Using the NEC APC, Japanese MS-DOS computer with 8" drives

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  • čas přidán 18. 11. 2022
  • The year was 1982 and NEC entered the home computer market (outside Japan) with the NEC APC, or Advanced Personal Computer. The machine sported an Intel 8086 CPU, ran MS-DOS and sported dual integrated 8" floppy drives! In this video I'll take a look at the machine inside and out, and do a repair on it so I can get it working again.
    Part 1: • The NEC APC runs MS-DO...
    Part 2: This part!
    -- Info
    To reboot the NEC APC:
    Function - Control - Break Stop
    -- Video Links
    Using an 8" Disk Drive on a PC:
    • This is how to use an ...
    TexElec Disk Drive Controller:
    Not yet available (As of Nov 2022)
    8" floppy disk Shugart interface adapter 50 pin to 34 pin (eBay)
    www.ebay.com/itm/115587959419
    NEC APC related files on archive.org:
    archive.org/search.php?query=...
    BitSaver NEC APC links:
    www.bitsavers.org/pdf/nec/APC/
    www.bitsavers.org/bits/NEC/APC/
    Imagedisk (IMD) by Dave Dunfield:
    dunfield.classiccmp.org/img/in...
    22DISK/22NICE (Utility for copying files to/from CPM disks)
    www.cpm80.com/ (download links there or use Google)
    NEC APC (Wikipedia)
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APC_series
    Adrian's Digital Basement Merch store:
    my-store-c82bd2-2.creator-spr...
    Adrian's Digital Basement ][ (Second Channel)
    / @adriansdigitalbasement2
    Support the channel on Patreon:
    / adriansdigitalbasement
    -- Tools
    Deoxit D5:
    amzn.to/2VvOKy1
    store.caig.com/s.nl/it.A/id.16...
    O-Ring Pick Set: (I use these to lift chips off boards)
    amzn.to/3a9x54J
    Elenco Electronics LP-560 Logic Probe:
    amzn.to/2VrT5lW
    Hakko FR301 Desoldering Iron:
    amzn.to/2ye6xC0
    Rigol DS1054Z Four Channel Oscilloscope:
    www.rigolna.com/products/digi...
    Head Worn Magnifying Goggles / Dual Lens Flip-In Head Magnifier:
    amzn.to/3adRbuy
    TL866II Plus Chip Tester and EPROM programmer: (The MiniPro)
    amzn.to/2wG4tlP
    www.aliexpress.com/item/33000...
    TS100 Soldering Iron:
    amzn.to/2K36dJ5
    www.ebay.com/itm/TS100-65W-MI...
    EEVBlog 121GW Multimeter:
    www.eevblog.com/product/121gw/
    DSLogic Basic Logic Analyzer:
    amzn.to/2RDSDQw
    www.ebay.com/itm/USB-Logic-DS...
    Magnetic Screw Holder:
    amzn.to/3b8LOhG
    www.harborfreight.com/4-inch-...
    Universal ZIP sockets: (clones, used on my ZIF-64 test machine)
    www.ebay.com/itm/14-16-18-20-...
    RetroTink 2X Upconverter: (to hook up something like a C64 to HDMI)
    www.retrotink.com/
    Plato (Clone) Side Cutters: (order five)
    www.ebay.com/itm/1-2-5-10PCS-...
    Heat Sinks:
    www.aliexpress.com/item/32537...
    Little squeezy bottles: (available elsewhere too)
    amzn.to/3b8LOOI
    --- Links
    My GitHub repository:
    github.com/misterblack1?tab=r...
    Commodore Computer Club / Vancouver, WA - Portland, OR - PDX Commodore Users Group
    www.commodorecomputerclub.com/
    --- Instructional videos
    My video on damage-free chip removal:
    • How to remove chips wi...
    --- Music
    Intro music and other tracks by:
    Nathan Divino
    @itsnathandivino
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 420

  • @johnsihler4034
    @johnsihler4034 Před rokem +42

    I had this exact APC 30 years ago. The green phosphor, screen resolution, and sound of the drive in the video takes me back in time. I loved that machine. I'm glad this video exists, because my machine does not anymore.

  • @der.Schtefan
    @der.Schtefan Před rokem +7

    Until I saw Part 1 and 2 of this, I always thought the slowly fading CRT text was just some fancy CGI of some Hollywood movies. This is the first time I see long persistence phosphor on a computer.

  • @raelik777
    @raelik777 Před rokem +82

    Little trick for vintage computers that don't support 4 year dates (and that also don't have some mechanism for dealing with year 2000 and beyond) that works well enough for most things: dial back the calendar 112 years (i.e. 2022 becomes 1910). The days of the week repeat every 28 years (112 is a multiple of that), so anything that does those calculations will still line up with the current year, you just have to add 12 (or 112 if that software assumes a 1900 century) to the year.

    • @leland818
      @leland818 Před rokem +4

      Very interesting workaround. Never thought about doing that even though I knew about the date cycles. Have you had use cases for that in the past?

    • @blackterminal
      @blackterminal Před rokem +3

      You are better with numbers than me.

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Před rokem +4

      The screen showed oct 30th demonstrating the system was able to correctly calculate the 2022 date!

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Před rokem +3

      Although apparently MS DOS didn't like it lmao

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Před rokem

      @@forbiddenera MS-DOS 2 is not Y2K compatible. Think you need 4 or 5 to use any dates past 1999

  • @jscipione
    @jscipione Před rokem +5

    23:18 “I really didn’t find anything particularly interesting.” 23:33 “There was a dev suite for the C programming language that doesn’t seem to be archived anywhere.”

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +1

      Haha -- well at least it's archived now :-) And some other manuals that had never been scanned.

  • @kencreten7308
    @kencreten7308 Před rokem +24

    Such a cool looking machine. It would be great for a retro-sci fi movie set.

    • @NaoPb
      @NaoPb Před rokem +1

      I totally agree Ken.

    • @TheThomasites
      @TheThomasites Před rokem

      Came here to say, we will probably see this on the set of a upcoming movie or show. Beautiful looking machine.

    • @jackilynpyzocha662
      @jackilynpyzocha662 Před rokem

      Like "WarGames"?

  • @runrin_
    @runrin_ Před rokem +10

    pretty sure most of us would have enjoyed a glimpse at the productivity software. even if it's not that interesting, it'd still be cool to see it running in that high resolution.

  • @Renville80
    @Renville80 Před rokem +40

    Neon lamps get kind of weird as they age. Adrian, I’ll bet that if you shine a light on the neon lamp it’ll light and stay lit as long as there is sufficient ambient light, but if you turn down the lights, it will start flickering something awful.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +2

      That is bizarre.

    • @neilbarnes3557
      @neilbarnes3557 Před rokem +14

      Bizarre but true; the neons were made with a tiny amount of a radioactive gas in the neon to lower the strike voltage by providing an initial ionisation. I used to enjoy watching apparatus rooms full of equipment with neon power indicators which flickered like mad in the dark but as soon as the room lights were turned on, mysteriously got better and lit up. It took me a long time to find out the reason; that the light is sufficient to help the ionisation along.

    • @NB1980
      @NB1980 Před rokem +1

      I have a similar vintage switch like that. It has the same problems where it doesn't light up immediately.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +2

      @@neilbarnes3557 Huh. Is that still true? You can still get neon lamps. I recently installed one as the indicator in a guitar amplifier.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +19

      Yeah I didn't know this! Someone mentioned Mr Carlson talked about this in a video. Fascinating thing! That switch I used was old and came out of something I ewasted long ago ... so it was probably quite spent.

  • @m_a_s6069
    @m_a_s6069 Před rokem +4

    Ah! The NEC APC series. First PC that I used that could make good-looking plots on the screen that could be easily dumped to the dot matrix printer. Wonderful blast from the past.

  • @WilliamHostman
    @WilliamHostman Před rokem +3

    Abacus North, who wrote the Color Program, was a computer store in Anchorage. We price shopped there when buying our kaypro II a few years before they wrote that. Flashback to the smell of new computers and soldering of circuits....

  • @bubbles581
    @bubbles581 Před rokem +3

    8" drives always seemed sooooo cool when I was a kid

  • @travispierce70
    @travispierce70 Před rokem +10

    I made a NEC APC disk today and was able to copy files to the DOS disks using Uniform PC version 3.0. It worked really well.

  • @ronostrenski8359
    @ronostrenski8359 Před rokem +2

    Sold these machines in the 80’s for business. They just worked and worked. Colour graphics was amazing, but very little software.

  • @Yordleton
    @Yordleton Před rokem +15

    1993?? That might explain why this thing is so well taken care of if the owner used it for that long. They either loved this machine or were too stubborn to upgrade or both lol. Thanks for the awesome video!

  • @craigtiano3455
    @craigtiano3455 Před rokem +27

    Back in the day, you could install a "flippy floppy" drive modification, which added two sensors (one for the timing, and one for the write protect), allowing you to use both sides of a 5 1/4" diskette on your single sided drive..
    There were also factory 5 1/4" diskettes with two write slots and two timing holes, and a company that offered a punch that punched the write slot and timing hole.
    In general, it's not a great idea to use flippy floppies, since the inside of your 5 1/4" diskette has a pad inside to collect dirt. When the diskette is flipped, the dirt can be pulled back off the pad.

    • @DanDan-wy3wq
      @DanDan-wy3wq Před rokem +4

      Flippy disks, Sierra hole-punched the Kings Quest III disks for CoCo 3, otherwise the 10 disks wouldn't have fit in the Sierra box!

  • @misterhat5823
    @misterhat5823 Před rokem +6

    As neon bulbs age, the trigger voltage can increase. That might explain the seeming random activation of the power light.

  • @Clavichordist
    @Clavichordist Před rokem +4

    This machine and software bundle is very typical of the early 1980s. If the user wanted to do something, outside of the few programs bundled they had to write the programs themselves. In the mid-1980s, I worked for Visual Technology who made their V-1050 CP/M Plus system. As an employee, I got a system at a steep discount and paid well under the list price of nearly $2500. That system too came bundled with a similar package including WordStar, DR Graph, MultiPlan, C-BASIC, and the Z-80 assembler. The V-1050 came with the built-in capabilities of reading other CP/M system and program disks by running a utility. Among the many the system supported was the DEC Rainbow and the Kaypro systems.
    I learned Z-80 assembly on my machine and also wrote numerous programs in C-BASIC. Instead of using the line-editor, I used WordStar in non-document mode. The line editor is similar if not the same as Edlin, making viewing and editing code very frustrating. Once my program was written and compiled in Z-80 Assembler, I'd execute it and view the memory using Z-Sid. Z-Sid is similar to debug on a DOS system.
    In many ways, I miss these days. Today, computers are blah, same, similar and not very exciting. This is the same with the operating systems. Linux comes close with its roll your own environment but that too is becoming more of the same from version to version.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +3

      John, guess what? Sitting here in my office is a Visual 1050! I haven't fired it up yer, waiting to make a video about it. I think I saw the drives on the 1050 are 96TPI versus the normal 48TPI on other systems, so you get 2x the storage. I figured it was going to have a similar issue to the APC though! Lack of the customized software it needs to really take advantage of the 1050's capabilities.
      I got this machine without disks or manuals. I haven't yet looked to see if scans and images exist, but I hope they do or it won't be a very interesting video.

    • @Clavichordist
      @Clavichordist Před rokem

      @@adriansdigitalbasement Hi Adrian,
      I can't wait to see the system power up and bring back some memories. 🙂
      There are disks up on Bit Savers for the system. I recommend downloading both the V1.3 and V.14 contents. Google for the V-1050. There's a couple of sites dedicated to the system and I think one of them has the schematics for the circuit boards. Visual was great that way. The systems came with tech docs as well as a user manual.
      Yes, the disks are 96 TPI and the TEAC floppy drives are really noisy and so is the fan inside the case. The 9-inch green or amber CRT is a separate unit. The keyboard to be warned is a Key-Tronic sponge and foil affair. Visual used the same display and keyboard for their V50, V55, V60 and V65 terminals from those components by placing a small circuit board inside the monitor.
      I agree, there's not much software to take advantage of the graphics and other capabilities of that system. The system was very powerful for its time. The V-1050 has a 6502 and 32K of RAM dedicated for the graphics portion of the system. The Z80 gets its own bank-switched set. Unfortunately, I can't remember the total amount of RAM on board any longer, but they had plans to come release some add-on cards including some memory boards mounted on some very long-sharp headers which used to gouge my hands whenever I was fixing the board. I tested some early memory boards but they never made it past that point. The system does support a hard drive through the Centronics port in the back.

  • @der.Schtefan
    @der.Schtefan Před rokem +3

    With that high res text screen, the C IDE must have looked amazing!

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 Před rokem +4

    The high res screen allows for a beautiful terminal font! Very interesting machine! Well made!

  • @SiaVids
    @SiaVids Před rokem +6

    That reminded me that I have here a couple of Apricot machines (ACT), these ran MSDOS but the disk formatting was very slightly different to make them incompatible with IBM PC's.

    • @HTMLEXP
      @HTMLEXP Před rokem +2

      Also ACT machines had a character editor and logo creator.

  • @ForgottenMachines
    @ForgottenMachines Před rokem +16

    15:55 What you demonstrate with the index hole position here is excellent and very valuable knowledge...crucial to any 8" disk flux recovery system that I may develop here, so again, I and the vintage community thank you for this!!!

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +7

      Yeah it's an interesting thing I didn't realize until recently!! I didn't say it in my video but I modded my Qume disk drive to actually allow me to format single sided disks as double sided. The circuit normally looks at which index hole is being read and then if it's the Single Sided hole, it will disallow use of the second head. I installed a jumper on the PCB to allow me to force it to ignore that part of the circuit. (This wasn't documented in the technical docs but I saw in the schematics the designers made a provision for this.) Anyway, yeah if you are going to be archiving 8" disks, it is essential to see the difference between single and double sided media since it's physically different.

    • @ForgottenMachines
      @ForgottenMachines Před rokem +1

      @@adriansdigitalbasement Thanks for this! I'm doing some experiments as a result with my 8" drives, and I'll be certain to share my results with you as soon as I have any...VERY cool and thanks again for this AWESOME preservation work and great video documentation!

    • @sio2groper410
      @sio2groper410 Před rokem +1

      I remember using an industrial machine in the early 80's that used 8" hard sector disks. You could see multiple holes in the magnetic disk punched to indicate the location of each sector through the index hole in the sleeve. I'm guessing these never made it onto the modern PC's of that time era, but the head loading clunk takes me back. We used to joke that it was punching holes out of the disk like a paper tape!

  • @mal2ksc
    @mal2ksc Před rokem +4

    You don't need the characters next to each other for the maze one-liner.
    chr$(x+y*int(rnd(1)*2))
    would jump to either chr$(x) or chr$(x+y).

  • @ropersonline
    @ropersonline Před rokem +3

    The redefinable character set hypothetically _could_ allow someone to make a really nice PETSCII Robots port for this.

  • @gordonbrandly4352
    @gordonbrandly4352 Před rokem +5

    As you noted, and many folks commented, not much software was created for this machine. Yet I know of at least one interesting use case for the colour version of the first APC, which I can explain with a bit of reminiscing. :) One of my consulting jobs in the early 80s was for a small electronics engineering firm that wanted to port a printed-circuit board CAD program to their brand-new colour APC computer. I ported it from, if I remember right, a CP/M-80 assembly-language program they got from somewhere beyond my memory now. Oh, and your videos reminded me how on each day I sat down to that machine I'd slide the keyboard out of the way and wonder whyyyy NEC decided to put the power switch there!
    The similarities between 8080 assembly-language CP/M programs and 8086 programs on CP/M-86 were vital to making my task possible since I didn't know much about 8086s at the time and I really needed that help. I wish I could remember if the converted program worked well in the end or not, though I *do* remember the APC being a vastly improved computer over whatever 8080/Z80 CP/M machine they were using before!

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie Před rokem +1

    Thank you for Archiving the C Compiling Software , Love this NEC , all the Great early 80's Computers . My brain can understand a Lot of Late 70's and Early 80's Computers and it has taken me 39 years to Learn What CPM and DOS that I Know , I sure Hope the collections are found by Young People and Put up on the Net for future Study , I Miss Gary Kildall , I Miss old BBS's , I Collect Modems , Books , Magazines and Computers , Cheres :) QC

  • @johnathanstevens8436
    @johnathanstevens8436 Před rokem +8

    Yes, the clones really didn't survive but to me these machines are some of the most interesting. For example someone ported DOS 1 to the Commodore B128 (CBM-II) with the 8088 add-on.

  • @foogod4237
    @foogod4237 Před rokem +1

    I actually remember taking 5 1/4" floppies and a paper hole punch and punching extra index holes in them so that I could flip them over and use both sides in my single-sided TRS-80 disk drives. It was actually pretty common practice at the time, because single-sided floppies often cost significantly less than double-sided ones, even though they were exactly the same except for that single missing hole (and the write-protect notch)...

  • @donaldcongdon9095
    @donaldcongdon9095 Před rokem +6

    DeSmet made compilers for several popular languages. They ran on CP/M and later MS-DOS. I think they later changed the name to Utah. I used the MS-DOS version of Utah COBOL and Utah Fortran 66 in college. Very inexpensive.

  • @UpLateGeek
    @UpLateGeek Před rokem +5

    With 1.2MB per-disk, that's pretty good for 1983. I believe the 1.2MB high-density 5.25" floppy format only came out with the IBM AT in 1984, so the 8" disk would have been around with that size for at least a year before IBM went with the 5.25" version.
    I vaguely remember reading somewhere that MS-DOS did support 8" floppy disks at some stage, but support was removed pretty early on, so you might be able to read them with an early version (like what was running on the APC, although the IBM compatible version). But I could be remembering incorrectly, so take that with an arbitrary number of NaCl molecules.
    When you formatted the disk in NFORMAT!, the format ID was $F9, which is for 1.2MB HD 5.25". $FE is for 1.2MB DSDD 8". It was definitely formatting with 15 sectors of 512B instead of the 8 sectors of 1024B that the APC would be expecting. And that would be the difference in size you saw.

  • @TSteffi
    @TSteffi Před rokem +6

    The DeSmet is a C compiler suite for 8088/86 CPUs. Creates really small code and is just perfect for low ram machines like this one. if you google for desmet C you will find the manual and all.

  • @rager1969
    @rager1969 Před rokem +1

    When I was a kid, I took an after school computer class that had Apple II+ computers. The teacher said he had a black Bell & Howell version of the Apple II with 8" disk drives that had a 1.2MB capacity on their floppies. When I got older and into MS-DOS PCs, I remember hearing the 5-1/4" High Density disk capacity of 1.2MB was to match the capacity of 8" disks. I also remember seeing a 5-1/4 Quad Density disk drive in some PC's in the computer lab, which used disks with a capacity of 720KB.

  • @danmenes3143
    @danmenes3143 Před rokem +7

    You can probably get the neon bulb to strike by shining a flashlight on it.

  • @74656trekkie
    @74656trekkie Před rokem +7

    The maze is also possible on ATARI 8-Bit machines as ATASCII happens to have the same slash/backslash combination as PETSCII, but in another location.

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke Před rokem +48

    The difficulties of incompatibility is just something of that era, given everyone was competing for people to use their standards, usually claiming better this, faster that, etc., it just seemed to boil down to who could get the most computers out there, and that ended up as being the IBM standard for MS-DOS type computers given companies started cloning their stuff on mass...

    • @SumeaBizarro
      @SumeaBizarro Před rokem +1

      It is indeed how much crazy corporate espionage type of moves to wrestle a platform away from company like IBM where Intel and Microsoft became much bigger controllers of the platform is something that companies octotuple check against, No third party Playstations not in any form not even legal emulators and so many other examples of extremely closed off platforms where even Microsoft is trying to make "their machines" more and more of a platform to protect and sell software on, though windows app store and their proprietary UWP format for programs are slightly failures that Microsoft eased on, most new gamepass games being more conventional computer programs, though the strong control from "the store" is there, which is a scary prospect to some like valve making Steam Deck to combat this seemingly one-way future.

    • @blackterminal
      @blackterminal Před rokem +3

      @@SumeaBizarro if MS pushes control too much another platform will become more attractive.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +4

      * _en masse_

    • @K-o-R
      @K-o-R Před rokem +2

      "That's the great thing about standards. There are so many to choose from..."

    • @asanjuas
      @asanjuas Před rokem

      @@K-o-R there was instead today with the PC including O.S. all are standard because of bad practises of all oems and micro$oft.

  • @ropersonline
    @ropersonline Před rokem +1

    The whole aesthetic of the APC and this video gives me Patlabor vibes.

  • @brianhind6149
    @brianhind6149 Před rokem +6

    Sir: I love your videos ! I know essentially nothing about computers, but I learned more about floppy dicks in a few minutes of watching your running comments, than I ever previously knew. You have a great knowledge of the machines from years gone by, a knack for teaching, & excellent articulation. I am in awe & admiration of your work. Cheers!

    • @theViomax
      @theViomax Před rokem +1

      "floppy dicks" hur hur hur I'm such a child.

  • @stannovacki2406
    @stannovacki2406 Před rokem +45

    another great video Adrian.
    in part 1, you had mentioned using xmodem or kermit as a possibility for transferring files between kinds of machines. In grad school, I used Kermit-80, Kermit-CMS, and whatever the DOS version was called to move files between a DEC VT-180, the university's IBM mainframe, and the then-rare PCs that two staff engineers were fortunate to have.
    maybe part 3 can be a dive into serially transferring files between different machine?

    • @stevesether
      @stevesether Před rokem +11

      Kermit was/is indeed the protocol of choice for transferring files between semi-obscure systems. There appears to be a version of kermit available for the NEC APC on kermit project website.
      From the txt file:
      MSKermit on the APC supports both the standard serial port (as port 1) and
      the optional (H14) add-on serial port (as port 2). Port selection is
      performed using the SET PORT command. Any baud rate up to 38400 is legal
      although 38400 has never been tested and may not work well. The port is
      always configured as 8 data bits, no parity, and 1 stop bit. Any necessary
      parity is supplied by Kermit.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +11

      Yeah I wish I had found a copy of KERMIT on the MSDOS disks. It seemed to exist (based on what I can see on the internet) but no copies existed. The non standard Serial cable would be a bit of a problem too. (Centronics type connector.)

    • @_irdc
      @_irdc Před rokem +6

      @@adriansdigitalbasement Your copy of MS-DOS 2.11 should have ctty, so if you get RS232 working there's the option of pasting a program from your regular PC into a debug session on the APC.

    • @hsuonsivu1
      @hsuonsivu1 Před rokem +2

      @@adriansdigitalbasement The serial port is connected to the cpu board with a ribbon cable, which seems to be right pinout for D25 ribbon cable connector.

    • @stannovacki2406
      @stannovacki2406 Před rokem

      @@adriansdigitalbasement I have the parts (including the clunky CN-36 soldertail connectors), the APC and PC tech manuals, and docs on interconnecting two DTEs together, so I'm gonna work on a null-modem cable so that the APC and an IBM-PC will be able to talk to one another.
      Also investigating a native Kermit solution. At first blush, there doesn't seem to be an APC-specific version of MS-Kermit, even though the Kermit docs say one was created. There *IS* source for building Kermit-86 (looking at it now) that has explicit support for the APC, but the chicken-egg challenge persists: how to get the source files ONTO the APC to build them?
      with that in mind, I had a thought:
      while the IBM-PC + Qume 8in drive didn't seen to work with NFormat or the disk archiver, there's a discussion on Vintage Computer Federation forums titled "NEC APC: RDCPM and a CP/M-86 formatted diskette?" that might have some useful information for accessing 8in disks using 22DISK, listed in your resource list.
      Also keep in mind that there _is_ a universal CP/M 8in disk standard (the only disk standard, actually) that might be "more compatible" than the 1.2ish MB format native to the APC's CP/M-86 system. the SSSD format is the same as the IBM 3740 (IIRC, known as "IBM Disk 1") and it stores a whopping 250k or so per disk. It might be possible to use this least-common-denominator to move files between CP/M on the APC and the PC+8inFDD running 22DISK?. Additionally/alternatively, a possibility to to see if DOS and/or CP/M on the APK offer options when disk-fomatting; perhaps a format less-sophisticated than the ones native to APC would let you create a disk that's more directly compatible with ImageDisk/Nformat? Maybe creating an 8in clone of a 360k/720k diskette, for example?
      as an adjunct to experimenting with disk formats on the APC, there is MS-DOS utlity on the APC called "RDCPM.COM" which (should) allow its MS-DOS environment to access content on a CPM (I"m giving up on the '/') diskette. maybe in conjunction with a different DOS disk clone (see prior paragraph) that would be easier to deal with on the PC side.
      in the meantime, I'll start work on the null-modem cable (who knows, maybe there's a terminal program in those 8in disks somewhere that support zmodem or something) and continue to burn out my grey cells poring over 30-year-old documents for Kermit.
      PS: reading now about 8FORMAT ...

  • @JeffAPierson
    @JeffAPierson Před rokem +1

    loved using my hole punch, first hack

  • @KennethScharf
    @KennethScharf Před rokem +6

    If I remember correctly Linux floppy support allows you to customize the disk format. You might be able to read the APC floppies on a PC running Linux. Linux can also write to MSDOS hard disk volumes so it could be used to transfer your files.

  • @brentfuchs5501
    @brentfuchs5501 Před rokem

    I grew up in a college town. My dad was a NEC authorized dealer. When the university opened their own computer store with discounts all the other computer stores went under. That's how I ended up with a NEC APC in my bedroom as a six year old. He eventually found a buyer and I was given a NEC 8201A.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem

      What did you do with the APC when you were that age? Fiddling around with Personal basic?

  • @horusfalcon
    @horusfalcon Před rokem +2

    That delay lends credence to the lamp being a neon. Sometimes old neon lamps take a while to break past their excitation voltage and light up.

  • @tony359
    @tony359 Před rokem +1

    Super cool dinosaur, sometimes being the best doesn’t automatically mean success - there are so many examples. Thanks for the video.

  • @rfbase
    @rfbase Před 7 měsíci

    Great video! Man this brings back memories, I started my first computer company in Ohio and we were selling these to all the former engineers from the Tire companies in Akron OH. We had a light fixture company come to us and asked for an inventory control system and these machines came bundled with dBase II Ashton Tate software. I ended up writing the program for the customer in dBase II on the NEC APC. That customer's company stayed and business well through the 90s and they were still using my program and the NEC APC through the mid 90s. One final note, if you logged into the program with the wrong username or password more than three times my program called the POW command, which you talk about in this video, and shut the computer off. 🙂

  • @williamsquires3070
    @williamsquires3070 Před rokem +14

    Hi Adrian. You can actually use the “one-line maze” program with the regular slash and backslash, you just have to multiply the Rnd(1) result by the difference in ASCII values between the “/“ and “\” characters. So when it gets a “tails” (which I’ll set = 0) it multiplies that times the offset, but 0 times anything is 0, so you just get the ASCII code for the slash. When it gets a “heads” (= 1) it multiplies 1 by the offset, then adds that to the ASCII code for the slash, to get the backslash. It’s not as pretty as the ones that have the “bigger” slash and backslash, but it’ll work. Variations on this should work in other languages, like C or Python, that can be run at a command-line prompt on modern systems.

    • @michaelcalvin42
      @michaelcalvin42 Před rokem +4

      I came here to make this exact comment. Note also that the rnd function generates a floating point number between 0 and the provided parameter, so it has to be rounded if the difference between characters is greater than one. That single line maze program looks like:
      10 ?chr$(47+(cint(rnd(1))*45));:goto 10
      (Tested in GWBasic 2.0)

    • @RetroDawn
      @RetroDawn Před rokem +1

      @@michaelcalvin42 Indeed. I came here to see if I needed to comment similarly. I knew someone must have beat me to it, since it's such an obvious point for anyone that knows anything about programming. I assume Adrian just had a brain fart--or perhaps he doesn't know much about programming, even in BASIC?

    • @shawnmulligan3471
      @shawnmulligan3471 Před rokem +1

      @@michaelcalvin42 If your BASIC doesn't have a function for rounding (like C64 BASIC doesn't), you can use something like INT(RND(1) + 0.5); essentially add 0.5 and then convert it to an integer; then multiply by the offset and add the base like you already have.

  • @granitepenguin
    @granitepenguin Před rokem +1

    Love the 10 print at the end. It's always interesting to see evolutionary dead-ends that die because of market reasons, not technology reasons.

  • @kdietz65
    @kdietz65 Před rokem +7

    I like the styling of it because it looks so similar to a VT100 terminal. If you could find a terminal emulator to run on it, you could use the computer as a dedicated terminal for other projects (I know you already have dedicated terminals, but why not one more).

  • @PixelPipes
    @PixelPipes Před rokem +2

    This is a genuinely gorgeous and novel machine. I definitely have a soft spot for ambitious hardware releases that never got to see their full potential.

  • @blackterminal
    @blackterminal Před rokem +1

    I've never used 8 inch drives but I love 5 inch drives. Can't explain why. I think because when I was a child with the family Sinclair Spectrum I thought floppy drives were the coolest things ever. Haha. We are all of our time.

  • @agranero6
    @agranero6 Před rokem +3

    I found this machine a very interesting one for that time. Powerful. The battery backup RAM, the char generator on the RAM, etc. I worked with TRS-80 I and II, Super Brain, Osborne, Commodore PET, TI99 and Apple II at that time and I didn't know about the 8'' disks write protection (maybe because I never really used a TRS-80 model II, just once). Thanks for explaining that.

  • @RikkiCattermole
    @RikkiCattermole Před rokem +1

    DeSmet compilers have been open-sourced as GPL. Only a few have source+manual though.
    Super interesting to have a read through, so simple. Hardly any semantic analysis and no optimization!
    It's nothing like the more advanced C compilers from the 80's and 90's such as DigitalMars that is for sure.

  • @Nerd3927
    @Nerd3927 Před rokem +12

    I can fully understand the owner using it well into the 90ties. With wordstar / DB3 and a C compiler, I would have been hard to move to a different setup until the Internet broke out :-)

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +6

      He said the computer was made in '83. To state the obvious, '93 is "only" ten years later. That'd be like using Windows 8 now, which doesn't seem that absurd.
      (Okay, that's not a great analogy.)

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +13

      The pace of advancement back then was huge compared to now. You can easily use a 10 year old computer today and run Windows 10 on it with all modern software. (Except maybe the most demanding stuff.) Compare that to a 1981 IBM PC 5150 versus a 1991 clone with a 486 chip. The performance improvement in 10 years back then was like 100x faster in some cases. Now they just add more cores but the single thread speed hasn't increased that much.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +5

      @@adriansdigitalbasement Yeah, I was sort-of joking. That said, non-GUI DOS applications were still pretty common up to the early '90s, especially in a business context. If whatever company owned this computer had their records on it starting from '83, there had better be a good reason to migrate that data to a new system (and you discovered that it's very hard just to copy bytes, even ignoring potentially translating that data to a new application) or abandoning that data. If I was running a business using this machine for my records in the early '90s, I'd definitely think hard about what advantages existed on a new system that would outweigh the cost of new hardware and data migration. I wouldn't be surprised to find that the stuff you found marked "1993" were the artifacts of a migration effort. Why would a company using a word processor and a database (IIRC) suddenly have a C compiler?

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Před rokem +4

      Yes i clearly remember many people in 93 using pure text programs like wordstar, wordperfect and such on pc clones for business use, something graphical like Windows was seriously alienating and made things much slower, so it was a net loss on productivity. I clearly remember one person late 90ies still using her Wordperfect with pure MSDOS, she didn't want Windows or mouse, was in the way. All she needed was to type legal documents and print them, had everything configured margins, fonts, etc. that was it. She was using like a Pentium class computer with that exact same configuration, simply because the older ones died and since MSDOS did still work with later CPUs, it didn't matter. In parallel i have a friend using a Z80 QX10 for almost the exact thing until it broke, in addition to a newer PC for games 🙂

    • @forbiddenera
      @forbiddenera Před rokem +1

      @@wbfaulk early 90s? Longer..I was doing data entry on vt100 terminals hooked to a mini computer early 2000s and my step-dad was doing dbiv programming up until about 2002 at least..lots of DOS stuff hung around longer than it probably should have..heck only a few years ago I saw a business still using what looked like maybe a 386 at best on dos for a bunch of business shit..I offered to trade them for a modern pc no cost because I wanted the retro machine and they said not a chance (was some weird fabric shop)

  • @BlackGymkhana
    @BlackGymkhana Před rokem

    That font is absolutely gorgeous!

  • @Duddie82
    @Duddie82 Před rokem

    When I was taking Computer Science in Colleage, we used machines just like that to create our Basic Progerams in for our Home work!, I passed all my test, as my intrest is in Science, it was not hard at all. Well, others in my class wanted me to totor them, but I was much too busy. I had a job to go to after class. The computer room opened early and stayed open until 11:00PM. That is how I got my Commodore 64. I sure wish I had one right now. In that computer on the Colleage campus had about 25 of those computers in there. Also, when I started using those disks, I never saw the large ones. Not until one of my coworkers brought one in and showed me what they looked like. I still have a Floppy drive in my collection.

  • @Quickened1
    @Quickened1 Před rokem +2

    That's some pretty interesting computer history there! I never knew any of this... I guess this machine has the Y2K bug... Hahaha...
    Thanks for the edumication Adrian...

  • @AureliusR
    @AureliusR Před 4 měsíci

    This machine is beyond cool. I really hope you do some more videos with it!

  • @John_Mack
    @John_Mack Před rokem +2

    Once every couple of years, I need to boot up an old PC 8088 to run a program called BoxCar that for some reason only works on an 8088 processor. The software designs Box Culverts. It is the only program available to do some particular calculations for the hunches. Fun DOS stuff.

  • @eariesalmon5220
    @eariesalmon5220 Před rokem +1

    When i was at school in the 80s we used to punch a second hole in the 5 1/4" disks to make them double sided using a small single hole punch. I think there were commercial ones on sale that prompted this called a "banana" disk.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the breakdown on the index holes. I had often wondered how drives were able to detect different types. Makes sense now, in hindsight.

  • @K-o-R
    @K-o-R Před rokem

    That is such a crisp and aesthetically pleasing font on that screen.

  • @fensoxx
    @fensoxx Před rokem

    One of my favorite videos you’ve done in awhile. I have a pile of disks from my A500 sitting in the basement I haven’t touched in 30 some odd years. Someday I’ll go through them as you did with this computer. I hope.

  • @AlejandroRodolfoMendez

    It's amazing how this computer still works fine.

  • @kimchee94112
    @kimchee94112 Před rokem +2

    There was an oscilloscope card for the PET during the late 70s, a cheap way to replace an expensive Tektronix. If I remember the PET was also used to drive a size A or B x-y plotter about the same time. Back in the day a full blown large size (size E?) flatbed plotter CAD system would cost in the 10s of thousands of dollars.

  • @daviddavies9149
    @daviddavies9149 Před rokem

    enjoyed all the videos great ton of information...great stuff very informative and entertaining

  • @joaomarreiros4906
    @joaomarreiros4906 Před rokem

    I started in the mid 80´s with an IBM 386 in my dad´s bakery office, and I get such a nerd satisfaction in watching your videos, and I almost learn or remember something, thanks Adrian, keep them coming...

  • @HoneyDoll894
    @HoneyDoll894 Před 2 měsíci

    That screen looks so pretty, imo a lot prettier than many other computers i've seen here

  • @marksterling8286
    @marksterling8286 Před rokem +2

    Love this video, super calc2 for cp/m was one of my first spreadsheets. I recall my cp/m machine had a 3” (not 3 1/2”) drive and a 5 1.4” disk drive and I had to use tdos for cp/m to read 360k pc dos disks.

  • @bluespeck9119
    @bluespeck9119 Před rokem +1

    Something about seeing 2081 on a vintage screen gives me the chills :)

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před rokem

      It's a little bit large for a pip-boy.

  • @Plarndude
    @Plarndude Před rokem +11

    Even if I’d bought that disk way back then, brand new, I absolutely WOULD have duplicated it! I only use duplicates of purchased stuff and safely store the originals.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před rokem +3

      Don't copy that floppy! 💾💾

    • @blackterminal
      @blackterminal Před rokem +4

      @@mal2ksc copy everything

    • @adampope5107
      @adampope5107 Před rokem +2

      @@mal2ksc shit is that what they've been saying? I always thought it was copy that floppy. Whoops.

    • @der.Schtefan
      @der.Schtefan Před rokem +5

      I remember my word processor for my C64 (Starwriter?) said to do this as the first step in the manual. Make a copy, and keep the original disk safe.

    • @andrewgillham1907
      @andrewgillham1907 Před rokem +3

      @@adampope5107 Actually when they see you sticking an original disk in the drive they are saying: “Don’t! Copy that floppy!” So the message is definitely saying make a backup.

  • @tigheklory
    @tigheklory Před rokem +7

    Being a programmer and someone who is fluent in ANSI C those C dev disks are super interesting! #ColecoAdam!

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +2

      Unfortunately the MAME NEC APC emulation seems to not work -- so no way for you to try them out.

    • @andrewdunbar828
      @andrewdunbar828 Před rokem

      @@adriansdigitalbasement Hmm maybe we can reach out to the MAME people? I always have trouble using MAME for microcomputers. It looks like most of the coding for the APC in MAME was done 8-10 years back.

  • @artemius130
    @artemius130 Před rokem +2

    Adrian , thank you for the video. Wow.. what a beautiful monochrome computer. I liked the monitor. On this monitor, I was taught in school, basic) Even a little sad that almost can't do anything on this computer...But for some reason it seems to me that all the same all is not hopeless )

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Před rokem +1

    I found CPM-86 and Concurrent CPM-86 on WinWorld.
    Concurrent CPM-86 is a multitasking version of CPM .
    In case you need it for archival or restoration purposes.

  • @WarpRadio
    @WarpRadio Před rokem +2

    about the power switch and its Neon lamp; the bulb is failing- and the reason it "sometimes lights up" is based on a few things: 1 the little electrodes are dipped in a slightly radioactive coating which helps the Neon "fire" and this combined with it being exposed to photons (light) also will cause it ti fire at random. a way to "test" this is very simple, simply turn it on in a darkened room and then shine a light on the switch and you'll then see it light up!

  • @brianorca
    @brianorca Před rokem +1

    I remember using that character editor on my dad's APC to make little animations.

  • @tigheklory
    @tigheklory Před rokem

    I love the shout out for the Coleco Adam!!!

  • @sendark001
    @sendark001 Před rokem

    the font on this machine is beautiful

  • @pappakilo3965
    @pappakilo3965 Před rokem +5

    Hats off once again. A great visit to an early computer. My computer experience pretty much started with my boss dumping two brand new IBM-XTs on my desk (FDD-only models) and telling me to do something with them. Back then I bought Peter Norton's Guide to IBM PCs and was encouraged to 'play' so that later I could help other users.
    I spent a few days with MS-DOS 'debug' just peeking and poking in memory and on the floppies. At the time I was transferring data from a CP/M system via the machines' serial ports and with the help of the Norton book I navigated my way through the directories of several MS-DOS floppies that I'd used. Of course 'delete' doesn't delete necessarily, first it marks files as deleted, then they are overwritten if clusters and/or sectors need to be re-used. Do you think that your blank disks may have erased data and software on them or have they been formatted but not used? There might be something there. I think CP/M has a means by which floppy sectors can be accessed direct, but I can't remember how

  • @jimstand
    @jimstand Před rokem +4

    The cardboard inserts for the 8 inch floppy disk drives were used to keep the heads from banging together when the computers were being shipped and also when shipping the diskette drives from the manufacturer to the computer assemblers.

  • @randy7894
    @randy7894 Před rokem

    That charachterset is heavenly beautiful.

  • @tekvax01
    @tekvax01 Před rokem +2

    Don't sound so shocked Adrian... I used my CP/m system well into the early 90s! Wordstar was perfect for me and worked wonderfully... Only purchased an IBM clone in the mid-90s...

  • @NaoPb
    @NaoPb Před rokem +13

    Too bad Zork didn't work. I wish I was better in coding so I could try to rewrite that Infocom interpreter to make those games playable on different systems.
    By the way, I really like your new way of doing the split screen display while working on the computer connected to your capturing device.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +3

      The Infocom interpreter has already been rewritten many times and Infocom games can be played on virtually any computer. "Frotz" is the most notable Z-machine interpreter.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +5

      Yeah, just no modern version for APC MSDOS or APC CPU86 :-)

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před rokem +7

      @@adriansdigitalbasement You've got that C compiler. I bet you could compile Frotz on there without too much effort.

    • @daoutbox9884
      @daoutbox9884 Před rokem

      Wasted potential having ram limit of 128kb and mentioned in last video highest was 256kb. Game may have entered in to a loop waiting for keyboard bios call to returning scan code. Not trying to be full pc compatible unless only dos functions called, common for clones.

  • @jecelassumpcaojr890
    @jecelassumpcaojr890 Před rokem +2

    Nearly all early PC software ran on non compatible MS-DOS machines. The two notable exceptions were Microsoft Flight Simulator and Lotus 1-2-3, but that was enough to tip the balance towards full clones. In the early days we didn't know if IBM was going to be as aggressive against clones as Apple had been, but once manufacturers saw that it was ok to make clones it didn't make sense to insist on non compatibles (like the TI Professional, the DEC Rainbow or the ones mentioned in the video)

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +2

      I think early machines recreated the IBM PC architecture in hardware pretty much identically, but didn't have the IBM BIOS. This is what led to some incompatibility, but if the software tried to talk to hardware directly it would work. But this APC is completely different than the IBM PC with regards to the hardware architecture, so the software would have to rely 100% on DOS calls only to work.....

    • @EvilTurkeySlices
      @EvilTurkeySlices Před rokem

      @@adriansdigitalbasement wonder if some modern trickery can be done to make it more compatible.

  • @madcrowmaxwell
    @madcrowmaxwell Před rokem +3

    The APC/PC-98 was certainly a much cleaner, better thought-through design than the IBM PC in many ways. It's a shame that it didn't catch on outside Japan. Speaking of PC-98, I wonder if it's disks are logically compatible with this machine's. IIRC, it used 5.25 inch 1.2 MB floppies but with a non-standard format that sounds a lot like the APC 8 inch layout. Maybe tools for reading/writing PC-98 disks on PC might help for this machine.

  • @darkstatehk
    @darkstatehk Před rokem

    19:17 DBASE II: In the morning of a random date back in 1982, "DO NOT DUPLICATE".
    Later that afternoon, "I learnt how to duplicate."

  • @chrismes3716
    @chrismes3716 Před rokem

    Those Digital Research disks and their sleeve at 19:20 have a beautiful color scheme.

  • @jerrylarch6556
    @jerrylarch6556 Před rokem +1

    Retrobrite! That computer would look awesome if it was its original cream color!

  • @pauljstephens
    @pauljstephens Před rokem

    I had an NEC APC III in the early ninety's, inherited it from a store liquidation when my dad bought a pharmacy. It had been used as a store room stock control computer & ran a version of DOS. I was learning computer programming at the time & was able to get pascall running on it and a cobol compiler. I remember phoning NEC and asking what else it might be good for? They replied use it as a door stop or a boat anchor! LOL. it had an internal 10mb hard drive and anlso an external 10mb hard drive as well as 1 5&1/4 floppy drive and a orange monochrome screen. I used it for a couple of years until it actually died in a power outage. I don't remember wht happened to it after that.

  • @ghosthuntergr
    @ghosthuntergr Před rokem +1

    My favorite non ibm compatible is Texas Instruments professional computer. If you can find one you will be amazed. I cannot send you mine because it will not survive the trip.

  • @JustinEdwords
    @JustinEdwords Před rokem

    I learned MS-DOS 2.11 on this machine, nothing else to do with it, but i was 11 years old and I sure did love it. Did a few basic programs too. So much fun, it was 1991. You could still buy 8 inch floppies at office max, just barely. They held about a megabyte! not bad

  • @tezzaNZ
    @tezzaNZ Před rokem

    Good video. I stumbled across it because I too, was trying to see and copy off files from an MS-DOS 8 inch disk used on an unknown machine. I have an 8 inch drive set up similar to yours. Yes, the problem seems to be that 512 sector size which is baked into PC floppy architecture. Many of these early MS-DOS formats for 8086 machines used something different. No standardisation in this regard, much like CP/M. What's needed is a 22DISK for MS-DOS 😀

  • @j.t.5178
    @j.t.5178 Před rokem +3

    This would be a great gift for George RR Martin. Maybe he'll actually finish the damn book. (He never will.)

  • @areannahvulpes4594
    @areannahvulpes4594 Před rokem +1

    Can confirm that the APC is Y2K Compatible. 02 Noc 1922 was a Thursday

  • @johnfrank6302
    @johnfrank6302 Před rokem

    This model was also available with CCPM and MPM. I still have my box of 8" disks from the 80's.

  • @DAVIDGREGORYKERR
    @DAVIDGREGORYKERR Před rokem

    The OLIVETTI M3030 used 8" Floppy discs and the unit was like a desk where you could take the back of and then you have access to the electronics of the computer.

  • @grantfryer1
    @grantfryer1 Před rokem +3

    It would be really cool to see what a color version could do.

  • @tschak909
    @tschak909 Před rokem +1

    No, Adrian. OLD is the original command to load a program, in Dartmouth BASIC (DTSS),the command is specified in the ANSI BASIC standard, which both TI BASIC, and DRI Personal BASIC implement.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Před rokem

    AFAIK the IBM PC only requires the index hole during formatting. For reading and writing data it is not necessary. So it would be entirely possible to create a flippy disk for the IBM PC, as long as the formatting was specially created on a double-sided drive.

  • @miked4377
    @miked4377 Před rokem

    i love these retro japanese computers there bea😂7utiful! but lack of software has hurt them...this happened alot😢😢😢

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 Před rokem +3

    I actually used to make my own fonts because I HATED the IBM standard font :) I did this by hacking the provided code pages with my own font set. You need a line in config.sys like "device=c:\dos\display.sys con:=(ega,437,1)" where "ega" refers to the file containing the desired code page, and 437 is the code page tag stored in that file, and 1 is the first allocated page. You then use the chcp command to change code pages. I don't know if this worked in DOS 2 but that's how I used to do it on DOS 5 and beyond. Somewhere out there in cyberspace is my font editor and the code pages I made - it was tons of fun.

  • @irinotecanhcl
    @irinotecanhcl Před rokem +2

    Reminds me a bit of the Tandy 2000, Radio Shack's first foray into the PC market with a "PC-like" machine that ran MS-DOS but could only run programs specifically made for it. I think it also had a high-res graphics option with a proprietary (and quite large) graphics card expansion board.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +3

      I had always been curious about the Tandy 2000! It looked like the later Tandy 1000 machines too, but as you mentioned, wasn't really IBM PC compatible, or at least not fully compatible. This machine is clearly not compatible at all, so you were just stuck strictly with things designed to run on it.

    • @blucy10
      @blucy10 Před rokem

      The Tandy 2000 ran MS-DOS. I used one when I worked at Radio Shack. It handled inventory and sales. I also used Microsoft Multi-Plan (!) to track additional sales and expense information.

  • @derekchristenson5711
    @derekchristenson5711 Před rokem

    What a fascinating machine! Too bad it didn't do better back in the day.

  • @skonkfactory
    @skonkfactory Před rokem +3

    Actually the NEC '765 floppy disc controller (and the Intel 8272A that's pin-compatible) doesn't need the index pulse to read. It only needs it to format a track; the formatting process writes a sector number into each sector on every track, which means it doesn't need the index pulse when reading or even writing- only when formatting.

    • @adriansdigitalbasement
      @adriansdigitalbasement  Před rokem +1

      Interesting! I guess the OS implementation still looks for the pulse anyway. Kind of rude! I know IMD even doesn't work if the index pulse can't be seen (while reading) and it's controlling the disk controller directly.