Jump to content
IGNORED

Please don't think me sacrilegious


Mehridian Sanders

Recommended Posts

So I was reading the thread Texas Instruments Dimension 4, and as my mind usually does, flies off in a different direction with chaotic association. About a month ago, I snagged a lot of Apple Computers off Craigslist for $20. Among them was the 12" monochrome display and an Apple IIgs. I sold the Display for cheap cause I had no way of testing it. However the IIgs is still sitting here. It turns on and the speaker works. So it sits awaiting to be sold. My co-worker mentioned that he had a IIgs and that he had purchased a card for, which gave it MS/DOS. Today I read the thread mentioned above and it turns out that the card he was talking about was probably something very similar to the Morning Star CP/M. 

 

One Google search Later: Apple IIgs Applied Engineering Softcard. Hey Look at that a Z80.

 

So, have their been attempts at mapping the PCB for the MS CP/M, then just buying a Z80 or Z81 and giving MS/DOS to the TI/99/4a?

Failing that, adapting a Z80 for the Peb?

My apologies if this offends anyone. I have an inner Mad Scientist who has been out to play for a couple of days now. ?

Edited by Mehridian Sanders
Link to comment
Share on other sites

There was a CP/M card built for the TI-99/4A back in the early 80's (1982'ish).  It was priced high, and as a result very FEW sales.  Software that used it was also priced high at around $200 per program if memory serves me correctly.  The guy that did the work apparently had quite a bit invested, and rather than sell the units cheaper to recoup some of his investment, he got upset as the story was told and the remaining units were never sold.  Somebody (Dan Eicher perhaps???) had a story that was posted somewhere regarding the history on the CP/M card.

 

As I recall though, MS/DOS was never an option with the available software for the CP/M card.  There was also a second card the CP/M card would plug into that gave 80 column capability.  I think it used the 9938 chip, though not 100% sure.  I seem to recall the card also had some kind of interface setup to floppy disk drives with an inbound and outbound connection.  I think it used something like a pass through configuration with the existing controller card.

 

Someone else around 1986 did build a sidecar device that allowed a TI keyboard on the TI-99/4A to talk to an XT computer.  It too was not received well.  The guy that bought the setup in our Memphis User Group at the time eventually disconnected the box and just plugged a regular XT keyboard into the XT computer.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

These features are drool worthy. 

 

 Needs no modifications to the T1-99/4A system.
• 64K RAM,8K ROM.
• Makes additional use of the Tl 32K memory expansion.
• Supplemental installation and usage manual included.
• Contains sufficient memory for virtually all programs.
• Compatible with TI-99/4A storage diskettes.
• Provides 60K transient program area.
• Fully burned-in and test cycled to ensure reliability.
• Fully shielded and protective metal enclosure.
• Ultra-reliable gold connector assembly.
• No chip sockets for better reliability.
• 90-day warranty.
• CP/M-80 2.2 disk-based operating system included.
• Digital Research™ CP/M user's manual included.
• Access to more than 10,000 commercially available software packages.
 

I don't think I will find one under warranty but..... the Hunt begins....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

55 minutes ago, jedimatt42 said:

For grins one day I installed a CP/M emulator on my TIPI's PI 3.  Then telneted to the PI with my 4A TELNET client, and ran it... it sort of worked, but my ANSI emulation and the linux ANSI termcap are not in 100% agreement... I'm missing something. 24 line limit doesn't help. 

 

-M@

I wonder what MyTerm for the TIPI would have done...........

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, BeeryMiller said:

As I recall though, MS/DOS was never an option with the available software for the CP/M card. 

 

 

I have a little personal experience with this era. I used a 2-floppy green-screen CP/M machine for a summer, then found a bootable MS-DOS disk for it. 

The banner indicated it was a specific distro for that machine. 

 

Just like IBM commissioned Microsoft to supply them with "PC-DOS", Microsoft were willing to customize and license.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 hours ago, jedimatt42 said:

For grins one day I installed a CP/M emulator on my TIPI's PI 3.  Then telneted to the PI with my 4A TELNET client, and ran it... it sort of worked, but my ANSI emulation and the linux ANSI termcap are not in 100% agreement... I'm missing something. 24 line limit doesn't help. 

 

-M@

This gives me hope. Alpha M@ thanks!

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On TI CP/M cards, two different commercial cards exist. The Morning Star CP/M card was seriously expensive. Very few of these were sold--and I have never seen one in the wild (and I've been looking since about 1990). The other was released by Foundation. The card sold significantly more than the Morning Star variant, but that isn't saying much. I know of about ten to twelve of these cards currently in user hands. Most of these folks (including myself) don't have copies of the compatible CP/M disks for the card. Foundation also released an 80-column card designed to work with the CP/M card. Like most CP/M graphics solutions, it was a monochrome solution. I know of exactly one copy of this 80-column card in the wild--mine. Vorticon (and IIRC Fred Kaal) designed their own Z-80 cards for the PEB, but those were personal projects and were not sold. There may be other one-off cards out there as well--some finished, some not (like Falcor's).

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...