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  1. This is a work in progress.. will be happy to add anything missing - Greg A few bits of information, rules and guidelines on posting. Short links to our sub-forums: TI-99/4A Computers http://ti99.atariage.com TI-99/4A Development http://dev99.atariage.com Please read the AtariAge site guidelines which apply to and are enforced in our subs. Our sub-forums are divided to help cater to the varied interests in our beloved platform. The parent sub-forum, TI-99/4A Computers, contains general information and conversation regarding the TI-99/4A and its siblings, such as the 99/2, 99/8, CC-40, and BASICALCS. The sub-forum TI-99/4A Development is for conversations, information, announcements, etc. pertaining to programming, tinkering, or the development of software or hardware for these computers. This division is not intended to be a separation of the community but rather a way for those who have little interest in development but moreso in general discussions to focus their time on the fun-zone, while those who take more interest in the deep-down nitty-gritty and not so much general shenanigans to focus their attention just the same. The rest of us can spend all the time we want and will peruse both subs with reckless abandon. Insofar as development is concerned, once hardware or software has been completed or is at least ready for general consumption, an announcement should be made in the general TI-99/4A Computers forum for all to partake. Further development and inquiries should still be continued within the TI-99/4A Development sub-forum. The forum leader will move threads to a more appropriate forum. This may also be done by request should a thread be started in the wrong forum by accident or the trajectory changes from general to development or vice-versa. The forum leader will also merge identical threads started in both forums into a single thread in the proper forum. Per AtariAge guidelines, please refrain from posting identical threads in both sub-forums as way to ensure the topic gets viewed. Many people already browse both subs, and if your topic pertains more to development rather than general, or vice-versa, the thread should exist in the appropriate forum. As well, multiple threads created on the same topic in the same forum will be merged. Regular members can edit a post for 60 minutes after submission. This allows you to fix any issues you may notice with the post right away. Subscribers can edit posts for 30 days. In the Marketplace and Programming forums you can edit your posts indefinitely, since the flexibility of allowing editing of posts outweighs the potential abuse of the edit functionality. If you make a duplicate post in a thread, which can happen by accident or some unforeseen technical glitch, report the post by clicking on the "report" link at the bottom of the post and indicate in the report that the post is a duplicate. If you are not a subscriber, please help support AtariAge by using the eBay BBCodes ebay, ebayseller, and ebaystore when posting links to eBay! Click here for more information. Anything you would like to share with your fellow 99ers but is seriously off-topic for the forum may be posted in the official off-topic thread, located here To find the most popular threads click on sort by and select most popular. All of us are ready and willing to provide answers to your TI-99 questions if we can, some will just chime in if they cannot, and others will just lurk. If you have any questions specifically pertaining to the operation of our forums, please feel free inquire of the forum leader via Private Message (PM,) or one of the global moderators. BEFORE POSTING QUESTIONS PLEASE READ THE UPDATED TI-99/4A FAQ HERE: https://www.arcadeshopper.com/wp/ti-99-4a-faq/
  2. Another one of my pesky questions-- My NanoPEB lately seems a bit "iffy," giving "DSR error 6" upon loading the second file of large programs like CF2K, or just locking up. My thoughts are: The NanoPEB is touchy about its supply voltage. My set-up has the console and NanoPEB running from the same supply, a battery supplied DC-DC converter. There was lots of power-line noise before I added filters. The voltage at the "navel" power connector is 4.84V. Haven't checked noise levels. The EPROM in the NanoPEB is losing its data. I remember, in the 1980s, hearing of EPROMs being erased by sunlight from friends who had their home-made systems near outside windows. My system sits near a window and I wonder if the label on the EPROM is letting some UV from outside to get in, which could slowly erase the DSR. I need to beef-up the power wiring from the supply to the console/NanoPEB. I originally used 22 gauge wire in the power supply; the charts I read said it should handle three amps, which I figured was enough for the system. The supply-to-console power cable is doubled-up because it is about three feet long. The NanoPEB edge connector is touchy. After I re-seated the NanoPEB I was able to run CF2K without failure, but I'm not sure I trust it. I've had to re-seat the edge connector before. I wonder if I replaced the edge connector with something like the header connectors on IDE drives, or that Arduinos use, if it might not be more "stable" for the long term. Ideas? K-R.
  3. Post updated to reflect current state: 1. "TELCN for nano" ZIP contains two TIFILES formatted files: a. NANOS - source for the nanopeb patch b. TELCN - a program to patch TELCO at run-time. The nanopeb serial port can only be accessed when the card/DSR is turned on. Although this follows TI convention, the step is not required for other RS232 cards, hence the 'incompatibility' with most direct-access serial programs. To use this patch place TELCN in the same folder/disk as TELCO/P/Q. Start Telco by running TELCN. TELCN will patch the necessary three routines and transfer control to Telco when complete. I originally hacked the patches into the telco files using Birdwell's disk utilities but maintenance/upkeep is a real pain so I used the more 'interactive' approach. Note: this patch does not change any of the Telco files, it only changes the program in memory. My testing has been limited to terminal-based testing with my (sometimes flakey) nano and a 14.4k modem. I did not try to "fix" the DTR hang-up feature. A proper cable is required as detailed in other topics. Since the question has arisen in other threads, Mass Transfer 7.4 and TIMXT also work with the nano. The latter requires the F18A. 2. "TELCN for Ubergrom UART" ZIP contains two TIFILES formatted files: a. UBERS - source for ubergrom patch b. TELCN - program to patch TELCO at run-time The ubergrom UART patch functions with Telco's terminal mode only; the file transfer routines rely on the RS232 circular interrupt buffer on a per-module basis. I have determined that it is not feasible (for me) at this time to try to update all of the file transfer modules. If someone comes up with the source code for Telco, I'd be happy to take a stab at it. UART speed is locked at 38.4K. It is possible this speed will need to be reduced to a lower baud rate for usability when connecting to systems that transmit at high speed. Edit: attached the telco complete package Tursi provided in another Telco thread for completeness since it is the image I used for testing. TELCN for nano.zip Telco - Complete Package.zip TELCN-for Ubergrom UART.zip
  4. Anyone know how "faithful" the NanoPEB emulation in TI994w is? Or, would a better question be, how close is the CF7+ emulation to the NanoPEB? I've been working on a new version of my batch loader, using TI994w to debug it while my TI has been in pieces. After getting the TI back together, the loader hung when I tried running it. The loader ran under TI994w without problems. My TI994w configuration uses FIADs, where the files are in DSK1-3 directories in TI-FILES format. Then I switched the configuration to use a CF7 image, and used TI99-Dir to make an image of the Compact Flash board in my NanoPEB. The batch loader appeared to hang, but when i showed the CPU window I could see that the program appeared to be stuck in a loop in the >4XXX range, presumably in the emulated disk DSR. K-R.
  5. A quick post here. I'm going to write more on the CFHDX on my blog soon but I just discovered something cool messing with it. A little back ground, the CFHDX uses software to transfer files between the PC and the TI99 via a cross-over cable. This process works fine but can't print. that requires a DSR with the CFHDX the NanoPEB does not have. But I found a work around and it doesn't use the HDX at all. What it requires is just a VT100 terminal emulator on the PC. You simple set the VT100 to 300,7,odd,none (default for the TI99 RS232) then start the VT100 on the PC and print anything on the TI99 to the RS232. The output is sent to the VT100 screen in all it's 300 baud glory. Use your VT100 to print out the output and you're done. This may be obvious to some people but I thought I would post it as I haven't seen it elsewhere and really does expand the usefulness of the NanoPEB.
  6. For those who still prefer to purchase on eBay, i've moved all my 3D printed stuff to a new account: c0d3m4st4_3d The other account was shared with a friend, and we were short of free monthly listings, so i decided to move all my 3D printed stuff to a new one Same items, support, quality and communication, only low feedback for now.. hopefully that will change soon http://www.ebay.es/usr/c0d3m4st4_3d IMPORTANT NOTES: UPDATE: seems transit times to the U.S. are shorter now (finally!), still not as fast as last year, but all parcels should be there in 15 days max, let me know if not received in 15 days after i send you the tracking number. - Shipping to Mexico and South America, absolutely at your own risk. Unacceptable customs delays in most cases, and some unexpected returns for no reason. If returned (safe, of course) i will only refund 80% of the item cost, but won't refund the postage cost. If declared lost, i will only refund whatever compensation the Spanish postal service offers (this is the amount payed for postage + a small compensation). - U.S. buyers can purchase from www.arcadeshopper.com when he has stock available Hey there. Some of you may already know me or even purchased from me on eBay or the Ti99 forum. I'm listing here all my 3D printed cases from now on offering cheaper prices (item + shipping) than on eBay (no eBay fees, no PayPal fees). Only shipping once or twice a week... mostly mondays and fridays, but not always... (kinda random shipping days ) so please, be patient... max you will wait before getting a tracking number is 5 working days. Please note, due to the manufacturing process (home 3D printing with non-professional equipment) cases might have imperfections here and there... but they will do the job. 3D printing is not comparable with mold injection Payments should be made by PayPal (in euro) using the send money to friends/family option (if you have PayPal funds or bank account linked to your account, if no funds and only credit card linked to your account, final price will be increased in 3.5% + 0.35 which is the PayPal fee). All cases include screws when needed. 3D printed case for FinalGROM 99 - 17.50 euro 4 colours available: green, white, orange and black. Design as pictured (for color options, please check FlashROM 99 case until i get some cases printed in the other colors). All cases include two 3D printed buttons in green and orange colors for the reset buttons (if you prefer them both in the same color, please, let me know when you contact me to purchase). Necessary screws included as usual. This one is for the fully assembled PCB including LED and push buttons. SD card inserts completely in the case... not an inch is left outside. I took the pics with it "ejected" from the socket. 3D printed case for FlashROM 99 - 20 euro --- Ω --- blog entry for this case HERE 4 colours available: green, white, orange and black. Design as pictured. All cases include 3 x 3D printed buttons in different colours, one matching your case, and 2 random ones to test where to sand or cut the plastic post in the button to match your reset switch height. 3D printed case for NanoPEB v1 - 20 euro IMPORTANT: Please double check to make sure your NanoPEB is the same i used to design these cases. Check with these pics, or contact me including a pic of yours to make sure it is the same model if you have any doubt, as i've seen different models of v1 floating around. --- Ω --- blog entry for this case HERE Available in black color only at least for now, i don't have much stock of other color filament. Since it seems there are many versions of these devices, please, check following pictures with measures and exact model to make sure yours will fit in the case. Ask me first if you have any doubt. The rough surface near the switch is caused because this is printed upside down and need a support structure in that area, so first layer is not very well done This is the only way to go to make it easier and faster to print, and getting a plain surface on the front. Slide-in lid to access CF card, works quite well. Please note if you have big fingers you will still have some problems to extract the card properly, you can lift it a bit (there is extra room for that) to make it easier. 3D printed case for CF7 - 20 euro IMPORTANT: Please double check to make sure your CF7 is the same i used to design these cases. Check with these pics, or contact me including a pic of yours to make sure it is the same model if you have any doubt, as i've seen different models floating around. --- Ω --- blog entry for this case HERE Available in black color only at least for now, i don't have much stock of other color filament. Since it seems there are many versions of these devices, please, check following pictures with measures and exact model to make sure yours will fit in the case. Ask me first if you have any doubt. The rough surface near the switch is caused because this is printed upside down and need a support structure in that area, so first layer is not very well done This is the only way to go to make it easier and faster to print, and getting a plain surface on the front. Slide-in lid to access CF card, works quite well. Please note if you have big fingers you will still have some problems to extract the card properly, you can lift it a bit (there is extra room for that) to make it easier. Thanks to schmitzi for sending me CF7 and NanoPEB so a case could be made. 3D printed case for jedimatt42 32K expansion - 15 euro --- Ω --- blog entry for this case HERE 4 different designs for top cover (plain, with logo, plain with window for expansion port, or with logo and window). Snap-in lid to cover the expansion port window in case you don't want to use it for now but you go for the window version for future use). Fits nicely. Will include an extra lid just in case, as it is the weakest part (should be good for normal use, but no doubt it will degrade and fall if you keep inserting/removing it a lot). 3D printed case for Amstrad C4CPC flash cart - 12 euro Mod of the original case to replace the weak tabs with screws and fix text for FDM 3D printers. Available in creamy white color only. 3D printed shell for Turbo Ever Drive v1.x flash cart - 5 euro With or without USB socket. Suitable for PCB revs. 1.x (not suitable for v2!). Available colors: gray, creamy white, orange, dark green. 3D printed case for MATEOS burner / dumper - 9 euro This is a redesign of my previous version. Now with screws. Available colors: gray, creamy white, orange, dark green. Suitable for PCB rev. 1.4 Fully assembled Tapuino - Commodore 64/VIC20/C16 datasette emulator - 50 euro Allows you to load .TAP files (tape backups) directly from a microSD card (not included). You can also save your own programs and copy to/from tape by connecting a real datasette to the port on the back. Fully assembled in a screwless 3D printed compact case. Upgradeable firmware. I can flash it in your desired language (English, Spanish, German, Italian or Turkish). Basic usage instructions included (in English or Spanish only). Professionally made PCB. For C16 compatibility, you need an adapter, which i haven't built, so i haven't really tested C16 compatibility, but it is in the firmware and project docs, so guess it should work. More cases coming soon Shipping cost (everything is shipped from Spain): I always ship boxed, and with tracking number. Sometimes the tracking numbers do not work with some postal services around the world, as i ship as "letter" to keep it cheap, and it seems they don't scan them on arrival, so contact me after 15 days if you haven't received your parcel so i can claim and they can start investigating the issue with your postal service. 2 weeks should be enough to arrive to U.S.A. but it may take up to a month (even more) for Asia and Australia. I ship to most destinations, but not all, so contact me to check if i will ship to your country if not listed below. Postage prices updated on Jan 1st, 2018 - To Japan / Australia / USA / Other countries : Up to 100 grams: 7.50 euro Up to 500 grams: 14 euro - To Europe: Up to 100 grams: 6.50 euro Up to 500 grams: 10.50 euro Feedback: Please, when your items arrive, it will be good if you can leave your feedback here, so everyone knows how i'm doing.Thanks. http://atariage.com/forums/topic/255013-c0d3m4st4/ If you have any problem or question about with your item, contact me first!
  7. In my ramblings with Level-2 and Level-3 I/O I found that, if a file is opened for Level-3 I/O, a Level-2 I/O call appears to fail. In a test program I open a DF128 file and read the contents. At EOF I close the file. The test program uses a copy of Tom Bentley's "TCIO" library that I disassembled and modified. I added two functions, 'tstat' and 'tstats' 'Tstat' uses the Level-3 STATUS (Op-code 9) command to get information about the test file. 'Tstats' uses the Level-2 Get-File-Info (0x14) command to get information. I was going to merge the two so I can get info to load a PAB for Level-3 access. Before and after each Level-3 TCIO call I use 'tstat' and 'tstats' to see how the information changes as the program performs the various library calls: Use 'tstat' to get file status (Level-3 Op-code 9). Print results and info. Use 'tstats' to get file information (Level-2 Op-code 0x14) Print results and info. Do a Level-3 operation. Get file status (Level-3 Op-code 9). Print results and info. [Repeat Step 1.] Get file status (Level-2 Op-code 0x14). Print results and info. [Repeat Step 2.] I found that Level-2 'Get File Info' command appears to fail with Error Code 7 (file error) if the file is opened for Level-3 access. After closing the file the Level-2 commands once again work. My merged file-info function will have to skip calling the Level-2 call if the file is open, but I do not see that being a problem. Also, I hate to say that my copy of Thierry Nouspikel's TI99-Pages has the 0x14 command returning the record-count at Result-pointer+8 as a byte value. Fred Kaal says this is a word value, and my experiments seem to indicate the record-count is a word. Both sites have been immensely useful for my experiments. K-R.
  8. Here is the problem and solution I posted to the Yahoo Forums a few years ago. Be aware that the CF7/nanoPEB and other devices (ie, disk controllers) use VDP RAM which might not be reserved in emulation/simulation. I didn't specify a FWEB version in my original post, but I am fairly certain I based this on v4.40. IIRC, the v5.0 release is limited to editor and other non-loader files. FWEB PROBLEM OVERVIEW: 1. The CF7+ device stores 8 bytes of volume control data starting at VDP address 0x3ff8. 2. The CF7+ mimics the TI Disk controller, and uses VDP RAM for its IO operations. 3. A TI Disk Controller reserves VDP memory 0x37d8 to 0x3fff. 4. A CF7+ device reserves VDP memory 0x37d1* to 0x3fff. 5. TI and CF7+ both contain a 5 byte header at the beginning of this VDP RAM. When FWEB launches it reads the first available VDP address from location 0x8370. It then re-creates the header in RAM, writes it to VDP, and clears the controller-reserved VDP memory with the exception of the header. In the case of the CF7+, this is 0x37d7 to 0x3fff. Because the CF7+ device uses 8 bytes to keep track of its volume info but does not "hide" them from other programs, FWEB is able to unwittingly create a condition where the CF7+ can no longer find ivolume information. Essentially, the device gets lost and can no longer access disks, creating lockup and "file not found" conditions. FWEB PROBLEM FIX: We need to help FWEB to "properly" set the VDP pointers and inhibit its clearing the CF7+ volume info. To do this, use your favorite file editor to locate the following three HEX strings and modify as directed: 1. Find "1afb 0220 0010" and replace with "1afb 0220 0018" 2. Find "fa94 0220 fdea" and replace with "fa94 0220 fde2" 3. Find "0580 8800 fa94" and replace with "0580 0280 3ff8" All three changes should be located within the same sector. Note: There are THREE files requiring the changes. IIRC they are: FW, UTIL1 (or UT), and LOAD. DSKU 4.2 return to FW problem: After loading FW, DSKU clears PAD Ram from 0x8300 to 0x83C6. Doing so destroys 0x8370, the VDP Disk Buffer Area pointer, which creates a nasty situation for FWEB and the CF7. During powerup the TI sets this value to 0x37d7 (or 0x37cf for compact flash). DSKU 4.2 FIX: Within the file DU (first file) replace "0281 83C6" with "0281 8348". DSKU inhibits interrupts so any in-place ISR should not wreak havoc between loading the file and re-starting FW. (*Edit: 0x73d1 probably should read 0x73d0 to reflect the 8 byte difference)
  9. I'm using my HDR ramdisk a lot while developing my TiVi editor. It's a real time saver. It's especially helpful when dealing with large files (which is kinda my primary purpose why I started working on TiVi). Today I read the updated documenation the InsaneMultitasker provided as draft. In there I learned that with ROS it's possible to use data buffers that reside in CPU RAM insead of VDP RAM. That is something I really want to try, because even with a RAMDISK reading a large file (think >100 kilobytes) takes some time. Now my challenge is; How can I easily detect from assembly language if I'm dealing with a "high-speed" disk device compared to a "slow" disk device ("floppy"). With a high-speed device I mean: CF7+, Nanopeb TIPI HDR ... I see differents possible paths here: CRC checksum on DSR space (but won't work with RAMBOS? Self modifiying code, configuration stored here too?) Check on some specific device feature? Actually I think that the CRC checksum logic would work quite well (I already did a test program on that about a year ago), but I'm not sure about HDR. Thinking about it would be cool if there is some unified way to detect device capabilities accross devices. For example a standard where there's a device "capabilities" file that is automatically created when the device is formatted. That file could then be processed from TI-Basic, assembly language or any other language supporting file I/O. Any ideas?
  10. This is a more targeted continuation of the blatantly hijacked thread <here>. Executive Summary of this go-forward: The NanoPEB being periodically peddled on eBay is a wonderful little device, providing 3 virtual disk drives which map to a Compact Flash card, a 32K RAM expansion, and an RS232 serial port. Unfortunately, the serial port was set up in such a way that virtually all existing Terminal Emulation software packages take one look at that serial port, and promptly throw their dish on the floor. The technical details of that I leave to vaster minds than mine to explain. Meanwhile, I have slapped together what I think is a toy many of us would like to have and use, a WiFi modem that is RS232 compatible and doesn't cost an arm and a leg. The prototype has been proven with several IBM-ish 8088 machines, and I have been surfing Telnet BBS's with it. I would like to test and use it with my TI-99/4A plus NanoPEB, but the terminal software always stops me, since none of them like my serial port. My current quest is to find, make, beg, borrow, steal or barter a package into working with the NanoPEB. The ultimate goal is to publish details of this very simple modem, so that others in this community can make their own for less than $10 and a few minutes work, and go BBS surfing using their household WiFi, Telnet, and a T-99/4A with either an "original" serial port or a NanoPeb. I'll explain how once it's tested, as I don't want folks clamoring to build one only to find that it doesn't work in this plane of existence. The modem itself works in another environment, but I'm a firm believer in end-to-end systems testing. Besides, I have a NanoPEB, so I'm greedy and want it to work with my TI-99/4A. So that's the lay of the land. In our last episode (thread) InsaneMultitasker had generously thrown me a software package thinking it might work. I'm sorry to report that it doesn't. It runs well up until the moment any byte is actually sent down the line, then it crashes. (Cursor stops blinking, and no keys respond.) To be thorough I connected a null modem cable between the NanoPeb and the modem, (they normally dock directly), but the behavior was the same. The quest continues,...
  11. Welp, it seems that the NanoPEB which had been powering my wireless weather station for the past 2 years has finally given up the ghost... On a routine check of the TI system managing the station, I was greeted with a blank screen. I reset everything with no change. I checked the CF card, and it's fine. Swapped it with a known working one, still no luck. Reseated the 9902 chip on the NanoPEB, nope... Cleaned all the contacts in the console and NanoPEB, still no dice. Checked the power supply, same thing. Replaced the power supply, ditto... So is it basically dead? It has been running 24/7 for 2 years now, but given that it's solid state with no moving parts, I did expect better from it. Heck, the TI console to which it is connected is several decades old and still running just fine! To be honest, I'm a little disgusted by that. Modern electronics just suck. If anyone here has any suggestions on how to revive the card, please let me know. There are really no user serviceable parts in it other than the 9902 chip. Otherwise, I may have to go on the hunt for another card.
  12. I just got a nanoPEB and I was looking for the documentation for it. I found this is the site for the nanoPEB and CF7+ http://webpages.charter.net/nanopeb/but It doesn't appear to be up at the moment. I keep checking it but it hasn't come back up. Does anybody have the nanoPEB user manual? And the other software that was hosted at that site? Like CFMGR.
  13. Have NanoPEB that is a few months old. Comes with a 256GB CF card, 3D Printed Case and power supply. To learn more: http://webpages.charter.net/nanopeb/ Price is $70 plus Shipping. Shipping to US only PM if interested
  14. Just wondering how others are duping copies of their existing TI 5.25" Floppies to volumes used for the nanoPEB? I imagine one way would be to connect the original PEB, then use an RS-232 data transfer to the PC using some software to receive the TI disk and store it on the PC HD. But, I was wondering if there was an easier way? I was looking for a 5.25" USB floppy drive, but apparently noone ever made them (I have a USB 3.5" but obviously not much use for the TI). Are there adapter/sleds that allow 5.25" USB connections to occur? Maybe there is another way that just isn't obvious to me. TIA
  15. This is my first post here, happy to have found it (thanks Gregory)! The TI-99/4a was my first computer, I spent countless hours on it when I was about 14ish. It was this machine that helped me decide what I wanted to do later in life, Software Engineering. Recently, I brought all my TI stuff down from the attic and have been having a great time going through my stuff but also catching up on a lot that I've missed over the years. I've had so much fun, I decided to create a video series on the TI-99/4a, below is the first episode : TI 99/4a Home Computer - Part I https://youtu.be/mFZgnH32Kag I'm working on the second episode, which will likely be much longer. Here's a list of things I'm planning in this next video (or two, depending on how long it turns out in the edit room) : Next Episode ideas 1) Connecting the TI cassette cable to the output jack of a PC/Raspberry Pi to transfer a program to the TI. 2) Connecting the TI via an RCA Cable to an HDMI converter to display on an HD TV 3) Using a nanoPEB to load/run programs 4) Using a null modem cable between an RS-232 port/PC/RPi to transfer data between the two 5) Using the FlashRom99 to run carts Obviously, the next video will get a bit more technical but not so much so that it will be too boring. At least, that's the plan. If you have recommendations for segments you think should be included, please post below. I hope to release Part II here in about a week or two. Please like/subscribe if you enjoy this video. I won't be shy, I'd like to someday be able to monetize my YouTube videos such that it can help fund my addiction to technology ps. I also have a Wagner's TechTalk page https://www.facebook.com/jwagnertech . There I have videos about building RPi arcade cabinets, a custom robot my son and I built, an LED face for Alexa (works via bluetooth), etc.
  16. Hey all, I just acquired a side car floppy drive, but I don't have a 32k RAM expansion for it and I'm looking to mess around with assembly language. I do however have a nanoPEB. Now, as silly as this may sound, would it be possible to set up the floppy drive, AND the nanoPEB so that the nanoPEB would act as the 32K expansion, or would having the 3 emulated floppy drives and the real floppy drives make something go wrong? In addition to that, now that I have a real floppy drive, what are good floppy disk games out there? Thanks!
  17. EDIT: NEVERMIND!!! I simply copied the TIFile to the DSk file and that worked. Even though when I open the DSK file called BLOCKS.DSK with the TIFILE BLOCKS copied to it, it shows up as BLOCKS.DSK so it looks like BLOCKS.DSK is a file on BLOCKS.DSK, but when I mount it as DSK1 via TI99DIR and load up TurboForth, it works! When i opened up my original BLOCKS.DSK file to see what was on it (one I created from scratch within forth) i saw anothe BLOCK.DSK file in there so i decided to try this new approach. ____________________________________________________________________ I have a TI file (Thanks Willsy) for Turboforth called BLOCKS. I want to load it on to my nanopeb CF card as a DSK file. Using TI99DIR - I created a blank dsk but everytime i attempt to copy a file to it I get a "Disk is full" error. I've attempted different formats even the 1600 special format for the CF7. I don't recall having this issue in the past (copying files back and forth in TI99DIR. so I'm kind of at a loss. I attempted to use TIImageTool but it cannot open the TIFile or the special formatted DSK file. I can create and use my own black block file using instructions Willsy provided but I'd like to start using forth with his environment since it's full of utils and demos. I'd rather not use it in emulation since I can't seem to get his TIFiles into DSK format and that would mean everything I do would be stuck in emulation. Is there a utility to convert tifiles in to dsk files that will work on the nano?
  18. I've never had this problem before, so looking for suggestions... Wanted to copy a couple dsk's over to a CF card this morning. but dsk2cf (which has always worked flawlessly in the past) seems to be having issues. I enter the dsk name and volume parameters, it reports back that it found the flash drive, identifies it correctly, and asks me if this is the drive I want to use, but when I type "Y" it just returns to the command prompt without the familiar "Successful!" (or whatever it is it usually responds after a successful copy). The flash drive is accessible and readable through TI99Dir and as I said dsk2cf recognizes it, but for some reason it's not completing the copy. I've tried multiple CF cards, all of which have worked fine in the past. Since the CF7 formatted cards are not directly accessible to windows I can't test writing to it in windows. but TI99Dir initializes volumes without problem. I just can't seem to copy dsks with dsk2cf, and as far as I know, there is no windows alternative. Been doing this for a couple years without issue, so kind of surprised it's suddenly not working. Any thoughts??
  19. As the nanoPEB and CF7+ are no longer available, is there any way to connect a 360k/720k 3.5" floppy drive to the TI-99/4a without dealing with the shipping costs of the PEB? Thanks in advance!
  20. I would like to make an extension cable for my NanoPEB. It currently plugs in so tight that I feel like I am damaging the NanoPEB when I try to unplug it. Can I have some help finding the parts I need? Darryl
  21. Hi everyone...so I've got to downsize my collection a bit to make the wife happy so I decided I'm gonna sell my TI-99/4a and accessories. I don't care for eBay so I figured this would be the best place to post for sale. I'm currently at work but I'll post pictures later. What I have: TI-99/4A Silver/black with: -original power adapter -original joysticks (one paddle is broken) -original plastic F-key descriptors, including a ton of blanks. -original cassette drive audio cables (in/out/control jacks) -aftermarket RCA A/V connector -original box (poor condition, see pictures coming soon) General Electric Cassette Player (the kind recommended for the TI-99/4A) nanoPEB with power adapter & 256mb CF card fully working Cartridges w/manuals (some with boxes, will update once I can take pictures): -Munchman -Jawbreaker II -Parsec -Personal Record Keeping Not sure what to price all of this, if I can get $100 for everything I'll be happy, I'll take best offer for individual pieces. Pictures will come this evening, thanks!
  22. Yesterday 5th December I ordered a nanoPeb from http://www.stargames.be/shop/101-ti-99-4a a French site, but I used Chrome web browser for on the fly translation from French to English. I will be posting my experience with this device as I go along. It should have a 256MB CF card which I can mount as TI Disks. As soon as this arrives and I test it that it is OK I will order the XB 2.7 (The Great Gazoo's software Suite) 12/12/2015 My NanoPeb Finally arrived. Let the fun begin.
  23. Just got a CF7+, like it. But, it seems to act flaky loading binaries when attached through my speech synthesizer. I have seen mixed comments on if the CF7 is compatible with the speech module. One guy has a web page on how to bypass ( http://gtello.pagesperso-orange.fr/ti99_e.htm ) it while I have seen pictures of people having their CF7 attached through the speech module fine. P.S. someone else also commenting on issues loading binaries http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Comp/comp.sys.ti/2008-11/msg00003.html Any thoughts.
  24. Given that questions about the nanoPEB are spread across a number of threads, I figured that a thread for general questions would be in order. The official user's manual doesn't answer some of these questions. I have a couple questions and will ask each in a separate post. Thanks to all for any help. By the way, I have one of the V2 nanoPEBs with the RS-232 port designated as COM1. In another thread, I noted that I have no plans to use the RS-232 port, as all I want to do now is play games in .dsk format. 1. If I only want to play .dsk games with my nanoPEB, what cartridges will I need besides XB and E/A? Do I need Mini Memory for anything? Should I use Disk Manager 2 for deleting files from the CF card?
  25. Does anyone know how to detect (using assembly languague) if a TI-99/4A console is running with a CF7+/nanopeb ?
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