The cassette routines will probably be broken by this too, though you might
be able to "overclock" the tape recorder (or MP3 file) to match. :)
On Nov 25, 2015 9:43 AM, "Stephen Adolph" wrote:
> Hi Georg,
> Very interesting! I think there could be impact on sounds as well.
Problems can be fun.
But solved problems have their positive attributes too.
LaddieAlpha works fine on OSX! I've tested it, and I support it. So if
you have trouble getting it working just ask on the list.
Dependencies are:
Mono
A loaded TPDD client. Best bet: A REX unit running TS-DOS, or
Thanks for the reply everyone. Since the computer has a dial up modem I'm
wondering if perhaps there is some kind of service still around in the states
where I could dial in, upload the file, and then retrieve it from my modern day
mac?
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 25, 2015, at 2:07 AM, Doug
How about Bluetooth?
m
On 11/25/15, Marko Peussa wrote:
> This would have been my suggestion, too. After all, "Cloud storage" was
> available already in the 80's...
>
> Here's the current dial-up BBS list:
>
> http://www.telnetbbsguide.com/dialbbs/dialbbs.htm
>
> I
This would have been my suggestion, too. After all, "Cloud storage" was
available already in the 80's...
Here's the current dial-up BBS list:
http://www.telnetbbsguide.com/dialbbs/dialbbs.htm
I would advise to login first using telnet, with something that supports VT100
terminal type. Then go
My setup:
Mac OSX laptop
FTDI USB serial adapter
CoolTerm terminal client (http://freeware.the-meiers.org/)
Tandy M102
Connect 102 to USB serial adapter. Open CoolTerm, set to 9600,8,N,1. Select
my USB serial port
Open TELCOM on 102. Select STAT, set to 88N1E (this is 9600,8,N,1 w/
flow-control
I working on a solution that hopefully with provide some benefits:
* wifi connectivity - either built as a daughterboard to the Model M n
or via a small external adapter
* lightweight cross-platform disk server
* support for TPDD protocol - so using TEENY as the client
Oh, and the cost
Hi Georg,
Very interesting! I think there could be impact on sounds as well.
Tundra semiconductor made a processor capable of 10MHz also. I have not
yet played with that.
It could be possible to make an adapter that includes a /4 circuit to feed
correct clock to the UART, and also the 81C55.
Hello together,
I did some try out on overclocking the 80C85 in my M100. I was quite
successful using an oszilator
with 7,3728MHz which gives a CPU clock 50% higher than the original one. My
M100 run with this
w/o any issues in running BASIC so far, gain in performance is visible and