Subject: Re: ProDOS Volume Emulation? (for K12 MECC) Path: lobby!newstf02.news.aol.com!portc01.blue.aol.com!portc03.blue.aol.com!newsfeed.cwix.com!sjc-peer.news.verio.net!news.verio.net!dfw-read.news.verio.net.POSTED!not-for-mail Message-ID: <395E66E1.9B5C984C@dcnet2000.com> From: Mike T X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.73 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.2.15-4mdk i586) X-Accept-Language: en MIME-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: comp.emulators.apple2,comp.sys.apple2 References: <395d74f2.76071785@news.wi.centuryinter.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Lines: 46 Date: Sat, 01 Jul 2000 16:47:13 -0500 NNTP-Posting-Host: 204.2.54.206 X-Complaints-To: abuse@verio.net X-Trace: dfw-read.news.verio.net 962487860 204.2.54.206 (Sat, 01 Jul 2000 21:44:20 GMT) NNTP-Posting-Date: Sat, 01 Jul 2000 21:44:20 GMT Organization: Verio Xref: lobby comp.emulators.apple2:20603 comp.sys.apple2:102480 As Jon mentioned, Apple Oasis (Windows) and ApplePC (MsDos) can handle your needs. I think Apple Oasis will probably be the best bet since it also includes utilities for manipulating the disk images and files and it is one of the few which support serial i/o that actually works. This means access to both printer and modem or other serial hardware. It is however, shareware for $20 I think. This is probably the most configurable emulator I have ever seen. ApplePC is free, but unsupported as the author has not answered mail from anyone for years. It's primary benefit is the use of full screen output for all video modes. The hires and double hires are very realistic. In my experience, it is a little buggy but not too bad. There is an annoying bug in the keyboard routines which will sometimes return the last key press instead of the current one. Both emulators support joystick, speed variance, disk selection sound, 64 & 128k base memory and aux memory which emulates the Applied Engineering memory cards. Apple Oasis can access up to 1 meg and ApplePC about 300 kb depending on how much Dos memory is free. As for the compressed disk images, the only one I've ever seen with this support is for Linux or other Unix oriented systems. All in all, it is a fairly good emulator but still a bit buggy. Considering the small size of the Apple II disk images, space shouldn't be too much of a problem. It may also be possible to use software which compresses and decompresses files on the fly. Although I have heard of such software, I have no info on it. I hope this gives you enough information. You may want to use both, depending on the software to run. -- Thank you for your time and interest. I hope it was helpful or at least interesting. Phoenyx, Apple2 user since March 1984 Links to Phoenyx's pages: preferred..... http://zip.to/Phoenyx_A2 alternate..... http://www.tinyangeldesigns.com/Apple2