Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!brutus.cs.uiuc.edu!apple!agate!ucbvax!DBNUAMA1.BITNET!VBRANDT From: VBRANDT@DBNUAMA1.BITNET Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st Subject: Re: TOS 1.6... Message-ID: <9001100808.AA18195@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Date: 10 Jan 90 08:08:20 GMT Sender: usenet@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 41 X-Unparsable-Date: Tue, 09 Jan 90 12:15:05 SET Hello all, In Info-Atari16 Digest #16, cca.ucsf.edu!wet!nut@cgl.ucsf.edu (adam tilghman) writes: > After reading several descriptions of TOS 1.6, it sounds like it would not >be an impossibility to drop a 68030 into a 1.6-equipped machine. Will Atari >market 1.6 to us 1.0-1.4 peoples for that purpose? I like my Mega and do >not plan on upgrading to an STe (for the same reasons that I sold my 1040). >I realise that this is not exactly an easy question for those Atari >employees on the net, as it is more a legal issue than a technical one =:( Sorry, but this technically impossible. The 1.6 version is bigger than the available ROM space in a regular ST/Mega, and is installed at a different location in the CPU address space. Also, I doubt that 1.6 checks for CPUs other than a 68000. TOS 3.0, on the other hand, does just what you want. 3.0 is the TOS that comes with the TT. It won't work in STs for the same reasons. The only way you still can achieve your goal of having an '020 or '030 in your machine is to take TOS 1.4, disassemble it, fix the '020/'030 problems and reassemble it. This works just fine, but it is a bit of work. As a side effect, GEM is 9 % faster using an 68000 (haven't measured other performances yet), and the ROM code size is decreased by several KB, giving you space to add some extra goodies on your own. While you're at it, you can fix all of those (known) bugs that still lurk in there. Of course, programs that illegaly use hardcoded ROM addresses will fail, but I haven't found such a program yet, at least not one that I'd miss. In Germany, this is entirely legal, as long as you don't distribute such a TOS to others (without written permission from Atari, which is probably hard to get :-) Me, all I need is an affordable 68030 board, like the one recently discussed here (if I remember correctly, Dave Small was one of the developers, but he has been silent on that topic for some while). ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bitnet: VBRANDT@DBNUAMA1 (will go away some day ...) Volker A. Brandt UNM409@DBNRHRZ1 (alternative) Angewandte Mathematik UUCP: ...!unido!DBNUAMA1.bitnet!vbrandt (Bonn, West Germany) ARPAnet: VBRANDT%DBNUAMA1.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU