I have never figured out why Bob Supnik defined the magnetic tape containers (TAP files) with the one byte padding for odd length records. This seems very odd (pun intended). :-) Even on a machine which couldn't write 32 bit numbers (the record lenght) on odd boundaries you could write the 32 bit number as 4 individual bytes. Does anyone know the reason? Cheers Tom Hunter
On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 9:17 AM Jeff Woolsey via cctech < cctech@classiccmp.org> wrote: > > Acoustically, the best tapes were the short-record "stranger" tapes. > > All sorts of interesting noise. I could tell from across the room when > > someone was running the tape section of the Navy audit tests for COBOL > > just by the sounds. > > > MALET was also pretty good, reading and writing a bunch of blocks that > were one frame longer or shorter than the last. Loud rising or falling > tone in the noisy computer room. > > -- > Jeff Woolsey {{woolsey,jlw}@jlw,first.last@{gmail,jlw}}.com > Nature abhors straight antennas, clean lenses, and empty storage. > "Delete! Delete! OK!" -Dr. Bronner on disk space management > Card-sorting, Joel. -Crow on solitaire > >