From: dcross1@nospam.home.com (David Cross) Date: Sat, Sep 19, 1998 15Ç19 Message-id: In article <6tumgm$qho$1@nnrp1.dejanews.com>, dalthoff@capital.edu says... >Consider that DOS 3.3 is entirely memory-resident, and that almost all Apple >]['s running today have 48k of base memory[Footnote 1]. So one could >technically *key in* DOS 3.3 to its final location. Then, simply call the >DOS warmstart routine at $9DBF to get it hooked in, execute an FP command to >reset HIMEM:, and one would be off and running. Just INIT a new disk, and >PRESTO! you have a bootable DOS 3.3 disk. > >Of course, that is silly. Who would want to *type in* 9k of hex code? [ snip ] Another idea, for those who have Integer-only Apples, would be to set your file up to use the mini-assembler. ;-) I had a source-code generator once that would generate code from a Monitor disassembly listing that would effectively create code you could EXEC into the Mini-Assembler. Now that would be cool just to say you did it.. "I assembled DOS 3.3 from scratch using a null-modem connection!"