Date : Tue, 07 Sep 1999 14:30:18 +0100
From : Chezz <achester@...>
Subject: Re: Macintosh -> BBC disk image transfer
RS do a ready made Plug to Free End lead.
8 Way Mini DIN P/N 463-518 £4.44 +VAT
Rather expensive I know but a nice neat solution all the same.
Andrew Chesterton.
Assistant Network Administrator.
Blue Wave Systems Ltd.
Loughborough Park,
Ashby Road,
Loughborough.
Leicestershire.
LE11 - 3NE.
Tel: +44 (0)1509 634322
Fax: +44 (0)1509 634450
Email: achester@... <mailto:achester@...>
-----Original Message-----
From: James Woodman [mailto:jrw@...]
Sent: 07 September 1999 14:40
To: FARAZ CHOUDHRY
Cc: bbc-micro@...
Subject: Re: [BBC-Micro] Macintosh -> BBC disk image transfer
On Tue, 7 Sep 1999, FARAZ CHOUDHRY wrote:
> Man, you shouldn't have got rid of your A310.
True. But then I should never have got rid of my BBC A, or all the
programs I had for it...
> I personally also think Acorns are better than Apples!
No contest, I agree. But the A310 was old, only had a floppy drive and
1Mb of RAM, and I needed a new computer. The Mac was a lot cheaper than a
RiscPC.
> Anyhow, I didn't know there was a BBC Emulator for Apple Mac.
It's a shareware one called "Horizon". I've never actually had anything
more complicated than "Granny's Garden" running on it: it uses an odd
header format to store the load/exec addresses of files, which I never
seem to get right.
> I would imagine though that the files are unaltered in compatibiliy
> with actual Beebs and so just serial link to it.
That's tomorrow's project. Don't suppose you've got any advice about
soldering 8-pin mini-DIN connectors, have you? The pins are far too close
together, and don't have any solder buckets (or whatever the indent things
are called) -- they're just spikes.
> A 65x02 file is the same, I would imagine, whichever it's loaded into,
> any emulator or the real thing.
I'll try it and see when I get the lead sorted out.
Cheers,
James.