Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!decvax!ucbvax!C.ISI.EDU!Info-IBMPC From: Info-IBMPC@C.ISI.EDU.UUCP Newsgroups: mod.computers.ibm-pc Subject: Info-IBMPC Digest V5 #108 Message-ID: <8612200420.AA07757@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Date: Fri, 19-Dec-86 20:37:31 EST Article-I.D.: ucbvax.8612200420.AA07757 Posted: Fri Dec 19 20:37:31 1986 Date-Received: Sat, 20-Dec-86 04:21:01 EST Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: INFO-IBMPC@C.ISI.EDU Organization: The ARPA Internet Lines: 833 Approved: info-ibmpc@b.isi.edu Info-IBMPC Digest Friday, 19 December 1986 Volume 5 : Issue 108 This Week's Editor: Billy Brackenridge Today's Topics: Tiny Turbo Accelerator Board Compaq Screen Blanking Problem PATH Length Limitation Doing Our Work for Us ARC Word Processing C Code Development Environment MS C 4.0 Dynamic Memory Allocation Pibterm Epsilon 2.01 w/color A Christmas Program Written in Basic Today's Queries: Tecmar Music Synthesizer Milestone Chart Fast Half-Height Hard Drives Z-171 internal modem IBM-PC Jr. Accessories Cheap Relational Database Package Wanted C Cross Compiler for 8048 SIMCGA Wanted Xenix 2.0 and C 9600 Baud Modems and CD ROM Players ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 1986 10:02 PST From: JGTP003%CALSTATE.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU Subject: Tiny Turbo Accelerator Board In answer to the person who asked about the 80286 boot-up problem with the Orchid Tiny Turbo Accelerator Board....I have this board installed in my IBM PC and when I first got the board approximately 6 mos ago I had the same problem. I could not boot the system up when the board was set to the 80286 mode. I had to start the boot process with the switch on the 8088 mode and once the boot process (memory check) was started I could switch over to th 80286 mode. This was a major pain, since the way my PC is situated, it was very awkward to reach around back to the switch. Anyway, I am pleased to say that a month or so ago I called up Orchid and was informed that they had solved this 80286 boot-up problem. They sent me a replacement chip for one on the board, I installed it, and...presto!...I can now boot the system up from the 80286 mode. So far I have found no compatibility problems in this mode and I just leave the machine always set to the 80286 mode. It is nice though to know that I have the 8088 mode if I ever do run into a compatibility problem or if I just want to see the speed difference with a particular piece of software or process. Glenn Zwinger (213/498-5403) Academic Computing Coordinator California State University, Long Beach JGTP003@CALSTATE.BITNET ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 1986 13:44:13 ULG From: Andre PIRARD Subject: Compaq Screen Blanking Problem To: Marc Caminetsky Pressing the CNTRL NUMLOCK keys cause the ROM BIOS keyboard interrupt 9 to set a flag and loop until the same flag is reset. Typing another key causes another interrupt 9 that resets the above flag and releases the first looping interrupt handler. CNTRL NUMLOCK just *happens* to provide scroll lock. In fact, it just stops anything not interrupt driven. Every software should beware of its possible impact. But it is too often overlooked. Even the genuine IBM ROM BIOS gets caught. If one holds the machine right during a scroll, the result is a messy screen showing the video RAM in the middle of the move. As to the screen blanking, I can't tell of Compaq's case, but IBM's ROM code looks to turn off video during scroll up and on before INT 9 loop (ha ha). This at least shows you in what direction to search. Maybe a INT 9 front end could do the trick. There is a whole book to write about the PC ROM's blunders. My latest finding relates to the keyboard buffer overflow beep. If the keyboard repeat rate is faster than the tone length (not hard) and the running program isn't fast enough to catch up (or simply does no keyboard input), repeated keying causes every new beep to interupt the ongoing one. As a result, the stack keeps growing beyond compare. It generally miserably crashes everything, but with some luck and patience, you may be able to contemplate once in your life the dos "internal stack overflow" message. Happy computing. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 86 10:14:15 PST From: Jim Anderson Subject: PATH Length Limitation Besides available environment space, the maximum length of a command that may be fed to COMMAND.COM also limits the length of a PATH (or any other environment string.) A couple of possible solutions, neither of which I have tried: 1. Use a program such as setenv.c from the INFO-IBMPC library to place a large PATH string in COMMAND's environment. 2. Write a program that copies it's environment with an appropriately modified PATH string and then EXECs a secondary COMMAND.COM with the modified environment. Both these solutions assume that COMMAND does not care how long the PATH string is once it is in the environment. ------------------------------ From: microsof!gordonl@beaver.cs.washington.edu Subject: Doing Our Work for Us Date: Wed Dec 17 09:59:40 1986 [Microsoft are you listening? Our readers are doing your work for you. How about some responses, acknowledgement? -wab] Yes, we're listening. We respond by fixing these bugs in the next release that we can. Often there are administrative reasons why our OEMs decline to take a bug fix (too late in the testing cycle, etc.) and so it can take quite a while for the fix to hit the streets. Giving patches out over the net would be a big problem; people would have troubles getting it to work, we can't provide individual support, and we'd have to be compatible not only with previous versions of DOS but with arbitraryly patched versions, as well. I disagree with the implication of your "Our readers are doing your work for you." When my car fails and I take it in for service, am I doing the car builder's work? When you get sick, are you doing the doctor's work because he didn't call you up in advance of illness to prescribe? Buy one of our retail products and you'll get good retail support. DOS is an OEM product and its the responsibility of the OEM to support it. If they don't do that job to your satisfaction, then complain to them. I understand the frustration that this approach brings on, but our hands our tied. That INT 25 DOS bug was discovered at Microsoft before 3.2 was released, but we weren't allowed to fix it. We're not *allowed* to provide the support you ask. Take a guess as to how happy we engineers feel about this. gordon I guess we do our own work, once in a while. ------------------------------ Date: 17 Dec 1986 12:09:59 PST Subject: Doing Our Work for Us From: Billy To: microsof!gordonl@BEAVER.CS.WASHINGTON.EDU Sorry if the tone sounded harsh. Of course we users have our frustrations with Microsoft/IBM as well. The editor engaged in a bit of retorical overkill and I apologize for the tone. Ragging on Microsoft doesn't do anybody any good. On the positive side there are hundreds of new readers to INFO-IBMPC who don't know that Microsoft is listening and that constructive bug reports, complaints, gripes etc. do get read. Recently I have been getting phone calls from people complaining about bugs in Microsoft C 4.0. I wish these people would send detailed reports and code examples. While the bug fix may take several months for the next release, the problem will get to the right people and the rest of us will be spared the duplicated effort of discovering the same bug. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 86 18:16:03 PST From: larry@Jpl-VLSI.ARPA Subject: ARC Word Processing C Code Development environment Answers to three questions follow: ARC can be gotten from SIMTEL20, from the PD: subdirectory. I believe the filename you want is ARC51.COM, but you may want to bring down ARC-FILE.INF first which I believe summarizes the subdir contents. I down- loaded and am using two other programs since I don't need the full ARC capability. ARCV106.COM lists the contents of an ARChive file, ARCE206.COM extracts files. Since SIMTEL20 is a 36-bit machine you need to type FTP>quote FTP>TYPE L 8 before doing the FTP>binary FTP>get ... I am using WordPerfect and am very happy with it. There's a built-in function to import and export ASCII files, and a CONVERT program for several other word processor programs, including Wordstar. WordPerfect has a number of features professional writers will appreciate. I've also used Word and Xywrite III, and consider them equally as good as WP. Each has somewhat different capabilities, though with a lot of overlap, and I suspect you'd do better to choose according to how you like the interface. Beginning C programmers may very well find interpreters better than compilers, but I've not tried any. Several reviews of them have appeared in Dr. Dobbs/Software Tools in the past year or so. I'm currently using Microsoft C version 4.0 and am very happy with it. With the Codeview source-code debugger and a C-smart version of the Emacs editor I have as good an environment as on our VAX supermini. (Actually I do most of my work on an AT and transfer code to the VAX only for testing and modifications needed just for the VAX.) Larry @ jpl-vlsi.arpa ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Dec 86 00:53:56 EST From: "James H. Coombs" Subject: MS C 4.0 Dynamic Memory Allocation If you use malloc()/_fmalloc() with the Compact model (and apparently with Large and Huge as well), allocation stalls when the far heap is exhausted. I have bench marks that took as long as 24 minutes to allocate some 350k; 17 seconds for 300k and 24 minutes for 50k. Full details are avilable in the Microsoft conference on BIX, and I posted the source code to my benchmarking program there. [What is BIX and could someone forward this info to the rest of us? -wab] There are a couple of solutions, but MS just came back with one that is outstanding: link with /CP:1. The consequence is that there is no near heap for malloc() to stall on. One still has access to all of the RAM for dynamic allocation, and no fancy dances are necessary. Unless a program uses _nmalloc(), it should probably be linked with /CP:1 (under compact, large, and huge models). Hopefully MS will document this in the future. Of course, they might modify their allocation routines. One of the beauties of this solution is that no code modification would be required to adapt to new allocation strategies. --Jim ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Dec 86 17:22 N From: Subject: Pibterm In one of the earlier digests, I complained about the fact that I didn't receive PIBTERM in spite of the money I sent. Philip Burns contacted me and apologized. According to him he encountered considerable difficulties in mailing disks to Europe. Also foreign requests didn't reach him always. If there are people in Europe that have had these complaints, please contact me. Maybe I can collect them and send them to Mr. Burns; it seems that we have a reliable contact now. Inno Frencken Computing Centre Agricultural University Hollandseweg 1 6706 KN Wageningen The Netherlands phone: 08370-83875 EARN-id: INNO EARN-node: HWALHW5 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Dec 86 09:04:09 EST From: John.Brennen@VI.RI.CMU.EDU Subject: Epsilon 2.01 w/color This is a little patch for Epsilon version 2.01 for those of us who can't stand a screen full of WHITE characters. It's a quick and dirty hack, but it works. Jack Brennen Carnegie-Mellon University jfb@vi.ri.cmu.edu Visual Inspection Lab ---------------------------------- Cut here ---------------------------------- rem This patch works for Epsilon version 2.01. Normally, if you use Epsilon rem with a color graphics adapter, you are stuck with white characters on rem a black background. This patch makes Epsilon use whatever foreground rem color you prefer. The patch as given below makes Epsilon use green rem characters. To use other colors, merely change the '22' found near the rem end of the long string of hex bytes below. The first digit gives the rem color of the inverse video mode line and the second digit gives the rem color of normal text. For example, changing the '22' to '24' gives rem a green mode line and red everywhere else. rem rem To execute this patch, make sure epsilon.exe is in the current directory rem and command.com and debug.com are on the PATH or in the rem current directory and type: rem rem command < patch rem rem Replace patch with the name of the file you saved this patch script in. rem rem NOTE: The modified Epsilon which is created will NOT work with a rem Monochrome Display Adapter (or any derivative thereof, such rem as the Hercules card). If you try to run the modified Epsilon rem on such a system, it will hang, but won't do any permanent harm. rem copy epsilon.exe foo.bar debug foo.bar e c65c eb fe 8a 66 0e 80 fc ff 74 03 80 e4 22 c3 e c6d0 e8 8b ff w q ren foo.bar green.exe exit ---------------------------------- Cut here ---------------------------------- [Later versions of Epsilon allow users to specify color. -wab] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 86 09:50:25 est From: nagy@bnl.ARPA (John Nagy) Subject: A Christmas Program Written in Basic Enclosed in a program for the season. It is based on the IBM DOS supplementary program MUSIC.BAS. Tunes therein have been replaced by Christmas songs and some other features have been added. To get all the effects, the program should be run with the BASICA interpreter on a system with the color/graphics adapter/monitor. 500 REM CHRISTMA.BAS 505 REM 510 REM Based on IBM DOS 2.0 supplementary program MUSIC.BAS 525 REM Plays Christmas music and draws a tree, instead. 530 REM 531 REM To get all features 535 REM (1) Use BASICA interpreter 540 REM (2) Use color/graphics adapter/monitor 543 REM 544 REM Suggested .BAT 545 REM ECHO OFF 548 REM CLS 550 REM BASICA CHRISTMA 555 REM 560 REM Following the name of a song in the DATA section, 570 REM input for three new variables (S,TN,TD) is added. 575 REM These are normally set to 0,1,1. Reset S to change key, 580 REM or reset TN,TD to change tempo. See line 1545 and 1546. 585 REM 590 REM For faster loading, SAVE without the ,a switch 595 REM 600 REM HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR 610 REM 910 DEFINT A-Z 920 DIM M(88),O(70) 975 DEF SEG: POKE 106,0 1000 CLS:KEY OFF:LOCATE 1,1,0:GOSUB 5000 'INTRODUCTORY BACKGROUND MUSIC 1010 KEY OFF:SCREEN 0,1:COLOR 15,0,0:WIDTH 40:CLS:LOCATE 5,19,0 1141 ON ERROR GOTO 1148 1142 PLAY "mf" 1143 GOTO 1149 1148 RESUME 1149 1149 ON ERROR GOTO 0 1150 SCREEN 0,1:WIDTH 40:COLOR 15,1,1:CLS 1160 LOCATE 15,1:PRINT " ------------- selections -------------" 1170 LOCATE 16,1:PRINT " A-Silent E-Deck The I-O Tanen " 1180 LOCATE 17,1:PRINT " B-Little Twn F-O Holy J-Away In A " 1190 LOCATE 18,1:PRINT " C-What Child G-Joy To The K-Drummer " 1191 LOCATE 19,1:PRINT " D-First Noel H-O Come All L-Rudolph " 1200 COLOR 15,0 1210 FOR I=0 TO 15:FOR J=0 TO 8 1220 LOCATE 5+J,5+I*2:PRINT CHR$(219);CHR$(221); 1230 NEXT:NEXT 1240 FOR I=0 TO 12:FOR J=0 TO 4 1250 IF I=2 OR I=6 OR I=9 OR I=13 THEN 1270 1260 LOCATE 5+J,8+I*2:PRINT CHR$(32);CHR$(222); 1270 NEXT:NEXT 1280 FOR J=0 TO 9 1290 LOCATE 4+J,4:COLOR 4,0:PRINT CHR$(221);:LOCATE 4+J,36:COLOR 15,0 1300 PRINT CHR$(221);:COLOR 4,1:PRINT CHR$(221); 1310 NEXT 1320 COLOR 4,1:LOCATE 4,4 1330 FOR I=0 TO 32:PRINT CHR$(219);:NEXT 1340 PRINT CHR$(221);:LOCATE 13,4 1350 FOR I=0 TO 32:PRINT CHR$(219);:NEXT 1360 PRINT CHR$(221);:COLOR 0,7 1370 FOR I=7 TO 88:M(I) = 36.8*(2^(1/12))^(I-6):NEXT 1380 FOR I=0 TO 6:M(I) = 32767:NEXT 1390 O(0) = 0 1400 O(39)=5:O(40)=7:O(41)=8:O(42)=9 1410 O(43)=10:O(44)=11:O(45)=13:O(46)=14 1420 O(47)=15:O(48)=16:O(49)=17:O(50)=18 1430 O(51)=19:O(52)=21:O(53)=22:O(54)=23 1440 O(55)=24:O(56)=25:O(57)=27:O(58)=28 1450 O(59)=29:O(60)=30:O(61)=31:O(62)=32 1460 O(63)=33:O(64)=35:O(65)=36:O(66)=37 1470 O(67)=38:O(68)=39:O(69)=40:O(70)=42 1480 GOTO 1630 1490 READ J,K 1500 CMD$ = INKEY$:IF CMD$="" THEN 1540 1510 IF CMD$=CHR$(27) THEN RETURN 1520 POKE 106,0 1530 REM 1540 IF J = -1 THEN RETURN 1545 IF J>0 THEN J=J+S 1546 K=(K*TN)/TD 1550 Q = O(J) 1560 IF J>64 OR J<39 THEN 1590 1570 IF SCREEN(5,Q)<>32 THEN COLOR 0,7 1575 LOCATE 11,Q:PRINT CHR$(14);:COLOR 15,0:GOTO 1590 1580 COLOR 15,0:LOCATE 7,Q:PRINT CHR$(14);:COLOR 0,7 1590 SOUND M(J),K:IF J=0 AND K=1 THEN 1600:'SKIP NEXT FOR STACCATTO 1595 SOUND 32767,1 1600 IF J>64 OR J<39 THEN 1490 1610 IF SCREEN(5,Q) = 32 THEN COLOR 15,0:LOCATE 7,Q:PRINT CHR$(32);:GOTO 1490 1620 COLOR 15,0:LOCATE 11,Q:PRINT CHR$(219);:GOTO 1490 1630 LOCATE 21,5:PRINT " "; 1640 LOCATE 21,5:PRINT "ENTER SELECTION [or ESC] ==>"; 1650 IF INKEY$ <> "" THEN 1650 1660 CMD$=INKEY$:IF CMD$="" THEN 1660 1670 IF CMD$=CHR$(27) THEN 1860 1680 IF CMD$="A" OR CMD$="a" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 4000:GOTO 1770 1690 IF CMD$="B" OR CMD$="b" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 4100:GOTO 1770 1700 IF CMD$="C" OR CMD$="c" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 3700:GOTO 1770 1710 IF CMD$="D" OR CMD$="d" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 4300:GOTO 1770 1720 IF CMD$="E" OR CMD$="e" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 3500:GOTO 1770 1730 IF CMD$="F" OR CMD$="f" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 3200:GOTO 1770 1740 IF CMD$="G" OR CMD$="g" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 3600:GOTO 1770 1750 IF CMD$="H" OR CMD$="h" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 3900:GOTO 1770 1755 IF CMD$="I" OR CMD$="i" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 4500:GOTO 1770 1757 IF CMD$="J" OR CMD$="j" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 3300:GOTO 1770 1761 IF CMD$="K" OR CMD$="k" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 4400:GOTO 1770 1765 IF CMD$="L" OR CMD$="l" THEN S$= "":RESTORE 4600:GOTO 1770 1769 GOTO 1640 1770 PRINT " ";CMD$ 1780 READ D 1800 READ S$:LOCATE 23,1+(40.5-LEN(S$))/2 1805 COLOR 15,4:PRINT S$;:COLOR 0,7 1807 SOUND 21767,12:SOUND 32767,1:READ S,TN,TD 1810 GOSUB 1490 1820 S$=STRING$(39," "):LOCATE 23,1:COLOR 4,1:PRINT S$:COLOR 0,7 1830 GOTO 1630 1840 END 1860 SCREEN 0,1:COLOR 7,0,0:CLS:GOSUB 6000:GOSUB 7000:SYSTEM 3200 DATA -2,"O HOLY NIGHT",0,1,1 3210 DATA 0,24,45,12,45,9,45,3, 48,21,48,3,50,9,50,3,46,9,50,3 3215 DATA 53,24,48,6,0,3,48,3,45,9,43,3, 41,12,45,9,46,3,48,12,46,9,43,3 3220 DATA 41,36,0,12 3225 DATA 0,24,45,12,45,9,45,3, 48,21,48,3,50,9,50,3,46,9,50,3 3230 DATA 53,24,48,6,0,3,48,3,46,9,45,3, 52,12,48,9,50,3,52,12,55,1,53,9,52,3 3235 DATA 45,24,0,18,48,6 3240 DATA 48,12,50,12,43,12,48,12, 50,9,48,3,53,9,45,3,50,12,48,9,48,3 3245 DATA 48,12,50,12,43,12,48,12, 50,9,48,3,53,9,45,3,48,18,0,6 3250 DATA 53,36,52,9,50,3, 52,36,52,12, 55,33,50,3,50,9,50,3 3255 DATA 53,24,53,12,0,6,53,6, 57,42,48,6, 53,36,52,9,50,3 3260 DATA 48,24,48,9,48,3,50,9,48,3, 48,36,53,12, 55,36,0,6,48,6 3265 DATA 57,36,55,12, 53,24,52,12,53,9,55,3, 53,36 3270 DATA -1,-1 3300 DATA -2,"AWAY IN A MANGER",0,1,1 3310 DATA 52,12, 52,18,50,6,49,12, 49,12,47,12,45,12, 45,12,44,12,42,12 3320 DATA 40,24,40,12, 40,18,42,6,40,12, 40,12,47,12,44,12, 42,12,40,12,45,12 3330 DATA 49,24,52,12, 52,18,50,6,49,12, 49,12,47,12,45,12, 45,12,44,12,42,12 3340 DATA 40,24,40,12, 50,18,49,6,47,12, 49,12,47,12,45,12, 47,12,42,12,44,12 3350 DATA 45,36 3370 DATA -1,-1 3500 DATA -2,"DECK THE HALLS",0,1,1 3510 DATA 52,9,50,3,49,6,47,6, 45,6,47,6,49,6,45,6 3520 DATA 47,3,49,3,50,3,47,3,49,9,47,3, 45,6,44,6,45,12 3530 DATA 52,9,50,3,49,6,47,6, 45,6,47,6,49,6,45,6 3540 DATA 47,3,49,3,50,3,47,3,49,9,47,3, 45,6,44,6,45,12 3550 DATA 47,9,49,3,50,6,47,6, 49,9,50,3,52,6,47,6 3560 DATA 49,3,51,3,52,6,54,3,56,3,57,6, 56,6,54,6,52,12 3570 DATA 52,9,50,3,49,6,47,6, 45,6,47,6,49,6,45,6 3580 DATA 54,3,54,3,54,3,54,3,52,9,50,3, 49,6,47,6,45,12 3590 DATA -1,-1 3600 DATA -2,"JOY TO THE WORLD",0,1,1 3610 DATA 54,10,53,7,51,2, 49,15,47,5, 46,10,44,10, 42,15,49,5, 51,15,51,5 3620 DATA 53,15,53,5, 54,30,54,5, 54,5,53,5,51,5,49,5, 49,7,47,2,46,5,54,5 3630 DATA 54,5,53,5,51,5,49,5, 49,7,47,2,46,5,46,5, 46,5,46,5,46,5,46,2,47,2 3640 DATA 49,15,47,2,46,2, 44,5,44,5,44,5,44,2,46,2, 47,15,46,2,44,2 3650 DATA 42,5,54,10,51,5, 49,7,47,2,46,5,47,5, 46,10,44,10, 42,20 3670 DATA -1,-1 3700 DATA -2,"WHAT CHILD IS THIS? [GREENSLEEVES]",0,1,1 3710 DATA 44,10, 47,20,49,10,51,15,52,5,51,10, 49,20,46,10,42,15,44,5,46,10 3720 DATA 47,20,44,10,44,15,43,5,44,10, 46,30,39,20,44,10 3730 DATA 47,20,49,10,51,15,52,5,51,10, 49,20,46,10,42,15,44,5,46,10 3740 DATA 47,15,46,5,44,10,43,15,41,5,43,10, 44,30,44,30 3750 DATA 54,30,54,15,52,5,51,10, 49,20,46,10,42,15,44,5,46,10 3760 DATA 47,20,44,10,44,15,43,5,44,10, 46,20,42,10,39,30 3770 DATA 54,30,54,15,52,5,51,10, 49,20,46,10,42,15,44,5,46,10 3780 DATA 47,15,46,5,44,10,43,15,41,5,43,10, 44,30,44,30 3810 DATA -1,-1 3900 DATA -2,"O COME, ALL YE FAITHFUL",0,1,1 3910 DATA 49,8, 49,16,44,8,49,8, 51,16,44,16, 53,8,51,8,53,8,54,8 3920 DATA 53,16,51,8,49,8, 49,16,48,8,46,8, 48,8,49,8,51,8,53,8 3930 DATA 48,16,46,12,44,4, 44,32, 56,16,54,8,53,8 3940 DATA 54,16,53,16, 51,8,53,8,49,8,51,8, 48,12,46,4,44,8,49,8 3950 DATA 49,8,48,8,49,8,51,8, 49,16,44,8,53,8 3960 DATA 53,8,51,8,53,8,54,8, 53,16,51,8,53,8, 54,8,53,8,51,8,49,8 3970 DATA 48,16,49,8,54,8, 53,16,51,12,49,4, 49,24 3990 DATA -1,-1 4000 DATA -2,"SILENT NIGHT [STILLE NACHT] - GRUBER",0,1,1 4010 DATA 47,18,49,6,47,12,44,36, 47,18,49,6,47,12,44,36 4020 DATA 54,24,54,12,51,36, 52,24,52,12,47,36 4030 DATA 49,24,49,12,52,18,51,6,49,12, 47,18,49,6,47,12,44,24,0,12 4040 DATA 49,24,49,12,52,18,51,6,49,12, 47,18,49,6,47,12,44,24,0,12 4050 DATA 54,24,54,12,57,18,54,6,51,12, 52,36,56,24,0,12 4060 DATA 52,18,47,6,44,12,47,18,45,6,42,12, 40,72 4080 DATA -1,-1 4090 REM -- C, 6/8, 91.5 bpm 4100 DATA -2,"O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM",0,1,1 4110 DATA 49,12, 49,12,49,12,48,12,49,12, 52,12,50,12,42,12,47,12 4120 DATA 45,12,44,6,45,6,47,12,40,12, 49,36,49,12, 49,12,49,12,54,12,52,12 4130 DATA 52,12,50,12,42,12,47,12, 45,12,44,6,45,6,49,12,47,12, 45,36 4140 DATA 49,12, 49,12,49,12,47,12,45,12, 44,24,44,12,44,12 4150 DATA 42,12,44,12,45,12,47,12, 49,36,49,12, 49,12,49,12,48,12,49,12 4160 DATA 52,12,50,12,42,12,54,12, 52,12,45,12,49,18,47,6, 45,36 4200 DATA -1,-1 4300 DATA -2,"THE FIRST NOEL",0,1,1 4310 DATA 46,5,44,5, 42,15,44,5,46,5,47,5, 49,20,51,5,53,5, 54,10,53,10,51,10 4320 DATA 49,20,51,5,53,5, 54,10,53,10,51,10, 49,10,51,10,53,10 4330 DATA 54,10,49,10,47,10, 46,20,46,5,44,5, 42,15,44,5,46,5,47,5 4340 DATA 49,20,51,5,53,5, 54,10,53,10,51,10, 49,20,51,5,53,5 4350 DATA 54,10,53,10,51,10, 49,10,51,10,53,10, 54,10,49,10,47,10 4360 DATA 46,20,46,5,44,5, 42,15,44,5,46,5,47,5, 49,20,54,5,53,5 4370 DATA 51,20,51,10, 49,30, 54,10,53,10,51,10, 49,10,51,10,53,10 4380 DATA 54,10, 49,10, 47,10, 46,20 4390 DATA -1,-1 4400 DATA -2,"THE LITTLE DRUMMER BOY tm",0,1,1 4410 DATA 45,18,47,6, 49,12,49,6,49,6, 50,3,49,3,50,6,49,30,0,6 4420 DATA 0,6,45,6,45,6,47,6, 49,6,49,6,49,6,49,6, 50,3,49,3,50,6,49,30,0,6 4430 DATA 0,6,47,6,49,6,50,6, 52,6,52,6,52,6,54,6 4440 DATA 52,3,50,3,49,6,47,30,0,6 4450 DATA 0,6,47,6,49,6,50,6, 52,6,52,6,52,6,54,6 4460 DATA 55,3,54,3,52,6,50,12, 54,3,52,3,50,6,49,12 4470 DATA 52,3,50,3,49,6,47,30,0,6, 45,18,47,6 4480 DATA 49,6,49,6,49,6,49,6,50,3,49,3,50,6,49,30,0,6,47,3,45,3,47,6,45,30,0 4490 DATA 6,-1,-1 4500 DATA -2,"O TANENBAUM",0,1,1 4510 DATA 40,12, 45,9,45,3,45,18,47,6, 49,9,49,3,49,18,49,6 4520 DATA 47,6,49,6,50,12,44,12, 47,12,45,12,0,6 4530 DATA 40,12, 45,9,45,3,45,18,47,6, 49,9,49,3,49,18,49,6 4540 DATA 47,6,49,6,50,12,44,12, 47,12,45,12,0,6 4550 DATA 52,6, 52,6,49,6,54,18,52,6, 52,6,50,6,50,18,50,6 4560 DATA 50,6,47,6,52,18,50,6, 50,6,49,6,49,12,0,6, 40,12 4570 DATA 45,9,45,3,45,18,47,6, 49,9,49,3,49,18,49,6 4580 DATA 47,6,49,6,50,12,44,12, 47,12,45,12 4590 DATA -1,-1 4600 DATA -2,"RUDOLPH, THE RED-NOSED REINDEER tm",0,1,1 4605 DATA 49,5,51,5, 52,5,49,10,45,5,51,5,47,10,44,5,49,5,45,10,42,5,49,5,47 4610 DATA 15,52,5,49,10,45,5,51,5,47,10,44,5, 49,5,45,10,42,5,49,5,47,15 4615 DATA 44,10,44,10,44,10,44,10, 49,30,49,5,51,5 4620 DATA 52,10,52,10,52,10,51,10,49,5, 47,40 4625 DATA 47,4,49,8,47,4,44,8,52,8, 49,8,47,24, 47,4,49,4,47,4,49,4,47,8,52,8 4630 DATA 51,32, 45,4,47,8,45,4,42,8,51,8, 49,8,47,24 4635 DATA 47,4,49,4,47,4,49,4,47,8,49,8,44,32 4640 DATA 47,4,49,8,47,4,44,8,52,8, 49,8,47,24, 47,4,49,4,47,4,49,4,47,8,52,8 4645 DATA 51,32, 45,4,47,8,45,4,42,8,51,8, 49,8,47,24 4650 DATA 47,4,49,4,47,4,49,4,47,8,54,8,52,32 4655 DATA 49,8,49,8,52,8,49,8, 47,8,44,8,47,16, 45,8,49,8,47,8,45,8, 44,32 4660 DATA 42,8,44,8,47,8,49,8, 51,8,51,8,51,16, 52,8,52,8,51,8,49,8 4665 DATA 47,8,45,4,42,20 4670 DATA 47,4,49,8,47,4,44,8,52,8, 49,8,47,24, 47,4,49,4,47,4,49,4,47,8,52,8 4675 DATA 51,32, 45,4,47,8,45,4,42,8,51,8, 49,8,47,24 4680 DATA 47,8,49,8,47,8,49,8,47,16,54,16,52,56 4695 DATA -1,-1 5000 REM -- "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" INTRODUCTION 5010 ON ERROR GOTO 5090 5020 SETUP$="MB O3 T136 L4" 5060 VERSE$="DGG8A8G8F+8EEEAA8B8A8G8F+DDBB8>C8 Subject: Tecmar Music Synthesizer Does anyone know of or use this new synthesizer card for the PC. What is the name and model, how much is it, and is it any good? I understand it to be an audio generator to be used for music. thanks for any info, Don Lindbergh ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 86 11:30:14 est From: preedy@nswc-wo.ARPA Subject: Milestone Chart I have been looking for project planning software for the IBM PC, but I have been unsuccessful in finding one that I like that makes a milestone chart. I like to be able to fill in the triangles when the goal is met. If you have any favorites, please let me know and how I can get a copy. PREEDY@NSWC-WO.ARPA ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 86 16:27:27 AST From: wdw%Acadia.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU (Bill Wilder - Acadia University) Subject: Fast Half-Height Hard Drives We were recently made an offer we could not refuse and have purchased a number of TeleCAT-286 Model three micros. Basically we like the machine but are not too happy with the hard disks that were included (Seagate 225 - 20 Mb and 75 ms. average access time). Can anyone offer me some information on hard disks with larger capacity and better seek times ( < 40 ms.). Such disks must be suitable for use on an AT type machine and must be half height. I understand that MicroScience has a half height 45 Mb - 28 ms. drive. Does anyone have any information on this such as price and model number? Any information you might have on other brands of half height drives would also be welcome. Thanks ------------------------------ Date: 17 December 1986 11:50:06 CST From: U45571%UICVM.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU (James A. Danowski 312-996-3187) Subject: Z-171 internal modem I have a Zenith 171 with internal modem. I have been trying to use the internal modem without the built-in modem software, instead using a telecom package called YTERM (for IBM CMS mainframe-pc communication). My problem is that the internal modem will not respond to the YTERM commands. I suspect I somehow need to over-ride the internal modem configuration. Any suggestions? Thanks! ------------------------------ Date: 17 December 1986 18:24:58 CST FROM: Subject: IBM-PC Jr. Accessories Help! I'm trying to help a friend expand the memory on her PC Jr. I understand that the Jr. uses sidecars (?) (external boards) in place of slots to expand memory, etc. Are there still sources of memory expansion sidecars around? I couldn't find much in Computer Shopper this month. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Dec 86 20:55:55 EST From: cerebus%UMass.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU Subject: Cheap Relational Database Package Wanted Hi, I am trying to find relational database packages for an IBM-PC compatable computer. They should work in the same way as DBase or RBase, but the group that may need these packages does not have the money to spend for the "name brands". Speed is not important, but reliability is. Thanks, Matthew Saroff SAROFF%UMASS.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU ------------------------------ Date: 18 Dec 1986 at 0820-EST Subject: C Cross Compiler for 8048 From: hsw at TYCHO.ARPA (Howard Weiss) Does aynyone know of a DOS C-compiler that will cross compile for an Intel 8048 (or 8031 or 8051)? Or, does anyone know how much trouble it would be to "fix" an 8080 cross compiler to generate correct code for the 8048? Please reply directly to me since I am not a regular reader of this list. Thanks, Howard Weiss hsw at TYCHO.ARPA ------------------------------ From: ames!seismo!mcvax!targon!roel@cad.Berkeley.EDU Date: Thu, 18 Dec 86 15:26:28 +0100 Subject: SIMCGA Wanted Organization: Nixdorf Computer BV., OSP, Vianen, The Netherlands Cc: roel@cad.Berkeley.EDU In article <8612170442.AA07603@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> you write: > SIMCGA - Simulate CGA with Hercules Monochrome Card > >This memory-resident utility allows you to "fool" most software requiring >a Color Graphics Adapter into using your Hercules (or compatible) mono- >chrome adapter in the graphics mode. > We're not sure how to address B. Svetitsky directly from here, and we'd like to get hold of SIMCGA as possible. If he got the program from a bulletin board, does it follow that it's public domain ? And if so, could you ask him to send a copy of the program to us ? Many thanks, and Happy Christmas! ------------------------------ Date: Thu 18 Dec 86 11:42:55-EST From: Seth Chaiklin Subject: Xenix 2.0 and C We have recently upgraded from Microsoft Xenix 1.0 to 2.0. We also have the software development system for Xenix 1.0 to write C programs. However, we cannot compile C programs in Version 2.0. We get the following error message: Warning: __.SYMDEF out of date in /lib/Slibcfp.a An IBM representative at the 800 number they supplied said that we would have to buy Version 2.0 of the software development system. I would appreciate advice and insight on this problem. ------------------------------ Date: 18 Dec 86 13:30 EST From: C0144%CSUOHIO.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU Subject: 9600 Baud Modems and CD ROM Players Can anyone give me their opinions on specific products that fall into the following categories? 9600-bps full-duplex ansynchronous modems for use with PC's (for BBS use) CD-ROM players w/ appropriate interface adapters to PC's Any and all answers would be appreciated, either to me or the net. Thanks. Dave Chatfield PC Technical Consultant Cleveland State University C0144%CSUOHIO.BITNET@WISCVM.WISC.EDU ------------------------------ End of Info-IBMPC Digest ************************ -------