Re: [M100] Prepping for CP/M on the Model T

2020-03-08 Thread Stefano Bodrato
> is there an easy way > discern which architecture a COM file was built for? No. The Z80 and the 8085 were introduced in the CP/M world as "super 8080", a COM file was just a binary block beginning at fixed position of 100h. Obviously at runtime the COM program can probe the hardware and, in

Re: [M100] Prepping for CP/M on the Model T

2020-03-08 Thread Tom Dison
I use RunCpm on Linux. I also just installed in on an Adafruit Grand Central M4 Express microcontroller. Just connect a micro-USB connector and use a terminal program like Putty at 9600. It uses a MicroSD card so I can just copy apps to the SD card. On Sun, Mar 8, 2020 at 13:01 r cs wrote: > I'm

[M100] Prepping for CP/M on the Model T

2020-03-08 Thread r cs
I'm excited about the prospect of CP/M coming to the Model T. Short of rebuilding everything one cares about for 8080, is there an easy way discern which architecture a COM file was built for? Anyone have good luck with any particular CP/M-80 emulator for the 8080 on Linux? Regards, rcs -- *NĂ­