. Records
|
|
obtained during the P.S.D. warehouse
|
|
raid indicated that further shipments
|
|
of counterfeit goods were on their
|
|
way. Upon receiving information about
|
|
the arrival of the -knockoff-
|
|
products, Atari personnel along with
|
|
officers of the U.S. Marshal moved in
|
|
and seized the entire container.
|
|
According to Dennis Hawker, director
|
|
of security for Atari, -This is a
|
|
victory for Atari and just the
|
|
beginning, but should demonstrate that
|
|
companies like Atari can take action
|
|
to protect their rights and the
|
|
industry.-
|
|
|
|
Atari Corp. of Sunnyvale is a growing
|
|
manufacturer of business and home
|
|
computers and video game equipment.
|
|
|
|
The company, in existence since July
|
|
of 1984, stands by its motto of -Power
|
|
Without the Price.- Tramiel commented,
|
|
-We want to deliver to the public the
|
|
best products at the lowest prices.
|
|
It's unfortunate that companies
|
|
producing illegal, often inferior and
|
|
even dangerous imitation products,
|
|
affect the market and force consumer
|
|
prices up. We want this stopped.-
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Other Atari News
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
ANTIC PUBLISHING INC., COPYRIGHT 1987
|
|
REPRINTED BY PERMISSION.
|
|
|
|
NEW ATARI PLANT
|
|
|
|
In an attempt to boost personal
|
|
computer sales in the United States,
|
|
Atari Corp. plans to open a 100-person
|
|
small manufacturing plant somewhere in
|
|
Silicon Valley early in 1988 and a
|
|
larger factory in either Texas or
|
|
Nevada later in the year, according to
|
|
Atari President Sam Tramiel.
|
|
|
|
Tramiel said that domestic sales were
|
|
strongly affected by the heavy
|
|
European demands for the ST line of
|
|
computers, manufactured exclusively in
|
|
Taiwan--about 80% of STs manufactured
|
|
this year were sold in Europe. -We
|
|
never had any product left over to
|
|
bring to the U.S.,- he said.
|
|
|
|
In late 1987 Atari's IBM PC-compatible
|
|
went on sale in Europe, but Tramiel
|
|
says that the Atari PC same won't
|
|
reach stores in the United States
|
|
until well into next year.
|
|
|
|
ATARI NO-SHOWS CES
|
|
|
|
Atari Corp. will NOT be in Las Vegas
|
|
at CES in January, 1988 -- but ANTIC
|
|
ONLINE will: whatever Atari news
|
|
there is will be uploaded as soon as
|
|
we get it.
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Next Week In ZMAG88
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Information from the Hard Disk Users
|
|
Group; Article by John Nagy; CES
|
|
reports; Basic Prgm'g Part 2 and more!
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
ZMAGAZINE BBS (201) 968-8148
|
|
300 Baud Service 4am-9pm
|
|
1200 Baud Service 24 hours a day
|
|
2400 Baud Service coming soon!
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Cable-Tec Expo
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
|
|
Howard Whitman, SCTE, (215) 363-6888
|
|
|
|
EXHIBIT FLOOR SOLD OUT FOR SCTE'S 1988
|
|
CABLE-TEC EXPO
|
|
|
|
There is no remaining exhibit space
|
|
available for the 1988 Cable-Tec Expo,
|
|
to be held June 16-19 at the San
|
|
Francisco Hilton and Towers in San
|
|
Francisco, Ca., it was recently
|
|
announced.
|
|
|
|
Sponsored by the Society of Cable
|
|
Television Engineers, Inc. (SCTE),
|
|
Cable-Tec Expo is a fully technical
|
|
conference and trade show offering an
|
|
instructional exhibit floor featuring
|
|
all areas of cable industry hardware,
|
|
as well as a wide variety of
|
|
educational programs, hands-on
|
|
training sessions and technical
|
|
workshops.
|
|
|
|
Over 85 exhibiting companies,
|
|
displaying all types of products,
|
|
services and equipment used in the
|
|
operation of cable television systems
|
|
have rented space on the exhibit floor
|
|
for Cable-Tec Expo '88. The exhibit
|
|
hall has been carefully coordinated to
|
|
provide industry suppliers with the
|
|
opportunity to present live technical
|
|
demonstrations of their products in a
|
|
relaxed and non-commercial atmosphere.
|
|
|
|
An added feature on the floor will be
|
|
the Technical Training Center offering
|
|
additional equipment demonstrations.
|
|
|
|
-We are very encouraged by the
|
|
interest the industry has shown in
|
|
Cable-Tec Expo '88,- commented SCTE
|
|
Executive Vice President Bill Riker.
|
|
-The exhibit hall has never sold out
|
|
as quickly as it has this year, and we
|
|
feel this bodes very well for the
|
|
overall success of the expo.
|
|
|
|
-This is the second year in a row that
|
|
the exhibit hall has sold out, -Riker
|
|
continued. -Cable-Tec Expo '87 showed
|
|
a 30% increase in attendance over the
|
|
previous year, and are confident that
|
|
Expo '88 will be another record-
|
|
breaking event.-
|
|
|
|
Riker added that companies wishing to
|
|
exhibit at Cable-Tec Expo '88 can
|
|
contact SCTE national headquarters to
|
|
be placed on a waiting list and
|
|
contacted in the event of an
|
|
exhibitor's cancellation.
|
|
|
|
Registration packets for Cable-Tec
|
|
Expo '88 will be mailed out to SCTE
|
|
national members in January 1988.
|
|
Persons interested in further
|
|
information on Cable-Tec Expo '88 are
|
|
encouraged to contact SCTE national
|
|
headquarters at (215) 363-6888.
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
Xx Bullet-proof Ramdisk
|
|
______________________________________
|
|
by Tony Hursh
|
|
|
|
In recent years, a number of home-
|
|
brewed and commercial memory
|
|
expansions have become available for
|
|
the 8-bit Atari. By far the most
|
|
common use for the expanded memory is
|
|
as a ramdisk, which uses the memory to
|
|
simulate a very fast disk drive. With
|
|
some upgrades, you can have several
|
|
disks worth of programs in memory, and
|
|
load them lightning fast. In this text
|
|
file I will discuss ways to recover
|
|
data from the ramdisk in the event of
|
|
a system crash. These methods should
|
|
work with most upgrades, and might
|
|
even be useful with a stock 130XE.
|
|
|
|
I built the Scott Peterson 320K XE
|
|
upgrade a few months ago with
|
|
excellent results. Total cost for the
|
|
modification is less than $30, and if
|
|
you are reasonably competent at
|
|
soldering and desoldering, you should
|
|
be able to complete the project within
|
|
a few hours. If you decide to attempt
|
|
this on your own, be careful, and heed
|
|
his warnings, especially about using a
|
|
desoldering tool. If you don't, you
|
|
will very likely rip traces on the
|
|
circuit board, and that is a big
|
|
no-no.
|
|
|
|
The major problem with a ramdisk is
|
|
that the information is volatile, i.e.
|
|
when the computer is powered down, any
|
|
data in memory is lost. If you do any
|
|
ml programming or USR calls from
|
|
BASIC, you have undoubtedly
|
|
experienced the dreaded system lock-up
|
|
(What Scott calls -door-stop- mode).
|
|
This is very annoying if you've just
|
|
spent 5-10 minutes copying compilers,
|
|
communications programs, and text
|
|
editors to the ramdisk. Another
|
|
problem is that some software
|
|
-expects- to be the first thing loaded
|
|
into the computer on powerup. A good
|
|
example of this is Keith Ledbetter's
|
|
popular (and excellent) 1030 Express!
|
|
terminal program (available on on-line
|
|
services, and many local BBS's). If
|
|
you run something else, then try to
|
|
run Express!, it -just ain't likely to
|
|
work-.
|
|
|
|
The solution
|
|
|
|
To use these techniques, you will need
|
|
SpartaDOS from ICD, Inc. The RD.COM
|
|
file supplied with version 3.2 give
|
|
you a great deal of flexibility in
|
|
formatting ramdrives, and is
|
|
recommended.
|
|
|
|
The short BASIC programs in listings 1
|
|
and 2 will generate a pair of binary
|
|
files called BOOTON.COM and
|
|
BOOTOFF.COM. These programs alter
|
|
memory location 580 ($244), which is
|
|
the system coldstart flag. A non-zero
|
|
value POKEd here will cause the
|
|
computer to coldstart when the RESET
|
|
key is pressed, while a zero causes
|
|
the computer to do a normal warmstart.
|
|
Copy all your files to the ramdrive,
|
|
then enter BOOTON at the Dn: prompt.
|
|
Should your machine lock up, just hit
|
|
RESET to reboot, then use RD Dn: /N to
|
|
reenable the ramdisk. The /N parameter
|
|
keeps the ramdisk from being
|
|
formatted. The only time wasted is the
|
|
time to reload DOS. I recommmend
|
|
copying BOOTON to the ramdisk and
|
|
invoking it often. It's cheap
|
|
insurance. BOOTOFF puts the coldstart
|
|
flag back to zero, so you can do a
|
|
-normal- RESET if need be. After the
|
|
DOS is reloaded, you can run Express!
|
|
from the ramdisk with no problem! You
|
|
may want to create a STARTUP.BAT file
|
|
to do the reenabling of the ramdisk
|
|
and resetting the system time and date
|
|
values. You may also want to use a
|
|
sector editor or binary file editor to
|
|
change the names of external resource
|
|
files so they may also be loaded from
|
|
the ramdisk. Make sure to keep a
|
|
backup.
|
|
|
|
What if it doesn't work?
|
|
|
|
Suppose you've forgotten to load
|
|
BOOTON, or a program has messed up the
|
|
coldstart flag? Under certain
|
|
conditions, SpartaDOS seems to get
|
|
-lobotomized-. You will get the Dn:
|
|
prompt, but will not be able to access
|
|
any drive. Usually, internal commands
|
|
will still work. If you have an XL/XE,
|
|
try typing BASIC ON, CAR, POKE 580,1,
|
|
then hit reset.
|
|
|
|
What if THAT doesn't work???
|
|
|
|
If you can't enable BASIC, try RUN
|
|
C2C8 for the XL/XE OS, or RUN F125 for
|
|
the old 400/800 OS.
|
|
|
|
Armageddon
|
|
|
|
Some programs screw things up so badly
|
|
that none of these methods will work.
|
|
Games seem to be the worst offenders
|
|
in this regard. Also, the internal DOS
|
|
commands can't be used if the system
|
|
is completely locked up, and you've
|
|
neglected to load BOOTON. In this
|
|
case, try hitting RESET about 10 times
|
|
rapidly, then wait a moment. If the
|
|
computer doesn't start to reboot, try
|
|
it again. You may have to repeat this
|
|
several times. Usually, this will do
|
|
the job.
|
|
|
|
Final notes
|
|
|
|
Using the techniques covered in this
|
|
text file, I have been able to go for
|
|
days without having to turn off the
|
|
computer. I run a C compiler, text
|
|
editor, and communications package
|
|
from he ramdisk, and can alternate
|
|
between them at will. Even with all of
|
|
these and most of the SpartaDOS
|
|
utilities in memory, I still have
|
|
about 500 free sectors (the empty
|
|
ramdisk has about 2000 sectors). It
|
|
has increased my productivity a lot,
|
|
and computing is much more enjoyable
|
|
without the constant grinding and
|
|
beeping sounds of a disk drive.
|
|
|
|
Tony Hursh
|
|
P.O. Box 90399
|
|
Anchorage, Alaska 99509
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
Listing 1
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
10 OPEN #2,8,0,-D1:BOOTON.COM-
|
|
20 READ BYTE:IF BYTE<0 THEN 100
|
|
30 PUT #2,BYTE:GOTO 20
|
|
100 CLOSE #2
|
|
200 DATA 255,255,68,2,68,2,1,0,6,0,6,96,224,2,225,2,0,6,-1
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
Listing 2
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
10 OPEN #2,8,0,-D1:BOOTOFF.COM-
|
|
20 READ BYTE:IF BYTE<0 THEN 100
|
|
30 PUT #2,BYTE:GOTO 20
|
|
100 CLOSE #2
|
|
200 DATA 255,255,68,2,68,2,0,0,6,0,6,96,224,2,225,2,0,6,-1
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------
|
|
ZMAG87 January 4, 1988 Volume 3 No. 1
|
|
|
|
Next edition January 11, 1988!
|
|
(c)1988 Syndicate Publications
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------
|