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Everything posted by ThumpNugget
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Ga! Sold on eBay in two hours for more than I was offering it on here when the shipping is included.. Crazy world
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Hi Ho Hi Ho Its off to eBay we go....
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BYTE Vol 04-05 1979-05 Computer Generated Maps - 292 Pages 183,269,009 bytes Foreground COMPUTER GENERATED MAPS, Part 1 REPRESENTING THREE·DIMENSIONAL OBJECTS IN YOUR COMPUTER COMMUNICATE ON A LIGHT BEAM SINGLE CHIP VIDEO CONTROLLER THE INTEL 8275 CRT CONTROLLER Background THE SUPERBOARD II, A Surprising Single Board Computer From OSI 6800 DISASSEMBLER SPACEWAR IN TINY BASIC, Navigating Through Integer BASIC SMART MEMORY, Part 2 SIMULTANEOUS INPUT AND OUTPUT FOR YOUR 8080 QUEUING THEORY, THE SCIENCE OF WAIT CONTROL, Part 2: System Types TRiGONOMETRY IN TWO EASY BLACK BOXES TIC·TAC·TOE: A PROGRAMMING EXERCISE THE HOBBY UNWRAP A MINI·DISASSEMBLER FOR THE 2650 AIDS FOR HAND ASSEMBLING PROGRAMS Nucleus Editorial: Don't Forget the Hardware .. Letters Technical Forum BYTE News Event QUEUE Nybbles: TMS·9900 Monitor BYTE's Bits Desktop Wonder: Digits Clubs and Newsletters BYTE's Bug Languages Forum Machine Language Puzzler: An Added Attraction Programming Quickies Book Reviews What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 04-05 1979-05 Computer Generated Maps Cover Index
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Hi Thumpnugget. The above quote is really old, like from the beginning of the thread. The picture is the editor's note from the DEC 82 (the last one you posted) Atari character set article. It sounds like they're both referencing the same stuff! And what cool stuff it is! I'm so grateful for all your efforts and realize you get to what you can when you can, but I wanted to make a very meek and timid request (which still sounds kind of bold, considering the circumstances) for these issues. This sounds like pure Atari gold! Much obliged to you, sir. Hey there.. Thank you for the comment.. I have five already chopped up then I am going to work on the 81/82 issues with the Atari Articles So these five: May 1979 - Maps for Computers (will post it Thursday) Aug 1981 - Smalltalk (will post it Sunday) Oct 1984 - Special IBM Issue Jul 1977 - Computerize your Railroad Aug 1985 - Declarative Languages and the Amiga Then start the mags with the Atari articles
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AtariUser Magazine (American version)
ThumpNugget replied to ThumpNugget's topic in Atari ST/TT/Falcon Computers
AtariUser 14 1992-06 Survival Kits - 32 Pages 26,396,193 bytes Issue #14 of AtariUser Magazine from June 1992.. This is one of the two missing magazines from AtariUser that I did not have. Many Many thanks to Retrogeeks for sending me the magazine. I ended up have to split the pages so he ended up sacrificing the magazine for all of us to have a chance to read it. I have the rest of the 6 remaining magazines (expect the one missing issue - #20 from Dec 1992) scanned and ready for processing so I should be back on the once a week schedule now for the next few weeks. If anyone has the Dec 1992 please get int touch and we can finish up the entire run. News and Stuff! Readers Byte Back - we get letters AtariUser News - Top Stories and so much more... News Alerts - Portfolio, Lynx, 8 bit RE_Views - Megapoint Professional, ST Game Knights of the Sky Features - Focus on Survival Lynx Survival - All the goodies you need to live Porfolio Survival - Your hardware and software toolkit 8 Bit Survival - Where survival is a way of life Learning MIDI - Knowledge is survival Free ST/TT Survival - Some of the best things are free! Resources Every User Group in the world AU Classifieds AU's AtariLand Calendar Download it here: AtariUser 14 1992-06 Survival Kits Cover Index -
bump before moving to eBay...
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I've never received a rep point for putting an item up for sale heh
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Box Atari Touch Tablet for the 8-bit computer.. Box is still sealed and has never been opened. You too can now draw in 128 brilliant colors! $25.00 - includes shipping in the U.S.
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BYTE Vol 02-06 1977-06 Cognitive Robot - 184 Pages 112,774,438 bytes The cover is a tad roughed-up this issue but the rest of the magazine is pretty good. Foreground DESIGNING MULTICHANNEL ANALOG INTERFACES INTERFACING THE IBM SELECTRIC KEYBOARD PRINTER COME FLY WITH KIM SOFTWARE FOR THE ECONOMY FLOPPY DISK ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: Part 2, Implementation A 6800 SELECTRIC 10 PRINTER PROGRAM A GUIDE TO BAUDOT MACHINES: Part 3 Background NEWT: A MOBILE , COGNITIVE ROBOT INTERFACING TO AN ANALOG WORLD: Part 2 INTRODUCTION TO MICROPROGRAMMING Nucleus In Th is BYTE The Software Dilemma Letters Whats New Ask BYTE Technical Forum Classified Ads Clubs, Newsletters BYTE's Bits Desk Top Wonders BYTE's Bugs BOMB Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 02-06 1977-06 Cognitive Robot Cover Index
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The Antic/Analog/Softsides were all in Torrents... Not sure if they are still going or not. Antic and Analog are available on the atarimania site (www.atarimania.com)
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BYTE Vol 11-13 1986-12 Graphics Algorithms - 458 Pages 322,241,121 bytes FEATURES INTRODUCTION CiARCIA'S CIRCUIT CELLAR: BUILD THE GTI80 COLOR GRAPHICS BOARD, PART 2: HARDWARE PROGRAMMING PROJECT: USING DOS FUNCTIONS FROM TURBO PASCAL PROGRAMMING INSIGHT: A PROGRAM FOR APPROXIMATING INTEGRALS DEBUGGING MACINTOSH APPLICATIONS LOCAL EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS THEME: GRAPHICS ALGORITHMS INTRODUCTION HENON MAPPING WITH PASCAL ABSTRACT MATHEMATICAL ART THE TMS34010 GRAPHICS SYSTEM PROCESSOR PLOTTING THE MANDELBROT SET GRAPHING QUADRIC SURFACES FREE-FORM CURVES ON YOUR MICRO REVIEWS INTRODUCTION REVIEWER'S NOTEBOOK FOUR IBM PC AT CLONES THE HERCULES GRAPHICS CARD PLUS 23 MODEMS PASCAL FOR THE IBM PC STELLA FLASH-COM REVIEW FEEDBACK KERNEL INTRODUCTION COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR: THE FINAL FRONTIER ACCORDING TO WEBSTER: SEASON'S GREETINGS by Bruce Webster APPLICATIONS ONLY: STOCKING STUFFERS by Ezra Shapiro BYTE U.K.: THE U-MAN POTENTIAL BEST OF BIX AMIGA ATARI IBM PC AND COMPATIBLES MACINTOSH/ApPLE II APPLE IIGS GRAPHICS DEPARTMENTS BYTE GETS FASTER MICROBYTES LETTERS WHAT'S NEW ASK BYTE CIRCUIT CELLAR FEEDBACK BOOK REVIEWS EVENTS AND CWBS CHAOS MANOR MAIL BOMB RESULTS READER SERVICE Download it here: BYTE Vol 11-13 1986-12 Graphics Algorithms Cover Index
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Here is my method for scanning: Step 1: Slice off the magazine binding.. I do this with a 17 inch guillotine slicer. They can be had on eBay for under 200 dollars. Replacement blades cost around 40 dollars but you will not go through many. Step 2: Use a double sided auto-feed scanner to scan the pages. I user the ScanSnap S510. I scan at 300DPI (aka setting "best" which ironically is not...). Never scan anything in black and white.. even if it is black and white. Save to TIFF if you can. some only to to PDF which works OK. Step 3: If you saved as TIFF use save the PDF as TIFF files into a separate directory. Step 4: divide the TIFF file into two directories: One directory for pages with color, one directory with pages without color. Step 5: Process the files to remove the scan-through. I use a macro in Photo Shop to go through each directory. Basically I alter the balance curves to remove some of the background.. ON the pages without color I convert them to gray-scale. For some pages this works wonders for other it is only marginally better.. It does shrink the file size a minimum of 25% Step 6: Assemble the TIFF files back into a PDF and OCR them. I use 600 DPI searchable image using acrobat pro.. This will make a mess out of 1 of every 250 pages or so (miss-read the text and to a strange rotation on the page) but on the rest of the pages it does a decent job of making them straight. That is why in my PDFs on the dark page there is always a small corner of white - when the page is rotated it fills in the gaps with white. On the pages that are rotated like crazy you just replace it with the TIFF file and do an OCR scan and use the "exact image" option. Step 7: Add in bookmarks... You are done.. Yeah!
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BYTE Vol 04-03 1979-03 Plain Text - 276 Pages 173,534,567 bytes Foreground THE STANDARD DATA ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM, Part 1: An Overview DESIGNING WITH DOUBLE SIDED PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS DESIGNING A ROBOT FROM NATURE, Part 2: Constructing the Eye A STEPPING MOTOR PRIMER, PART 2 BUILD A COMPUTER CONTROLLED SECURITY SYSTEM FOR YOUR HOME, Part 3 THE POWER OF THE HP-67 PROGRAMMABLE CALCULATOR Background BUILDING THE HEATH H8 COMPUTER A MAP OF THE TMS-9900 INSTRUCTION SPACE FILES ON PARADE, Part 2: Using Files A MICROPROCESSOR FOR THE REVOLUTION: THE 6809, Part 3 CRYPTOGRAPHY IN THE FIELD, Part 1: An Overview PREVIEW OF THE Z-8000 COMMON MISTAKES USING WARNIER-ORR DIAGRAMS PASSWORD PROTECTION FOR YOUR COMPUTER WHAT IS AN INTERRUPT? HISTORY OF COMPUTERS: THE IBM 650, Nucleus Don't Overlook LISP Letters Desk Top Wonder: Race Car for the SR-52 Book Review Event Queue Programming Quickie: Inverse Trig Functions 92 Machine Language Puzzler: Odd Tones BYTE News Technical Forum Nybbles: Computer Assisted Flight Planning Clubs and Newsletters BYTE's Bits What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 04-03 1979-03 Plain Text Cover Index
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Very cool:) I am going to hold off scanning any more until we see what is not covered with both sets combined...
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BYTE Vol 07-12 1982-12 Game Plan 1982 - 596 Pages 402,488,209 bytes Features Build the Circuit Cellar MPX-16 Computer System, Part 2 Game Plan 1982 The Coinless Arcade-Rediscovered The Vectrex Arcade System Board to Death Design Techniques and Ideals for Computer Games Charge! Cosmic Conquest BYTE Game Grid Character Editor for the Atari User's Column: A Slew of Languages, a Slap at Documentation, and a Curse at Keyboards The Soundchaser Computer Music Systems A Brief Introduction to Electronic Music Synthesizers The 8051 One-Chip Microcomputer: A Most Powerful Micro-controller Problem Oriented Language, Part 1: A New Method of Input Practical Dynamic-Memory System Design Test Your Memory Using the Barber-Pole Algorithm A Versatile Low-Cost Microprocessor Controller Module Reviews Microshell and Unica: Unix-Style Enhancements for CP/M Autocontrol's AC-8S: A CP/M System on One Board Multidos: A New TRS-80 Disk Operating System Condor Series 20 DBMS Nucleus Editorial: The Play's the Thing Letters BYTE's Bits Product Description: Lotus Development Corporation's 1-2-3; The Lobo Max-80 Book Reviews: PET/CBM BASIC; 8080 Z80 Assembly Language: Techniques for Improved Programming BYTE's Bugs System Notes: GRPRINT: An Apple Utility Program for Dot-Matrix Printers; A Little Apple SOS with Your Pascal BYTELINES Clubs and Newsletters Ask BYTE Software Received Books Received Event Queue Cumulative Index Update What's New? Unclassified Ad5 BOMB, BOMB Results Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 07-12 1982-12 Game Plan 1982 Cover Index
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BYTE Vol 02-05 1977-05 Interfacing - 180 Pages 110,363,054 Bytes BYTE Vol 02-05 from May 1977... Oh time has been short the last two weeks and I had not planned on it to be so... Not a lot of time to digest these things lately The Apple II article by Steve Wozniak and the 8080 programming notes make the issue for me. The tidbit on the ASCII standards and the Tiny Assembler implementation also had me teary eyed. I did not get a chance to even gloss over the AI article. Foreground A CATALOG OF LIBERATING HOME COMPUTER CONCEPTS THE APPLE-II INTERFACING WITH AN ANALOG WORLD-Part 1 WHAT'S IN A FLOATING POINT PACKAGE? A GUIDE TO BAUDOT MACHINES: Part 2 ALL THIS JUST TO PRINT A QUOTATION MARK? 8080 PROGRAMMING NOTES Background ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, AN EVOLUTIONARY IDEA: Part 1 COME UPSTAIRS AND BE RESPECTABLE USING A KEYBOARD ROM IMPLEMENTING THE TINY ASSEMBLER Nucleus In This BYTE BYTE'S Bugs Surveying the Field Solution to 8080 Bug in the Stack Letters Answer to Bar Code Puzzle What's New Book Reviews Technical Forum Ask BYTE BYTE's Bits Clubs, Newsletters New ASCII Standards BOMB Classified Ads Download it here: BYTE Vol 02-05 1977-05 Interfacing Cover Index The next issue is about done.. The 1982 Game issue - probably will post on Sunday
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Ga! I am not a subscriber anymore.. I did not realize I had expired I don't have the ability to update my previous post anymore.. The 1980-05 BYTE has been fix and is here: BYTE Vol 05-05 1980-05 Floppy Disks
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Hi People! Sorry for the delay in getting the last issue posted (and then with an error - it is OCRing now, then I have to re-upload it, will put out a message when it is done). Darryl - Yes please send that issue if you can! Thank you so much! redheights - I had a couple of messages about the other archive a few months ago but as of yet have not been able to download any issues (I give it a go about once a week). We do not use Rapidshare - I have a hosted site.. Samir I think is giving up his own bandwidth and ExoBuzz I have no idea (don't ask don't tell ... Requests - Right now I am trying to do big issue / little issue (though even the little issues that are left are big now) so I will cycle them in but it may take a few cycles.
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BYTE Vol 05-05 1980-05 Floppy Disks - 344 Pages 227,314,758 bytes Byte Vol 05-05 from May 1980... Wow a program article for the COSMAC computer. The whole magazine is worth for that alone Although the I/O expansion for the TRS-80, The Computer Club Network, KIMDOS, and Floppy interface for 8080A computers is pretty good as well. The BYTELINES has a tidbit on Commodore introducing a new 4-bit processor.. I Never knew! Columns A DC-TO-DC CONVERTER EXPANSION FOR THE RADIO SHACK TRS-80, Part 1: Principles of Parallel Ports KIMDOS, Using Your KIM-1 with a Percom Floppy-Disk Drive INTERFACE A FLOPPY-DISK DRIVE TO AN 8080A-BASED COMPUTER GIVE YOUR COMPUTER AN EAR FOR NAMES. THE COSMAC DOODLER ERROR CHECKING AND CORRECTING FOR YOUR COMPUTER Background THE CASSETTE LIVES ON, An Alternative to Floppy-Disk Mass Storage A GRAPHICS TEXT EDITOR FOR MUSIC, Patr 2: Algorithms USING THE COMPUTER AS A MUSICIAN'S AMANUENSIS,Part 2: Going from Keyboard to Printed Score COMPARING FLOPPY -DISK DRIVES BY SOFTWARE SIMULATION THE CLUB COMPUTER NETWORK Nucleus Editorial: Computer-Controlled Viewing of the 1980 Eclipse Letters BYTELINES (formerly BYTE News) Technical Forum: Simplifying the Curve-Plotting Calculation by Geometric Means; Programming Quickies: Decisions, Formatted Program Output for the KIM Book Reviews Clubs and Newsletters BYTE's Bits BYTE's Bugs Event Queue NCC Information What's New? Unclassified Ads, BOMB Results Reader Service, BOMB ** NOTE: I found a problem with the PDF, fixing it now.. ** Download it here: BYTE Vol 05-05 1980-05 Floppy Disks Cover Index
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Hey there.. Interface age.. I think I have some of those (the covers seem familiar) I did a quick peek (home for lunch) and all that I found in my collection were some of pre-cursor magazines from before the split (interface was split into two magazines - Interface Age and SCCS Interface) - I have Issue 7 from when it was still called "interface" from June of 1976.. I also have issues of 9, 10, 11, 12 of SCCS Interface, and 13 of MicroComputer Interface (for issue 13 they changed the name to MicroComputer Interface). They tend to be pretty pricey on eBay! I read your PM.. I'll PM you back tonight
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BYTE Vol 09-05 1984-05 Computers and the Professions - 586 Pages 403,427,461 bytes BYTE Vol 09-05 from May 1984... Big Issue from 1984! I think the features section is much more interesting than the Themes section this month.. Though there is an article and program for an OB/GYN that uses an Atari 400 as an expert system. Apple seems to get more than the usual attention with several articles... and a couple of good articles for programmers: fitting curves to data and indexing open-ended tree structures.. Add that in with reviews for two C compilers, putting CP/M on the TRS-80 model II and an article covering HAM bulletin boards. Another excellent issue! Columns Trump Card, Part 1: Hardware User's Column: Chaos Manor's Hard-Disk System BYTE West Coast: Bulletin Boards in Space Themes Professional Computing A Professional's Perspective on User-Friendliness A Computer In the Doctor's Waiting Room The Microcomputer as a Decision-Making Aid Benchmarking Business-Modeling Software Expert Systems for Personal Computers How Lawyers Can Use Microcomputers Computerizing a Medical Office Reviews Reviewer's Notebook Thinktank. The ODP-300 Computer The Kaypro 10 Converting the TRS-80 Model III for CP/M Robographics CAD-l Two More Versions of C for CP/M LNW-80 Features This Month's Features The Apple IIc Personal Computer Inside the Model 100's ROM Maximizing Hard-Disk Performance Update on Apple Macintosh and Lisa 2 Fitting Curves to Data Laboratory Data Collection with an IBM PC by Putting the Apple II Work, Part 2: The Software ISIM: A Continuous-System Simulation Language Indexing Open-Ended Tree Structures Using Comments to Aid Program Maintenance Nucleus Editorial: The BYTE Reader: Who You Are MICRO BYTES Letters BYTE's User to User Event Queue Book Reviews Clubs and Newsletters Books Received Software Received Ask BYTE What's New? Unclassified Ads BYTE's Ongoing Monitor Box and BOMB Results Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 09-05 1984-05 Computers and the Professions Cover Index
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BYTE Vol 04-02 1979-02 Robot Arm - 236 Pages 149,945,300 bytes BYTE Vol 07-03 from March 1982... Reading the "Designing a Robot from Nature" article you really get the feeling that humanoid robots may not be just around the corner but that we have a pretty good handle on what needs to be done. As per usual for me, the microprocessor article is a favorite - this particular case being part II covering the 6809. The forum on the eight queens puzzle has half a dozen interesting articles. One interesting tidbits in the "BYTE News" - If I am not mistaken the first mention in BYTE about the Atari 8-bit computers is here: ATARI'S NEW COMPUTERS. The recently announced Atari Model 400 and 800 personal computers are major entries into the market. The 8K non-expandable 400 (suggested retail $500) sports a touch audio feedback keyboard and a single read only memory cartridge slot, plus cassette IO. It also has 16 color graphics with eight luminance levels (!) The 48K expandable 800 (suggested retail $1000 with 8K and cassette recorder) has additional color features, full keyboard, 8K BASIC, high resolution graphics, two read only memory cartridge slots, and much more. Both units use a modified 6502. Availability: August 1979 (limited quantities); full availability: Fall 1979. More details next month. Almost makes it sound like the 400 would have the CTIA while the 800 would have the GTIA Foreground USE YOUR TELEVISION SET AS A VIDEO MONITOR THE ECLECTIC CARD READER A STEPPING MOTOR PRIMER : Theory of Operation FAST FOURIER FOR THE 6800 BUILD A COMPUTER CONTROLLED SECURITY SYSTEM FOR YOUR HOME Background DESIGNING A ROBOT FROM NATURE: Biological Considerations A MICROPROCESSOR FOR THE REVOLUTION : The 6809 ANOTHER PLOTTER TO TOY WITH ASSEMBLING THE ADM-3A A HOBBYIST ROBOT ARM APPROACHING GAME PROGRAM DESIGN UNLIMITED PRECISION DIVISION HAMMING ERROR CORRECTING CODE FILES ON PARADE Nucleus In This BYTE The Current State of Robotics Letters BYTE's Bugs BYTE's Bits Book Review Robotics Forum BYTE News Nybbles: Computerized Wine Cellar 8 Queens Forum Technical Forum: Interfacing TTL to 20 mA Current Loop Event Queue Clubs and Newsletters What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB, Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 04-02 1979-02 Robot Arm Cover Index
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AtariUser Magazine (American version)
ThumpNugget replied to ThumpNugget's topic in Atari ST/TT/Falcon Computers
AtariUser 15 1992-07 Summer Fun - 32 Pages 23,487,248 bytes Issue #15 of AtariUser Magazine from July 1992.. Oh look, more yellow! OK, OK only half of it So another special Summer Issue which means.. games! Yeah! Mostly the ST and some Lynx with the 8-bit getting the shaft. The news was kinda sad to read - the Milwaukee AtariFest was a disappointment with only 200 people coming even though there were big names and announcements... There was also a blurb about the declining User Group memberships and creative ways to keep number up... Kind of interesting that they were trying to grow for growing sake like a business. News and Stuff! Special Subscription Offer - Our lowest price in over a year AtariUser News - Top Stories ... And so much more News Alerts - Portfolio, Lynx RE:Views - Batman Returns, EdScheme, Rampart, Straight Fax, Supra FaxModem, HotteST Game of the Month-EPIC Feature - The Modem in the Home The Games the Thing! Resources AtariUser's Wacky World of ST Gaming - Who's Who, What's What, and Why, .. Sometimes, the topsy-turvy world of ST games AU Classifieds AU's AtariLand Calendar Download it here: AtariUser 15 1992-07 Summer Fun Cover Index -
AtariUser Magazine (American version)
ThumpNugget replied to ThumpNugget's topic in Atari ST/TT/Falcon Computers
Oh no!! Did you throw them away? There is an issue #14 on its way so the only missing issue now is #20 (December 92). With yours gone I only know of one other person that has it and he was not ready to give it up for the cause last time I spoke to him I have issue #15 ready to go... I'll post it up tomorrow then swing around and get #14 next week if it arrives in the next few days. If anyone has the Dec 1992 issue - these mags are small enough that I can get them scanned non-destructively (no need to split the spine) and return it to you... We are only one magazine away from having the complete collection... -
BYTE Vol 07-03 1982-03 Printers - 532 Pages 352,800,678 bytes BYTE Vol 07-03 from March 1982... I know what you are thinking.. Awesome! Finally a magazine covering dot matrix printers from 1982! Sadly, this covers so much more even though they only had 532 pages. The BYTE Arcade covers a few good games like Apple Panic, Missile Command, and Dino wars.. Reviews of the COBOL for the TRS-80 III, a Tutorial over the Atari 8-bit sound capability, and a toolbox for FORTH. This is the stated quote of the month by the Wall Street Journal. "By the end of the century, analysts predict, computers and information processing will be the world 's biggest business after petroleum." But I found this one very funny (look at page 439 of the PDF in the BYTElines): "A report issued by Strategic Incorporated, a market research firm in San Jose, California, predicts Xerox Corporation's Ethernet local area network will be a total failure within two years." Good Call! Features Four New Products from Radio Shack use Voice prints to Analyze Speech The Atari Tutorial, Part 7: Sound Build a Half-year Clock for the Color Computer. The Input/Output Primer. Part 2: Interrupts and Direct Memory Access A BASIC Plotting Subroutine. Sophisticated Plotting with Your MX-80 Modify Your Paper Tiger for Different Paper Thicknesses Custom and Standardized Forms for the Microcomputer User The Fill Forms System. CP/M Programs to Cut Down on Paperwork. Lowercase Descenders for the Epson MX-70. BYTE Printer Directory The Computer Toolbox. Skip Sequential: A New File Structure for Microcomputers Reviews Commodore 4022 Printer Integral Data Systems' Prism Printer BYTE's Arcade: Apple Panic by Gregg Williams; Missile Command by Stanley J. Wszola; Dino Wars Graphics II by Selanar, High Resolution Hard Copy from a DECwriter Base 2 Printer by Walter Jeffries Text Editing with Compuview's VEDIT Four Implementations of Pascal Microsoft's BASIC Compiler for the TRS-8O LOOS-Disk Operating System for the TRS-8O COBOL for the TRS-8O Models 1/111 John Bell Engineering's Apple II Parallel Interface Board Nucleus Editorial: The Microprocessor's Tenth Birthday Letters Programming Ouickies: BASIC ; Formatted Printing; An Underline Filter for Matrix Printers; A Shape-Drawing Program for Diablo Printers; Finding Words That Sound Alike, The Soundex Algorithm System Notes: Epson MX-BO Print-Control; Program for the Apple II; Add a Full-sized Keyboard to Sinclair's ZXBO; Add a Cassette Interface to Your VIC-20 Product Description: Tele-VIC. Commodore Breaks the 5100 Price Barrier for Modems Books Received BYTE's Bugs BYTELINES Clubs and Newsletters Software Received Ask BYTE Event Oueue BYTE's Bits What's New? Unclassified Ads BOMB. BOMB Results Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 07-03 1982-03 Printers Cover Index
