Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cornell!uw-beaver!blake!ogccse!littlei!omepd!iwarpj!pcm From: pcm@iwarpj.intel.com (Phil C. Miller) Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc Subject: re: Disassembler Message-ID: <4132@omepd.UUCP> Date: 11 Feb 89 16:18:04 GMT Sender: news@omepd.UUCP Reply-To: pcm@iwarpj.UUCP (Phil C. Miller) Organization: Intel Corp., Hillsboro Lines: 27 Date: Fri, 10 Feb 89 07:39:18 PST From: omepd!iwarp.intel.com!pcm (Phil C. Miller) To: {...}bionet!agate Subject: Re: looking for an 80286 disassembler In article <6722@polya.Stanford.EDU>, agate writes: >*** > >Anybody know of a public domain or otherwise free 80286 >diassembler that I can get hold of? > >Please reply to esc@cs.stanford.edu -- thanks! Sorry, our mailer seems to have sent this to Wisconsin (?) and bounced it in a most peculiar way. The PC-SIG group distributes a disassembler written in Basic (I know, I know). Disk #309 is the disk you would want. I expect that this is an 8088 disassembler, but it is table driven and you can probably modify the source to the degree you want/need. If you're not familiar with PC-SIG, check out your local B Dalton Bookstore and look for their books, which list their software. It's all cheapware, if not freeware. A store here in Portland sells disks from them for $6.95. Phil Miller