4IBM )p -----E-COPY----- (c) 1991 - 95 by Robert Weiss Baumhackergasse293047 RegensburgTel: 0941-567218EMail (Mausnetz)Robert Weiss @ R----------------@`  @o! #@%`')+-/1 3@5`79;=A C@E`GIKMOQ S@U`WY[]_a c@e`gkmoqs@uwy{}/@ @ ` @ @ ` @ ` ǀ ɠ @ ` ׀ ٠  @`@`!Aa   !Aa!!#A%a')+-/1!3A5a79;=?A!CAEaGIKMOQ!SAUaWY[]_a!cAegioq!sAuawy{}!A!Aa!Aa!Aa!Aaǁɡ!Aa!Aa!Aa " B b  !"!B!b!!!!!"!""#B"%b"'")"+"-"/#1"#O#5b#7#9#;#=#?$A"$CB$Eb$G$I$K$M$O%Q"%SB%Ub%%Y%[%]%_&a"&cB&eb&g&i&k&m&o'q"'sB'ub''y'{'}("(B(b((((()")B)b)))))"*B*b****+B+b+++++,@`  @o! #@%`')+-/1 3@5`79;=A C@E`GIKMOQ S@U`WY[]_a c@e`gkmoqs@uwy{}/@ @ ` @ @ ` @ ` ǀ ɠ @ ` ׀ ٠  @`@`!Aa   !Aa!!#A%a')+-/1!3A5a79;=?A!CAEaGIKMOQ!SAUaWY[]_a!cAegioq!sAuawy{}!A!Aa!Aa!Aa!Aaǁɡ!Aa!Aa!Aa " B b  !"!B!b!!!!!"!""#B"%b"'")"+"-"/#1"#O#5b#7#9#;#=#?$A"$CB$Eb$G$I$K$M$O%Q"%SB%Ub%%Y%[%]%_&a"&cB&eb&g&i&k&m&o'q"'sB'ub''y'{'}("(B(b((((()")B)b)))))"*B*b****+B+b+++++,CDAUDIO ACC k` ȦINSTALL APP m` jCD BOS k` HEXTENDOSCNF LrUNIDRIVEDOS k` UNI_BDDSDOS k` fREAD ME h WCDAUDIO PRG l` ?ȦEXTENDOSPRG j` vn*EXTINFO PRG l` |DISC RSC l` iH INSTALL RSC m` l,EXTENDOSTT #&SCSI TXT h%SCSI_FAQTXT gCDP i6 kTRANSLATTTP3`B".TRANSLATTXTB"+CHECKIT CTLm"CHECKIT TOS<`.T\ PH8(@Hy.T?< NA\Hy.r?< NA\a~a09C @op`bAC[Ca 9Cg6"<&ҹC(/?<HNA\Jfp`$#C#CЄ#C#CC <.LNuIxg Tg Dg> Lgf`#CaJk m n #C`HyC~`d3CazJk m n3C`THyC`6#CaJJk m nR#C`HyCHyC_?< NA\?< NA\RSDj6Nu Dm8 ,=f0TUDrv  g0k  n$ԁւ"RSfNurNuByCBC 8g\ @JgV _CPUf m>3C`4 _FRBf #C`" _MCHf 3C` EProf#C`Nu 9Cg" @ m3CJCf#4CNuJCg/a&JkaNupNu"yC IxBQ!|C1yC !@1A B1CC.TEfCGE9Cg20r$aJk*Jk& 9Gf$AGa>avtS2Nup`p`p`p`p`ACTCGpfQpNupNupC.QpC.QpC.QHy.?< NA\Nu09Cj^E.ACGJgpa`g `$jACGp("a>gV`p9G g*`*E3j2*k@g\` *NuH`J@gS@ߴVVJLNu"oA"BB"CpNupNu"O#F(f8J(fa`a gfg yFa| fp` p`pNu"Oa f <a yF"OaNu(f$#Fa%, gffNua$NupNu(fF#FJ(fa`aj gfg( yFa fp` <` p`pNu#FJ(fad`a gg4ff` NuaH$o ZZZRt aNuaH$o a@a@a@a@t aNuaZH$o R|jt aNua6rt aJkb|9Ga&$o ab@| t azJk4a|$o *a0Fop@| t aBNua$o R|jjt aNuaH$o R|j|t aNuH$o a@a@a@a@t aNua2rt aJkb|9Ga"$o a^@| t avJk4a|$o *a,Fop@| t a>NuaC| r t aJk$o GGpNuaC| r t aTJk$o GGaapNuaVC|| r t aJk$o GGaXaPpNuart a JkL yGf&a|rt a Jk( 9Gfp`$o GGaapNua| r t a |Jk$o GGpNuaC|| r t a JJk$o GGpNuaX| r t a Jk$o GGa`aXpNua rt a Jk$o GGa.a&pNua C$o R *g|| r t a Jk$o GGk|%kpNua C$o  ga@ *g|| r t a BJk$o GGk|%kpNua BC$o  ga@|| r t a Jk,$o GGk| + *faD%@pNua $o | g|a@rt a Jk&$o 9G@ar *fa%@pNua $o R *g|| r t a 4Jk$o GGk|%kpNua 4|@ $o  g| aj@|rt a Jk>$o 5| 9G f`yGa *fa%@pNua $o | g|a@rt a fJk&$o 9G@aL *fa%@pNua ^|ta Nua Ht a Nua 8||ta Nua ||ta Nua t a tNua |t a ^Nua |t a HNupNua |t a .Nua ||$o GG&&&&rta NupNua Z|$o GG&& &&rta Nua B$o g||@||rt aJk$o GGkZV4$$pNua B$o g||@|0r0t anJk$o GGkZV4$$pNua nB$o g||@|0r0t aJk&$o GGkZVp0a 4$$pNua B||@|0r0t aJk@$o GGkZVp0a 4  fa $  fa $pNua| r t atJk$o GGACHp%@%@%@ p gRk+a @+a z@ +a  fa %@ +a fa p%@pNua $o g||@||rt aJk$o GGkZV4$$pNuaa^JkX@a| r t anJk:$o XGGa a  a @%@ +a 2$pNu|rt aJkGGACLp0Nua"| r t aJk$o GGACHp%@%@%@ p gRk+a @+a @ +a fa %@ +a l fa %@pNua|taNuajtaNuaZ$o JRf0||rtaJk$o TGG$$pNu||TGG&&&&&rtaNu$o JRf%|%|pNua$o JRf0| |rtaJk$o TGG$$pNu|TGG&& &&&rtaNua\C$o aNuaT#@3At Nua4CD$o anNua,#@B4#Bt NuaCr$o a@Nua#@3At NuaC$o a f < 0aaC$o aNua#@3At NuaB|@||rt aLJk$o GGG tQpNuaNB||@|0r0t aJk$o GGGtQpNua | r t aJk($o GGACHptQpNua|@||rt aJk$o GGG tQpNuaa*Jk$o tQpNuab| r t a(Jk($o GGACHptQpNuaB|@|$o R|rt aJk $o GGkG TtQpNuaB||@|0r0t aJk $o GGkG!TtQpNua| r t aLJk,$o GGACHppTtQpNua>|@|$o R|rt aJk $o GGkG TtQpNuaaJk$o TtQpNua| r t aJk,$o GGACHppTtQpNupNuEG&<HC0( rJ(fa x`ax g,fg yFa fa8Nu <NupNuEG&<HC0( J(fa t`6Cg6< l6<a g,fg yFaH faNu <NupNu * 0?//*/ J(fab`aO g,fg yFa falNu <NupNuEG&<HC6<0( J(fa`aP g,fg yFa faNu <NupNu#FaNu yFaNupNupNua&r t aJk 9GNu#FatJk gpNuaNu#FaXJk& gpaJkpNu <aJkaNu#FaNJk gpaJkpNu <aNuaT||r t aJkp9G Nua*|"<t aJkp9G Nua||rt aJk 9Ggaa"Nua| EG$%@5|r ta@Nu#FaNu#F <aJkaNuaC| |@ r t a4Jk 9GNu#F <aJk@aD|rt aJk&pEG  f gaaZNua| EG$%|%|r talJkpNua| EG$BB5@ H@@r ta0NupNu#F0( &/$/"o "/$oJ(fJga` a``a ` gg,ff ` axSa /vak"<WҸatkaXahBx>"8T#Fa Nuv`va &P>axSa (HDH`aLJkRaDҸJg$ak4ag Jga`aa&`aJfa:JfapaBx>"8T#Fa zNup))Nu/?a,T"Jk"aL"<ҸSBpaJkQpNu"<Ҹagba&"<`2a:2/ax"<Ҹafba"<`rpaR Nu9Cf Nu111111 Nup9Cf 88Nu111110811081Nup9Cf8Nu108@Nu9Cf$Jf 0|0| Nu1111Nu?ak 0a a(NuTONu9CfNu11Nu9CfN8f,8gba| cAF(SDQCFRBxAa*Mg&</    aD0a&I(r<C1A<UDHAHA <ak~Q1A<HAHA HEEHEa(8T#FJkFJyCga<1A0Vt1|Bx>Xa:(8T#FNu <` <<1Aa>JP1|a4JP$8Tn8g`/ 9F`/ 9Fd NuJ8J8J8J8Nuиe 8fpNupNuCFBBBBNu 9Cg"yC$@ S@$$$$QNu yF|Nu#CJCgRH`,yCHD8<%yC NBQHD-x=CD @ B A SBQ-C-A"-J&LCNuJCgXH`,yC-x-@$.""9Ce$"n&A&`Q&CCm,yC#CLCNu@|NzN{FNuCD ACSI/SCSI BOS Driver v2.4B Copyright 1993-1996 Roger Burrows All rights reserved. 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All Rights Reserved. Track Elapsed Track Remaining Total Elapsed Total RemainingTdt[2][You have selected Shuffle. If|you quit now, the CD will stop|playing at the end of the|current track. Do you really|want to quit now ?][OK|Cancel][2][You have selected Repeat. If|you quit now, the CD will stop|playing at the end of the|entire CD. Do you really|want to quit now ?][OK|Cancel][2][Your recording will take more|than 60 seconds to complete.|Do you wish to continue ?][OK|Cancel]CDDA7Cannot get global apid CD AudioCannot register accessory No CD-ROM drives found:|check that drives are|connected and ExtenDOS Pro |is loadedCannot initialise resources CDaudio direct-to-diskSelect name of output file*.AVRCDaudio CD Player[1][Can't create file ][ OK ][1][Can't issue setvbuf() ][ OK ][1][Can't write file | (disk full?) ][ OK ][1][This model of CD-ROM |drive does not support |reading audio CDs][ OK ][1][Can't read audio CD: | error %ld ][ OK ]DISC.RSCCannot find DISC.RSC Wrong version of DISC.RSC DISC.RSCCannot load DISC.RSC Cannot find required resource |in DISC.RSCv2.4Cannot adjust icon for |this video resolutionCDaudio direct-to-diskCDaudio CD Player.AVRwbCreated by CDaudio %sv2.4%6ld[3][%s][ Quit ](  (P(Hh xm ((((( H ((((( H "Df (\ \\ x\8B:""" ((((( H  TJ` ,x$H f$oIx`I.|)|)JHz$?<&NN\O gv"j)IA W*j,Jf J-gRMJg"R Af^&MRM Rf Gf Vf =fp#@JgN&I P@Jf"Ͱf ,Ma&*N#MJfB` _fj Pfd Bf^ PfX =fRYIJfLrpg: 0e< 9dҀ` Ae( zd" Fc ae Ҁ`²$W`"JfgBN&IAp }bB0,Ha|Nr"@$ p lep@)@)I"`BQ)I`BQ , o2V@ l$)I|lB"Y"XI#I2B"2)I썸" VA"Ad?<`JfF" leT)A ,Ȃ0BAHAR@&,ȖHCBCHCFC׬.I/ S// / ?<?<JNAO DpA신"P < "0<NB @gAxh0kNDPJhf)DNrPNNn>`\ONrF ,g/?<?<NMPO?<LNAJ =fJRNrtB0m B nҁ&ҁҁ҃҂`.g g+g fv RNJg)A NNu ,",̲e ЀЀNu)x x h9h2(I9ABNuNpaeAaaNCbBNzhXONueANCh)@`lHla?XO`pf^Hl/,`NH8PO)@|lHla?XO`/<HldNAzPO`4 ,:"< 0NAJ/NAnXO)@>f ,:jR)@: :nJ>fp)@:A)H>aXONuNVƿe@H?A,)HDJfa@)@xNA\/NZXOBBNFPOA*P` / a XO$AлcA////HnHnp//,Hn//////////r//Hx/,NBDO\.gpxg0.H2.H//HxB/,$NG>O,Jk rN?* l$"H*I- gh&H Hx// a?O l$ f /aFXO`0.H2.H///aO *K- f Hx// a>O g0.@gS@g@S@g|S@g[@gn[@gZ_@gS@gD`\0.H|fNpxf a)@x`:p////Hx /,xNJBO`0.H|fp)@xp)@`0.H",xf/NH.xNIXOp)@xp)@A*P`*-f-f-gp-f$Aлc)|脀`0.H",xfp l$"l gb"lf)l$A4)HD` )I$A,)HD0H4(H6(H8(H////Hx/NI4.DHxa O`0.H",xf0.9@<9@49@,4.9B>9B69B. lHЬH1@0,.HЬL1@ l0,4HЬP1@0,6HЬT1@ l 0,HЬ\1@ lD0H2(H4(H6(H////Hx/,xNHfO`@0.Hxf20.Hr////Hx /NH6O`0.Hxf0.Hr////Hx/NHO`0.HxfHxNHtXOBHxNB=n=n=n=nHnHnHnHnHx /,xNFO `dHnHnND^POJg20.H2.H4.H6.H////HxB/,$NBOHnHnHnHnHx /,xNFfOJngJnfBHxNB8BNGPOgDA*P` / a XO$Aлcpxgava-a.la3aJf ,xJjA*P~|`*-g -rfR-g p-fR$AлcJgHlHxN>POSf`$Jg Hl=HxN=POSf` a)@x`~L(N^NuNVe}.H3 ..| l$f /a*XO.A/Hn//N@O0.g ,g)|ሊ Wm l@0;Nd>pb"Z2C QEбd$|`@C QEȱc$|`C Q(Sf^-h ,D/Hna!C$I O A/aA.a|O0.g$Hla)XO`J(g( rcS Q@ |`C Q(SfZ-h/,Hna!RC$I O A/aTA.aO0.g$Hla).XO`J(g( rcdR Q@ |`A/aXO|`A/aXO|`A/a*XO|`A/a 6XOJfC QB(|`pC QB2POC Q(Sf/aXOBHx/,a6O `C QJ(g8 (B@H@ @H@B@@"( Q!A` Q(gHx/,a(TPO`Hx/,a(POBHx/,a6O `C QJ(g8 (B@H@ @H@B@ "( Q!A` Q(gHx/,a'PO`Hx/,a(POC Q(Sf/aXOBHx/,a5hO `JC QJ(g8 (B@H@ @H@B@"( Q!A`/a BHx/,a4O `C QJ(g8 (B@H@ @H@B@"( Q!A`/aHBHx/,a4O `r)l$()l $A<)HD0,H4,@H6,BH////Hx/,xN@LHl/,xN@.DHxaO$`BHxN;2BHx"Hx!/,N;HBB/@0N;.0aO| `HnHnHx"/,N<"OJg0.2.@o:pC Q("<tFr2pdҀ m"<,`4pC Q("<tFr2pd nr,/aXO| `2C Q( R Q@ rcB( aa%a&apfaa$6a,a%a&a, apf\C Q/aC Q.ajaPBHx/,a1BHx/,a1a&.aLOpf aa#a6p f a a+a$)GLN^Nueud/ *op-f*--$c -fSA @/ a.aXO`"J-g- -$c r- fS- | *_Nuet/ *op-f-RA @ / a8.arXO`J-g- -%d R- | *_NuetH $*op-J@gS@g*S@g\S@f|-g/ a1XO/ aXO`^pB2SgPSg`SgSgF[gSg\[gSgr g|SgUgSgUgSg,SgT`"C Q/aXO|`C Q/aXO|`A P"HE / / /a O `A P/aA P ./@a"/n".HnaOa L N^NuelH./ rhЁgUgSgrEg`K`4K`.K`(KF`"/HlHlNkO K/ HxN-,POL NuNV̿eltH$BHlHnN[O JgHla(bp` HgHla(Jp`HlN2XOJfHla(.p`dHlp//N2vO Jg,HlHxBN2`O JgHl HxBN2JO JfHla'p`)l$A PCбf lQaJg~K`D0H///,$aPO Jjp`0-H///,a0O Jjp`Rpm l!Q l 1 9"l i$CH$PfC Q( l@l h\p$Q* E셔  l$Qj.t0.H)@P0.H/N3XO`>< Glp`p.N^NuNVejH4.. ,. rNi. n$px rNiA/H0(jn 0(joHlfa%p` o5h5h|*R&h `z`:R0*HrNhĺmR0*Hm|*j o&h`z`:R0*HrNhmR0*HmAd%H0*jR@@5@0*jV@@5@Bj o0( npxpL,N^NuNVԿeiH!4~AK `2 Hn?r1?NNPOJf / aZXO ?r2?NNXO$RpZoA C"E$"M$E$dp`a&@Hnp0?NN\OK ~`p/Hn/ aO JjR$AлcA*P`&Jgp`p/Hn/ alO @$AлcA CȐ"<$NfRE$/ Hx$/Hl NqNpL,N^NuNVegp n (r n( N^NuNVegt/p n@@1|Ò@ @ @ @ @@@rAAr!A!A!A!A @$@%!A&C*-A0<Q.N^NuNVefHn/HlH2(H)A\B lD0H2(H4(H6(H////HxN+O.JkP l$ fHl/N-(PO` Hl/N-PO lD0H2(H4(H6(H/////N,HO)|脀p2)@ LN^NuecnHxN,XOBHxN'fPONuecNBHxN'PBN,PONuNVec.H!4*nB-pHn2pKЀЮ "</@NXP n@r <NX"/ rKNX,@ /rKNXAN^NuNVeXH /. a<-@-l>-| 0p. 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Jg6// /NO `& ." // /N~O Rg -K-n` lg/ pI?NA\O`Jg/Hx /.NO -@f//./N(O n"H-I`N//./NO ".찁f.HxHzH/NO UfR ."윁-@`x . *J gp` L,N^Nu / *oJg -fp`4/,N XO+@+@f p )@{p`+lpp+@ +@*_NuNVH4*n&n $n-J n-HJg@p%f,fR`" M/ /Hn/.NO-@g-@`p/ /NPO`L,N^NuH'4./ &l g kN&S`K g.pUf -,Jg//-/-NO *U`Jg lXH/pA?NA\ON l)P`zl$ A{JpgA{20H/N,XOR`/NXOL,NuH*o~-g / NBXO.p fJg /-NXOB/-NXO,pgJfpL NuH*o g-f*+mp+@B- +@ -g`pJgj - Jjr+A - ,Jg,//-/-NVO .pf` g+m-gp+@ rí`+m p0gp`(p`$~K gJg/ a,XOJg~*U` L NuNVHK g Jg&M*U` f"Hx"N XO*@ fp`&p!r MQ/ /. /.NL(N^NupaNVH*n*,xJg/ NJg~@އ`~`p`,f+H+H+F+m+H +H+G L N^NuH*o./,/-g/ NXOpf / NVXOހ|+mp+@+m B- -g rí+@ ///-NO Rfp`pL NuH*o-gX-g/ NTHxB/-N^O.``HxB/-NHO "-.&m, SJg8r fS`HxB/-NO .-g - ހ` L(NuNVH.. ,.*n "N*Jfp`Jf.d(-f / NXOJg` +m +mJgp3UgXpLFr@ҁf -+@ `8-gp`pnFrnFf -+@ ` p+@ `Z-fcJgZ - n"m`Sd/-/-/-NO (g$pf p` "Nr`+m - n"///-NLO ( "- g2pf - "N&,`$ "- Ё"N,` Ё"N, -+@ `rJ gD  m - & H n"m`Sd m+H H H n-HJgf/ NXOJgX ЇS"N" ` L N^NupaH4*o&o./ ,/$Jn rDYg p)@{p`-fJg-f /-N.XOp+@ +@p Jg4Ygr/,/J{g "??4<?NA\OHN``Jkpn JGgN@g p")@{p`b A|t*pC|t#fp`B f6 ]gUgr gSg`KB`Kx`p` /NXOp`/NXOpL$NupaNVA NN^NuAbnormal program termination/./NH//NPO.Nu/ *o)Mp*_Nu/./Jg / lNXO` /N XO.NuNpaNVH#4*n&n " . ",|Nn",|N$M-J|e M/ /-H"l|NPOJo n` J"K|/ /-H-I l|NPOJo0 n"nf"J`"H/./ -I l|NPOJj n-H ng/,|// NO $M K|-Hd/./ l|NPOJn|` ncL//."l|NPOJn ,|` J ,|Hf n-H-H`. n-H` nf`0"J ,|-H-I-I/,|/./ N@O $n`T n-H|$H ."$ ." $ ,n|e // aTPO*J.`|e / / a>PO&n|dHL,N^NuNVH4*n.. ,.&npc( )K|)@|)@| ,|rN)@| ,|"N M-Hpe// aPO M|-H`-H M-H-H ,|Ѯ nd//."l|NPOJo-n` ng/,|// NO -M ,|Ѯ-n ndl ,| n/./"l|NPOJn ,|Ѯ n"ng-HS ne$H-H ,| ne$n``L,N^Nu o"BL Q Qp$ NuWWf S$ Nu2H@`L0/ 2/`QQ /NuL / d2H@`!QQ /NuL0/ 2/?`QQ4 /Nu o"Hrp/ +g -fRH0m n $҂ҁҀ` -fD$ S o Nu0123456789abcdef / oC2Af "XᲉfQАNu / oNV"O"AA0f fQАN^Nu / oNV"Or NA0Jf fQАN^NuLf SNuL JfSHfNu o/ gJfpNu SNuNV/ *nJ g n Jg// NPO*@p:-gJg0 nJg(// N~PO*@p-@/g@ g @"gJg/./ NNPO*@Jg././ N6PO*@B*_N^NuNVH*n n "Mf MJfS.Jg$p5x@/g@ g@"g GR  M"nfL N^NupaLL QQ`WWg` QQQ /NuNVtH4*n &n$nHx/.HntNO B.At"HJfS. gp gp gpJg nB, SJoBAtp@.gS@g,@ g&@"g `JgAu"nfAtB`, SJo6Atp@/g @ g@"f g Au"JfRAtBJj gAt"Jf`*S SJobAtp@:f g6 ro Atp\g Atp/fAtBAu"KfAuB g>At"Mf`2 g.Jo Atp\g Atp/fAtBAt"KfL,N^NuH*o &MJgp/NXORK` L(NuLL ?HQ`QQ4NuH!4./*o/ Hxp ?NA\O$_Jf/ Bp ?NA\O$_&@`0|$P g/ / p ?NA\O$_B} g f g*p`R} JPJJfpL,Nu??x?x?x<x?x?x?x??@@ @<@C@@<@ @??>>>><>>>??@A0A<A?A?A?A<A0@???????????@@`@`~@c@@c@`~@`@?????9??9????@@p@~@@@@~@p@????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@???????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@???????????>?>??@@@@@@@?@@A@A@? 0 `  P@0 @Copyright 1994,1995 Roger Burrows. All Rights Reserved. Track Elapsed Track Remaining Total Elapsed Total RemainingTdt[2][You have selected Shuffle. If|you quit now, the CD will stop|playing at the end of the|current track. Do you really|want to quit now ?][OK|Cancel][2][You have selected Repeat. If|you quit now, the CD will stop|playing at the end of the|entire CD. Do you really|want to quit now ?][OK|Cancel][2][Your recording will take more|than 60 seconds to complete.|Do you wish to continue ?][OK|Cancel]CDDA7Cannot get global apid CD AudioCannot register accessory No CD-ROM drives found:|check that drives are|connected and ExtenDOS Pro |is loadedCannot initialise resources CDaudio direct-to-diskSelect name of output file*.AVRCDaudio CD Player[1][Can't create file ][ OK ][1][Can't issue setvbuf() ][ OK ][1][Can't write file | (disk full?) ][ OK ][1][This model of CD-ROM |drive does not support |reading audio CDs][ OK ][1][Can't read audio CD: | error %ld ][ OK ]DISC.RSCCannot find DISC.RSC Wrong version of DISC.RSC DISC.RSCCannot load DISC.RSC Cannot find required resource |in DISC.RSCv2.4Cannot adjust icon for |this video resolutionCDaudio direct-to-diskCDaudio CD Player.AVRwbCreated by CDaudio %sv2.4%6ld[3][%s][ Quit ](  (P(Hh xm ((((( H ((((( H "Df (\ \\ x\8B:""" ((((( H  TJ0 |Xttxx$^) H0 #  ? 8 T  p             4  |         & H  P  l         X    !#  #""!    ? 0 Lj   %6#" h               , <  q>  H  d       t  f        ! (  " D # `  $*'%&&$ *())' #+-,-*1  %&'-./678Z["\cdehijpqr        #$%+,-ABC XG   0J xO T0 "Y "_@ "<j@  Hl0  n Pp  r  (pt   v  x   Record A-BCancelStereoMono16-bit8-bit500664410025033DRIVE.OFTrack..OFXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXSHUFFLEREPEATSCANSet ASet BRECORDCopyright 1994-96 Roger BurrowsVOLUME.Start time (A):.Current:.TrkTimeEnd time (B):.File size999999kBCopyright 1994-1996CDaudioRoger Burrowsv2.4 All Rights ReservedREWFFTRK-TRK+STOPEJECTPLAY/PAUSE<3"n>y<y<y<y<y<x<x<x<x>>y?y?yy2uK&*J*J*J2d3&??????>???????@@@@@>>@~~@A@@~~@>>@@@@???????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@??@@@`@`@`~@a@g@@@g@a@`~@`@`@?yy?@@@`@x@~@@@@@@@~@x@`@?????????????????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@???????????????????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@?@?@@@@@@@@@@@???????????????????????????????@@@@@@@@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@@@@@@@@???????????????????????????????@@@@@@@@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@8@@@@@@@@?????????????????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@???????????????????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@?@?@@@@@@@@@@@??@@@`@`@`~@a@g@@@g@a@`~@`@`@?yy?@@@`@x@~@@@@@@@~@x@`@???????>???????@@@@@>>@~~@A@@~~@>>@@@@???????????????????@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@?l4@0;N $ ~`~`~`~`~` ~`~`~ .NuNV 4e^/.a"RJjRЁ m <./.aN^Nu 4e$H l d*h l h&hp lB$(J@gS@gS@gNS@f0<7@ ;@ `r ,Tro2<7A ;A `Zro0<07@ ;@ `F0<7@ ;@ `8 ,Tro2< 7A ;A ` ro0<7@ ;@ ` 0<7@ ;@ l d"l pfBHx/aO `BHx/, haO L(NuNV 4e2/ *n . rN9~ M*h ,Trorum`ropsm`pAm*_N^NuNV 4e/ *n . rN9. M*h ,Trorm`ropm`pm*_N^Nu 4e l d"l pfp"lB$)Hx/Hx /arO"l d ip"lB$)C p lB$(gBHx /, dalO p lB$(gBHx/, daJO p lB$(r()@)ANuNV 4eH AC" lB$(Sf~( |( ` ~(|( l d"l pfHx/Hx /aHx/Hx/, daO p lB$(J@gS@gS@gS@g`V  lB$C"E/ / HnaHnHx/, daOp lB$( fC/ Hx/, dahO `HnHx/, d; ; This is a sample EXTENDOS.CNF for use with ExtenDOS. ; ; It is set up for a CD-ROM drive attached as device 5 on the ; SCSI port of a Falcon030, or on any ACSI DMA port. ; ; This file should be placed in C:\AUTO, together with ; EXTENDOS.PRG. ; ; Note: lines beginning with a semicolon like this are comments ; and are ignored by EXTENDOS.PRG. The only lines absolutely ; required are one *BOS line specifying CD.BOS, and one *DOS : line specifying UNIDRIVE.DOS. ; ; ; Format of line for physical (BOS) driver: ; ;*BOS, [Arguments], :, ... ; ; where is a single letter not used as a drive letter ; elsewhere in your setup. X, Y, or Z is usually ; a good choice ; indicates the actual physical id of the device, ; as follows: ; Device # meaning ; 0 - 7 ACSI DMA device 0 - 7, or ; Falcon030 SCSI device 0 - 7 ; 8 - 15 TT030 SCSI device 0 - 7 ; ; Examples: ; 1. Using driver in C:\AUTO\BOOT, associate device Z with ACSI device 5 ; *BOS, C:\AUTO\BOOT\CD.BOS, Z:5 ; 2. Associate device Y with TT030 SCSI device 3 ; *BOS, C:\BOOT\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS, Y:11 ; ; ; The following specifies that: ; a) the physical device driver is CD.BOS, located in directory C:\EXTENDOS ; b) CD.BOS will have tracing active, with 16 trace entries ; c) CD.BOS will use Z as the name of the physical device ; d) the CD-ROM drive is at address 5 on the ACSI DMA port. ; NOTE: the choice of Z is arbitrary, but you must choose a letter ; that is not otherwise used in your system. ; *BOS, C:\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS T=16, Z:5 ; ; Format of line for logical (DOS) driver: ; ;*DOS, [Arguments], :,... ; ; where is a single letter not used as a drive letter ; elsewhere in your setup. P, Q, or R is usually ; a good choice ; refers back to the letter specified in an *BOS ; line for the physical device involved ; ; Examples: ; 1. Using driver in C:\AUTO\BOOT, associate drive R with physical device Y ; *DOS, C:\AUTO\BOOT\UNIDRIVE.DOS, R:Y ; ; ; The following specifies that: ; a) the logical DOS driver is UNIDRIVE.DOS, located in directory C:\EXTENDOS ; b) UNIDRIVE.DOS should reserve a 12-sector buffer for the path table ; and 2 1-sector buffers for single read requests ; c) all files on the CD-ROM will be shown as (logical) read/write in directory ; displays ; d) GEMDOS (including the desktop) will access the CD-ROM drive as drive P ; e) the physical drive that this is associated with is drive Z (which ties ; back via the *BOS control statement to an actual drive address). ; NOTE: the choice of P is arbitrary, but you must choose a letter ; that is not otherwise used in your system. ; *DOS, C:\EXTENDOS\UNIDRIVE.DOS P=12 B=2 R/W, P:Z ; ; At this point you _may_ run other AUTO-folder programs by specifying ; the full pathname for them, followed by any arguments required. ; NOTE: if you decide to run them from here, don't forget to move them ; out of the AUTO folder into a different folder !! ; ; Examples: ;c:\patches\serialfx.prg ; fix RTS/CTS stuff for ST-compatible port ;c:\boot\cachennn.prg d200 f200 ; 200 FAT/root buffers & 200 data/dir buffers ;c:\boot\foldr100.prg ; allow 100 extra folders ;c:\boot\maccel3.prg ; install mouse accelerator ;c:\gplus\g+plus.prg ; install g+plus ` (B*O#kO.*m#k - ЭЭ/// Bg?<JNAO B?< NA\/?< Hy"?< NA\"arJ93 f azaapHy#?< NA\a(NA\.?</?<1NAJp`paaNABNAJ 9Ng.A#J93 fA# 9Yf/?< NA?<NAPNuBk x0(3k @f #Vk` @f #~kA2#2al#3#^!b#~`!d~08F@A3 0<cA4!|,4QA0#0#!NuNV-x n-h n hd n0(H @f <<` <`,` n ((N^NuJy3kB33"HG>HG??<NAXHG33NuH~,9!g??<NAX?<NAT@fRG GcBLNup`H,8.9!~&(**ykgR??<NAX-7fR-9fRRG GcغDg0<7Cg0<9Cg pa0"@NJj g.aV g y0L~JXg Jxg?/?.X#0Ns y0L~JXg Jxg?/?.X#0 yN nJ mB f"y3)f,//aXL+|,B(4c0|#j `0| jNuJy3k y3 P093 8NuJy3k y3 Pp0930Nu0/ gS@`a$@Aakta kt#jN/9jNu oaakL"oaTkLa k@#jN/9jNu oaatk"og *g ?g `"oaka k#j#jN/9jJk yjC3Ef31I pNu oa&ak"oaka`kJa $kF#j+H, y3+P(#jN/9j yjJk 44dNupNup!|,Nu0/a\k,#j @ak#jN/9j"yj#|,pNu0/a$k @ak#jN/9jNu oaNa&k"oakaTk#jN/9jNu0/ ak @a0k#jN/9jNu0/ gS@`a"8g$@Aak`"oAJ(fRfpNupNuJog of4 oa3kazk o?</?<=a\PJk(3k / "///B?<?<KaXOJjNu#kat&?9k?<>aX j#kaA &"yk#H`Jog 9kNuBkJkgaB/yk B?|Jkf^?|`T?9k?<LNAJ oa3ka*@09kak$"oa,k$ak09k@A@#jN/9jNuaL*@ -"pNupNuGk/ /<??<?NAO Jg ;gf  g  g  g  gR/ /<??<?NAO JgZ  gT ;f $KR/ /<??<?NAO Jg.  g(`/ /<??<?NAO Jg\  gT`p NuAkC( arfaJkHHa*LaNuAkC( aHfaJkavNuAkC(a*fa4JkNu g//?< NA\a aNupVVJNuJ93 gpNuAkg g g ,g' Bg Dg. PgN'pNu =fb Yg Ng`R` =fD Yg Ng`433` =f Yg Ng Ef `^pNuJ93 fb 9Yg "NAX NupNuHyk/<?9k?<?NAO ak8/?<HNA\#kg*aa(kaa 9kNu/9k?<INA\pNupNu&ykKk&-֭/+/?9k?<?NAO f> -?<?9k/?<BNAO k//<?9k?<?NAO lpNua( ykEk <ЪЪЪ !@"yk!i$$!i,,C!I EjfNudd44!R D | | 6 4 | " #!_MET!$$=$Z$u$$$$%%$%g%%%%&&(&I&d&&&&&' 'v'''' p ExtenDOS Pro version 2.4 Copyright 1993-1996 Roger Burrows All rights reserved q p End of EXTENDOS.CNF processing q Error(s) detected (see above) Pausing ... press any key to continue ExtenDOS Pro v2.4 *ERROR* Note: No memory to initialise driver Bad command sent to device General hardware failure CRC error Unknown device Device is not a CD-ROM Bad data returned from Inquiry: possible host adapter problem Invalid device address Too many physical devices Bad address: valid numbers are 0-7 (ACSI) and/or 8-15 (SCSI) Unknown machine in _MCH cookie Logical drive X already exists Physical device X is invalid Physical device X already exists Expected colon is missing ExtenDOS Pro already installed DOS extender already installed No memory for cookie jar Can't find configuration files: Too many logical devices No filename in *BOS/*DOS line Driver file not found Invalid driver file No memory to load driver Unable to set default drive; some data functions may be restricted. Please notify Anodyne Software. *OPT must be before *BOS/*DOS Unknown option x in *OPT Invalid x option in *OPT No memory for i/o buffer Device not responding xxxxxxxx BOSDOSOPT($(H(qZ:\EXTENDOS.CNFZ:\AUTO\EXTENDOS.CNFZ:\EXTENDOS\EXTENDOS.CNFDriver installed as x: on xCSI x LUN x Driver installed as logical device x: : :  V :<n. *l> &("8 & & L  .,D :  ,&,^&*   "V44  :xLD >8. &  .6"6& "$@  " > B T  DR6  X8*`N"    8,` H@<(p is the fully-qualified pathname of the physical ; device driver, CD.BOS ; [Options] ; are optional parameters to pass to CD.BOS (see ; Appendix A of the manual for examples) ; ; is a single letter not used as a physical drive ; name elsewhere in your setup. X, Y, or Z is usually; ; This is a sample EXTENDOS.CNF for use with ExtenDOS. ; ; It is set up for a CD-ROM drive attached as device 5 on the ; SCSI port of a TT030. ; ; This file should be placed in C:\AUTO, together with ; EXTENDOS.PRG. ; ; Note: lines beginning with a semicolon like this are comments ; and are ignored by EXTENDOS.PRG. The only lines absolutely ; required are one *BOS line specifying CD.BOS, and one *DOS : line specifying UNIDRIVE.DOS. ; ; ; Format of line for physical (BOS) driver: ; ;*BOS, [Options], : ... ; ; where ; is the fully-qualified pathname of the physical ; device driver, CD.BOS ; [Options] ; are optional parameters to pass to CD.BOS (see ; Appendix A of the manual for examples) ; ; is a single letter not used as a physical drive ; name elsewhere in your setup. X, Y, or Z is usually ; a good choice ; ; indicates the actual physical id of the device, as ; follows: ; Device # meaning ; 0 - 7 ACSI DMA device 0 - 7, or ; Falcon030 SCSI device 0 - 7 ; 8 - 15 TT030 SCSI device 0 - 7, or ; Falcon030 SCSI device 0 - 7 ; ; Note that there can be several : pairs, ; separated by spaces, if you have more than one CD-ROM drive. ; ; Examples: ; 1. Using driver in C:\AUTO\BOOT, associate device Z with ACSI device 5 ; *BOS, C:\AUTO\BOOT\CD.BOS, Z:5 ; 2. Associate device Y with TT030 SCSI device 3 ; *BOS, C:\BOOT\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS, Y:11 ; ; ; The following specifies that: ; a) the physical device driver is CD.BOS, located in directory C:\EXTENDOS ; b) CD.BOS will have tracing active, with 16 trace entries ; c) CD.BOS will use Z as the name of the physical device ; d) the CD-ROM drive is at address 5 on the TT030 SCSI port. ; NOTE: the choice of Z is arbitrary, but you must choose a letter ; that is not otherwise used in your system. ; *BOS, C:\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS T=16, Z:13 ; ; Format of line for logical (DOS) driver: ; ;*DOS, [Arguments], : ; ; where ; is a single letter not used as a logical (GEMDOS) drive ; letter elsewhere in your setup. P, Q, or R is usually ; a good choice ; ; refers back to the letter specified in an *BOS line for ; the physical device involved ; ; Examples: ; 1. Using driver in C:\AUTO\BOOT, associate drive R with physical device Y ; *DOS, C:\AUTO\BOOT\UNIDRIVE.DOS, R:Y ; ; ; The following specifies that: ; a) the logical DOS driver is UNIDRIVE.DOS, located in directory C:\EXTENDOS ; b) UNIDRIVE.DOS should reserve a 12-sector buffer for the path table ; and 2 1-sector buffers for single read requests ; c) all files on the CD-ROM will be shown as (logical) read/write in directory ; displays ; d) GEMDOS (including the desktop) will access the CD-ROM drive as drive P ; e) the physical drive that this is associated with is drive Z (which ties ; back via the *BOS control statement to an actual drive address). ; NOTE: the choice of P is arbitrary, but you must choose a letter ; that is not otherwise used in your system. ; *DOS, C:\EXTENDOS\UNIDRIVE.DOS P=12 B=2 R/W, P:Z ; ; At this point you _may_ run other AUTO-folder programs by specifying ; the full pathname for them, followed by any arguments required. ; NOTE: if you decide to run them from here, don't forget to move them ; out of the AUTO folder into a different folder !! ; ; Examples: ;c:\patches\serialfx.prg ; fix RTS/CTS stuff for ST-compatible port ;c:\boot\cachennn.prg d200 f200 ; 200 FAT/root buffers & 200 data/dir buffers ;c:\boot\foldr100.prg ; allow 100 extra folders ;c:\boot\maccel3.prg ; install mouse accelerator ;c:\gplus\g+plus.prg ; install g+plus `O0*$oIO0)J*Hz?<&NN\O"j)I*A W*j,Jf J-gRMJg"R* Af^&MRM Rf Gf Vf =fp#@JgNJ&I P@Jf"Ͱf ,Ma*N#MJfB` _fj Pfd Bf^ PfX =fRYIJfLrpg: 0e< 9dҀ` Ae( zd" Fc ae Ҁ`²$W`"JfgBN&IAp }bB0,Ha8N"l"@$ p l*ep@)@*)I*"`BQ)I*`BQ ,)l o2V@ l$)I/B"Y"XI#I2B"2)t)I*)h" VA"Ad?<`J)pfF" l*eT)A)p ,)x0BAHAR@&,)xHCBCHCFC׬)x.I/ S// / ?<?<JNAO N"hN9N>`\ON"^ ,*g/?<?<NMPO?<LNAJ =fJRNrtB0m B nҁ&ҁҁ҃҂`.g g+g fv RNJg)A)h NNu ,*",)|e ЀЀNu)x* x h9h*2(I9A*BNu*e9H*o./|` // NPORoL Nu*e8Hx HlaHx HlXaONuNV*e8H!$~NXJjHlHxNdHxN.O A////N`O9@*p?NNTOT@9@*K*`:A*һe9|*Hl*Hl*Hl*NVO 0,*fHlHxNNHxN.O 0,*HR)@+F0,*HR)@+J0,*H)@+NaBBNBHlaHO r Afa$.0,*H/NNL.N."L$N^NuNV*e7H~a*@ fHl.HxNTPOSgp`` g/ aXOHlHlN/PO&@ f"HlHxNp`."l Qp@g~`HxHlXaPOr AgHl/ N0,HlVHl"/ N0HnNH HnNG.NC.HllHlZ/ N/Hlx/ N/O0Jg/ aXO/ a<.a2.a 4XO g>/ / a n./ a ./ a ./ a./ a(./ aN./ aO `Hl/ N/~Hl/ N/tOHl/ N/fHnNGRHnNG.NB.HlJHl6/ N/@HlV/ N/6.N-DpL(N^NuNV*e6Hn/Hl/ N.4O~` / /aPORp oHl/ N.POL NuNV*e4H .rN4AX*H m &h`RKJgp:fp m &Pr@f m //(Hl/. 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Hn/N nB .*nN^NuJjDJjDaDNuaDDNuJjDaDNu/HA4fH@HAHB4g0H@40HB2$Nu/v AdQC AdYC A dUCJAkSC4HBBBHC604HAdSCЁr2HCH@A&$NuH0$&HBHgHCHgCHBBBЂL NuNuANNuStack space exhausted ,/)o/JfNuYH<0",/f)|/DL XORK` L(NuNVHzNXO-@fd ,* dP@0;N&&D&&&&&:0&&:&A-H`&A-H`A-H`A-H`A-H nP0 h0!h0"B,0#C0 )I0CHn/ NPOVѮ ."<N)@0B0 nJgP0$h0%h0&p@0'`B,0$A0$)H0N^NuTZCST6CET-1???-2???-3GMT0NV/ n ("($<lԨ///(/(/( A*$/0A*T/0HzHl/NA/ $.N^Nu%.3s %.3s%3d %.2d:%.2d:%.2d %d NVH..*n -G .B@H@ .B@H@@ .B@H@@ .@ .?@ .Ѐ@L N^NuNVH'$*np,?NATO=@p*?NATO=@ .B@H@@".BAHAA .B@H@@".BAHAA .B@H@?@ .B@H@Ѐ@B-p-,rF܁ "<mNV/@ "<N"/Ҁ /ArdN"/ JjVҀp-Ҁ.zp-l A)ްR` -c6p-rN@Jf&p-"<N,Jgp-rdNJgR rNL$N^NuNVH n. "<QN, "<QN. "<N)@/ "<N. rYހ rN2Jf rdN&Jf "<NJfp`p@*rp(,SJopA*p0hހS`p n(Sހ* rNz*p(ڀ rPp!2PPP!2QQ*Q\!2Q~QQ!2QRRH!2RjRR!2RSS4!2ExtInfo v2.4Copyright 1995,1996 Roger BurrowsExtInfo gathers general system information,plus ExtenDOS Pro status information, andwrites it to the text file EXTINFO.TXT.If you need assistance with ExtenDOS Pro,you may be asked to provide informationfrom the EXTINFO.TXT file.In order for us to serve you better, pleaserun this program and have the output readybefore you contact Anodyne Software.Create EXTINFO.TXTExit immediately -TRT`#T+T)T'U )U, ' UT  Up + U* U$ U%VExtInfo User InformationOKSkip 3Wd SV1Sr1S1S1S1S 1 S 1 T 1 T61 W~ %W# 0123456789abcdefUSAGermanyFranceGreat BritainSpainItalySwedenSwitzerland (French)Switzerland (German)TurkeyFinlandNorwayDenmarkSaudi ArabiaHolland?XXXXXXXYYY2Y:YBYJYRY`YhPterm0CconinCconoutCauxinCauxoutCprnoutCrawioCrawcinCnecinCconwsCconrsCconis??Dsetdrv?CconosCprnosCauxisCauxosMaddalt????DgetdrvFsetdta?????Super?????????TgetdateTsetdateTgettimeTsettime?FgetdtaSversionPtermres????Dfree??DcreateDdeleteDsetpathFcreateFopenFcloseFreadFwriteFdeleteFseekFattribMxallocFdupFforceDgetpathMallocMfreeMshrinkPexecPterm?FsfirstFsnext??????FrenameFdatime???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????SyieldFpipe???FcntlFinstatFoutstatFgetcharFputcharPwaitPnicePgetpidPgetppidPgetpgrpPsetpgrpPgetuidPsetuidPkillPsignalPvforkPgetgidPsetgidPsigblockPsigsetmaskPusrvalPdomainPsigreturnPforkPwait3FselectPrusagePsetlimitTalarmPauseSysconfPsigpendingDpathconfPmsgFmidipipePreniceDopendirDreaddirDrewinddirDclosedirFxattrFlinkFsymlinkFreadlinkDcntlFchownFchmodPumaskPsemaphoreDlockPsigpausePsigactionPgeteuidPgetegidPwaitpidDgetcwdSalertTmalarmPsigintrSuptime??DxreaddirPseteuidPsetegidPgetauidPsetauidPgetgroupsPsetgroupsTsetitimer????????DreadlabelDwritelabel????YYYYYYYYYYYZZ Z ZZZZ Z(Z0Z8Z@ZBZDZFZHZPZXZZZ\Z^Z`ZbZhZjZlZnZpZrZtZvZxZzZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ[[[[[[&[.[4[<[F[N[T[\[b[h[j[r[z[|[~[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[\\\\\\ \ \\\\\\\\\\ \"\$\&\(\*\,\.\0\2\4\6\8\:\<\>\@\B\D\F\H\J\L\N\P\R\T\V\X\Z\\\^\`\b\d\f\h\j\l\n\p\r\t\v\x\z\|\~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\]]]]$]*]0]8]B]L]V]^]f]l]t]|]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]^^^^"^*^4^>^J^T^\^b^l^v^|^^^^^^^^^^^^^^______&_0_:_F_R_^_`_b_d_f_h_j_l_n_z____[3][Fatal error !|Cannot initialise application][ Cancel ][3][Fatal error !|Cannot get VDI handle][ Cancel ][2][Warning !|ExtenDOS Pro not loaded|or incompatible version.|Only standard system data|will be listed.][ OK | Cancel ]EXTINFO.TXTwa[3][Fatal error !|Cannot open output file][ Cancel ]-------------------------------------------------- ExtenDOS Pro information formatted by ExtInfo v%s 2.4 %s started on %sEXTINFO.TXT-------------------------------------------------- ExtenDOS Pro information not available -------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------- %s completed on %sEXTINFO.TXT--------------------------------------------------- User information ---------------- %s: %s System information ------------------ TOS version: %d.%02x All? TOS country: %s TOS date: %s TOS start address: 0x%x GEMDOS version: %d.%02x AES version: %d.%02x Max concurrent apps: Unlimited multitasking %d Geneva: Not active Geneva version: %d.%02d Mag!X/MagiC: Not active Mag!X/MagiC version: %d.%02d Mag!X/MagiC release: %d MiNT version: %d.%02x ExtenDOS Pro version: %d.%d 520/1040/Mega STSTeMega STeSTe(?)TT030Falcon030Unknown Computer: %s Processor: 680%02d Software emulation68040 internal688826888168881 or 68882I/O mapped 68881None Coprocessor: %s Blitter: %s InstalledNot installed Largest free ST RAM: %ld bytes Largest free TT RAM: %ld bytes Largest free ST RAM: %ld Hard disk driver: %4.4s version %x.%02x Installed drives: %c Boot drive: %c Number of floppies: %d palette-basedmonochrometrue-colour Screen resolution: %d x %d x %d colours (%s) No cookie jar present Cookie jar contents ------------------- Total cookies found: %d Free cookie slots: %d 0x%08x (%c%c%c%c) 0x%08x %c:\AUTONo AUTO folder present AUTO folder contents -------------------- Auto folder is %s ---Program--- --Size-- ---Date--- --Time-- \*.PR? %-12s %9ld %04d/%02d/%02d %02d:%02d:%02d Logical device status --------------------- -Device- ----Sectors----- ------Path table------ Vol File Driver log phys --number-- size -start- size type flag flg sys flags %c %c %8d %4d %7d %4d %c %02x %02x %-3.3s %08x ISOHS Driver name: %s Current path: %s Volume label: %s Physical device status ---------------------- Phys -----DMA----- ------------Device------------ dev type id LUN type io stat table leadout %c %cCSI %02d %02d %3d %3d %02x %3d %08x Driver name: %s Inquiry data: File status ----------- Maximum open files: %5ld Current open files: %5ld First file handle: %5ld File entry size: %5ld Handle Device Start Length Current Time/date Basepage Mode Type %5ld %c %7ld %7ld %7ld 0x%08x 0x%08x %3d %3d Message status -------------- Not available No messages Message(s) issued: %ld *OPT switches ------------- Not available P=%c D=%c B=%c Not specified Intermediate buffer: %sactive in Buffer available: %s localFRB BDOS trace status ----------------- BDOS trace is not active BDOS trace table is empty Trace table header is at 0x%08x Trace table has %d entries: each entry is %d bytes long Trace entry size error: expected %d, found %d --Time-- --BDOS opcode--- Footprint -Return- %08x %-8.8s(0x%04x) %08x %08x ? %08x XBIOS trace status ------------------ No physical devices present ... debug trace table found No tEmpty tT %srace table for device(s): %c Trace table header is at 0x%08x Trace table has %d entries: each entry is %d bytes long Trace entry size error: expected %d or more, found %d -start-- dev flgs datlen footprnt -status- ------command descriptor block----- --end--- -------------------data(hex)------------------- ---data(char)--- %08x %c%02x %04hx%7d %08x %08x%c %02x %08x %02X |%c. | plus [3][Fatal error !|Cannot draw dialog][ Cancel ]zzzzzz{{~}~, ((((( H ((((( H xx$xFxh 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"<QNl, "<QN^. "<NP)@-@ "<N@. rf@" |j8~~N0 H^ *D <x\:2`B8B&"""N://*CV KNPPO?9d/*C` KNP\OB@30?/*Ch KNP\OHy/*Cp KNPPONr`6 o 0(g$?(?(?(??/* Cz KNPO SCj?9(?9(?9(/*$C KNPO /90/*(C KNPPO?*/*,C KNP\O?*/*0CK KNP\O?*/*4C KNP\O?*/*8C KNP\O?90$/*$ ?$ @4$ AP$ Bl$ C$D$E$F$G$H$%"'% 7 0 3L!h  $ (    #( , H", "1 '"8! ) 7d  CDEF G  H  I  J KLMNOPQRS T U VWXYZ"K&%  !"# $( %D`'"c("h)"o '"{(  *|(&&&&& $& @& \& x &  & & &"'" D A A <A XA tA A   A   A   A ! A " " %"6 """"""" "## $# ### #;#<#=#D#E#F#Y#Z#[#r#s#t########%#######$$$$&$'$($=$>$?$T$U$V$k$l$m$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$% % %%#%$%%%:%;%<%Q%R%S%U%V%W%Y%Z%[%]%^%_%a%b%c%e%f%g%i%j%k%m%n%o%q%r%s%u%v%w%y%z%{%}%~%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%&&&& & & &&&&/&0&1&P&Q&R&Y&Z&[&d&e &f&l&m&n&&%&&&&&&&&&$&&&&&&&&&&&&&&''' '$'('-'E'J'N'f'j'n'''' ''''''''''''''(('((=(>'(?(f(g'(h(('((('((('() ) ') )3)4')5)\)]')^))')))'))))**B**J*KB*L**B***B*++B++Z+[B+\++B+++B+,&,'B,(,j,kBInstall new version from driveReconfigure existing versionHELPContinueQuitHELPBypass scanBegin scanQuitDMA idACSI 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7SCSI 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7HELPGlobal optionsNameDoneDriveQuitHELPCancelSet global optionsRemove drive assignmentHELPCancelSet ALL idsSet this idHELPReturn to desktopPreviousNextDoneExtenDOS Pro Installation ProgramVersion x.xxCopyright 1995,1996 Roger BurrowsAll Rights ReservedExtenDOS Pro ConfigurationSourceDestination Drive:ACSI IDs to be skippedSCSI IDs to be skippedAction/status: ACSI/SCSI DMA id assignment________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________SetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupSetupExtenDOS Pro global optionsPause at end of initialisationAlwaysOn errorNeverForce use of intermediate I/O bufferNoYesForce use of system Dsetdrv/DgetdrvNoYesSetup for id:xCSI x Path table size: __99 Number of buffers: ___999 Trace table size: ____9999 Trace data length: ___999 Device type: ___999Display as:R/WR/OExtenDOS Pro installation logxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxInstallation helpxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx May 1995 Program versions on this diskette: CD.BOS 2.1 CDAUDIO.ACC 2.1 CDAUDIO.PRG 2.1 DISC.RSC 2.1 EXTENDOS.PRG 2.1 EXTINFO.PRG 2.1 INSTALL.APP 2.1 INSTALL.RSC 2.1 UNIDRIVE.DOS 2.1 UNI_BDDS.DOS 2.1 Other files on this diskette: READ.ME This very text file. SCSI.TXT An introduction to the 'SCSI game'; you probably should read this before diving into SCSI_FAQ.TXT. SCSI_FAQ.TXT The February 1995 edition of Frequently Asked Questions for comp.periphs.scsi. Contains many questions and answers about SCSI in general. New features ------------ 1. * IMPORTANT * UNIDRIVE.DOS will now handle most CD-ROMs; you should 'never' need to use UNI_BDDS.DOS (although it's still provided 'just in case'). Please change any references to UNI_BDDS.DOS in your existing EXLast minute notes on ExtenDOS Pro --------------------------------- Version: 2.4A Dated: 26 May 1996 Program versions on this diskette: CD.BOS 2.4A CDAUDIO.ACC 2.4 CDAUDIO.PRG 2.4 DISC.RSC 2.4 EXTENDOS.PRG 2.4 EXTINFO.PRG 2.4 INSTALL.APP 2.4 INSTALL.RSC 2.4 UNIDRIVE.DOS 2.4A UNI_BDDS.DOS 2.4A Other files on this diskette: CD_LIST7.ZIP An archive listing over 1000 CD-ROMs you can use with your Atari EXTENDOS.CNF Standard configuration file for non-TT systems EXTENDOS.TT Standard configuration file for TT030 systems READ.ME This very text file New features that are not in the manual --------------------------------------- 1. * IMPORTANT * UNIDRIVE.DOS will now handle most CD-ROMs; you should 'never' need to use UNI_BDDS.DOS (although it's still provided 'just in case'). If you are upgrading from ExtenDOS, please change any references to UNI_BDDS.DOS in your existing EXTENDOS.CNF to refer to UNIDRIVE.DOS instead; you can do this by running the install program (see below) if you wish. 2. There is now an install/reconfiguration program, INSTALL.APP, which uses a resource file INSTALL.RSC. We suggest that you use this instead of the manual install process, since it greatly simplifies installation and reduces the chance of errors. See "Using the install program" below for further information. 3. CDaudio has been greatly enhanced; among other features, it now provides direct-to-disk recording (you can copy audio CD sectors across the SCSI interface and write them to a hard disk). Please refer to "Using CDaudio" and "Recording with CDaudio" below for more details. 4. ExtenDOS Pro is now compatible with the MagxDesk desktop of MagiC4: installed drives may be accessed via the standard drive icons which MagxDesk will install automatically. NOTE: unlike hard disk drives, CD-ROM drives cannot be accessed from the U: drive of the MagxDesk desktop. 5. ExtenDOS Pro is now compatible with even more third-party software, including the CDPLAYxx audio CD player and the MIDI_COM networking desk accessory (CD-ROM drives defined as C: thru P: are visible across the network). 6. ExtenDOS Pro now reports the volume label on a CD-ROM, where one exists. Any piece of software (like the MagiC4 desktop) that looks for a volume label will be able to find one on your CD-ROM. 7. ExtenDOS Pro now allows you to specify a LUN as well as a DMA id for each drive in CD.BOS: this is to support CD-ROM changers such as the Pioneer DRM-602X/604X. See "Supporting multiple-LUN CD-ROM drives" below for how to use this feature. 8. Global options can now be specified to ExtenDOS Pro via the new *OPT line in EXTENDOS.CNF. Currently allowed values are: P=Y/N/E Pause at end of processing: Yes, No, or only if Error (default is P=E) B=Y/N Forces use of intermediate buffer for I/O: Yes or No. (default is B=N) D=Y/N Forces use of system calls e.g. Dgetdrv()/Dsetdrv(): Yes or No (default is F=N) Examples: . Never pause at end of processing: *OPT P=N . Force use of system Dgetdrv()/Dsetdrv(): *OPT D=Y . Always pause at end of processing, and force use of system Dgetdrv()/Dsetdrv(): *OPT P=Y D=Y The specification of global options is fully supported by a new 'Global options' panel in INSTALL.APP. 9. If you have multiple CD-ROM drives, you can now specify up to eight drives per *BOS or *DOS line. This will save the memory required for additional copies of CD.BOS and UNIDRIVE.DOS. For example, if you have a CD-ROM drive at id=1 and at id=3, you could use an EXTENDOS.CNF file with the following lines: *BOS, C:\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS T=20 L=32, V:3 Y:1 *DOS, C:\EXTENDOS\UNIDRIVE.DOS P=20 B=8, P:Y Q:V Note that the multiple drive definitions are separated by one or more spaces. Also note that any parameters (such as T= or P= above) apply to all drives specified on that line. If you need to specify different parameters for different drives, you can continue to use one line per drive, as before. If you use the install program, this is all taken care of for you (aren't computers wonderful?) 10. An ExtenDOS Pro cookie is now added to the cookie jar; this will allow programs that use the drivers (e.g. for audio control) to determine if they are present. The cookie id is 'EPro' (note upper/lower case mix), and the cookie value is the address of an internal ExtenDOS Pro table. 11. During initialisation, ExtenDOS Pro now checks for duplicate physical (BOS) drives and reports an error message if found. It also does further checking on the data returned by the initial INQUIRY command to a drive. This will help catch certain host adapter problems. 12. The following new drives are now supported: Drive Device id ----- --------- Apple CD600 70 Chinon 525 53 Chinon 535 rev S 52 Compaq 561 110 MediaVision Reno 90 Nakamichi MBR-7 120 NEC 3Xp+ 20 NEC 4Xe 20 NEC 73/83 24 (single-session photoCD) Panasonic CR-501 71 (no photoCD) Pioneer 602x 100 Pioneer 604x rev 2401 101 Pioneer 604x (other revs) 102 Pioneer 124X 102 Plextor 3028 80 Plextor 3024 81 Plextor 4plex 82 Sony 55S 30 Toshiba 3201 12 (no photoCD) Toshiba 3501 10 Toshiba 3601 10 Toshiba 5201 10 Toshiba 5301 10 Also, single-session photoCD is now supported on the NEC25. NOTE: The device type for the NEC25 has been changed to 24; if you have a NEC25 and have been specifying a device type, you must remove it (preferable) or change it to 24 in order to access photoCDs. 13. If a drive isn't recognised, but identifies itself as a SCSI-2 device, it is handled in the same way as the most recent SCSI-2 capable drive from the same manufacturer. This should provide the maximum amount of audioCD _AND_ photoCD support for new drives as they are introduced. 14. ExtenDOS Pro now allows more time for accesses to a CD-ROM that involve reading a table-of-contents, such as some photoCD and audio operations. This provides increased reliability at the cost of additional time to detect that the device is genuinely not responding. This may slow down the boot sequence in some circumstances. 15. The trace program, TRACE.TTP, no longer exists. Its function has been replaced by EXTINFO.PRG, which is loosely patterned after the well-known SYSINFO program. EXTINFO.PRG automatically gathers both system and ExtenDOS Pro data and writes it to a file EXTINFO.TXT in the current directory. See "Using the ExtenDOS Pro information program" below for more details. Using CDaudio ------------- CDaudio has been greatly enhanced over the version described in the manual, as follows: 1. It now uses 3D dialogs, where supported by the AES (this includes all Falcon030s, and any system running Geneva). 2. A 'minimised' display is available to reduce the screen space occupied by the dialog. The minimised display dialog is accessible via the 'Fuller' gadget, i.e. the gadget at the top right-hand corner of the window. 3. Fewer redraws are issued, thereby reducing screen flicker. 4. The FastForward/Rewind buttons are now "ballistic", i.e. if you keep the button selected, the forward/backward skip amounts increase continually, so you skip faster and faster. 5. Index numbers up to 99 are supported. 6. The volume may be changed by clicking on the volume bar, as well as by dragging the slider. 7. In order to reduce confusion, the drive letter shown in the dialog is the logical device, rather than the physical device. 8. A 'Scan' button has been added; if selected, 'Play' plays the first 10 seconds of each track rather than the entire track. This can be used in conjunction with REPEAT and/or SHUFFLE (you can get tired of this combination pretty quickly!) 9. 'Set A' & 'Set B' buttons have been added, to set the start and end of a play segment. This is likely to be of most use with the direct-to-disk recording feature (see below), but can also be used with playback. This feature can be used together with the 'Repeat' button. NOTE: if 'Set A' & 'Set B' are selected, 'Scan' and 'Shuffle' will be ignored. 10. A 'Record' button has been added for direct recording; please see 'Recording with CDaudio' below for further details. Recording with CDaudio ---------------------- CDaudio now provides direct-to-disk recording (you can copy audio CD sectors across the SCSI interface and write them to a hard disk). This is achieved via changes to CD.BOS and CDAUDIO.PRG/CDAUDIO.ACC. The changes to CD.BOS make it compatible with third-party audio CD programs including CDPLAYxx. Output files from CDAUDIO.PRG/ACC are created in AVR format. In order to access the recording dialogue, click on the new 'Record' button on the standard (non-minimised) CDaudio dialogue. In the recording dialogue, the following buttons are available: . in current track/time box: < track down play (inverse video) stop > track up . to right of current track/time box  copy current track position to Start Time or End Time (alternative to using Set A/Set B in the main dialogue) . in start track/time box play from start time to end time . in end track/time box play from (end time - 10 seconds) to end time . below current track/time box Stereo/Mono select mode 16-bit/8-bit select resolution 50066/44100/25033 select recording speed . at bottom right Record A-B start recording (you will be prompted for filename) Cancel return to main dialogue Note that you will need LOTS of disk space for digital recording (around 10MB/minute for 16-bit stereo at 50066 Hz). *** IMPORTANT *** The direct-to-disk recording feature requires a CD-ROM drive that is capable of reading audio sectors as data, and support for that drive in CD.BOS. The following drives are claimed to support reading audio sectors as data: Chinon 535 (firmware revision Q20 & later) NEC 3X Panasonic 8004 Pioneer 602x Plextor 4plex Sony 561 (and equivalents) Toshiba 3401 (later models from the same manufacturers will probably also support this function). At this time, the following drives are known to work correctly: Plextor 4plex Sony 561 (and equivalents) Toshiba 3401/4101/3601 Other recent Toshiba drives such as the 3501 & 5301 should also work but have not been tested. The NEC 3Xp has been tested, but appears to have a firmware problem with the drive, resulting in an unacceptable 'skipping' in the output. Other NEC drives may function better. Although CD.BOS contains support for all the drives in the above list, we have been unable to test the Chinon, Panasonic, and Pioneer at this time. If you have one of these drives, please let us know whether the recording function works correctly or not. If not, an EXTINFO.TXT listing of the problem would be welcomed (see "Using the ExtenDOS Pro information program" below for how to produce this). If you always receive the message "Can't read audio CD: error -5" when attempting to record, it is probable that your drive does not support this feature. Using the install program ------------------------- The install program, INSTALL.APP, has two basic functions: . install a new version of ExtenDOS Pro by copying all the files to the right places . reconfigure ExtenDOS Pro by updating EXTENDOS.CNF These functions are accomplished by a series of GEM-based dialogs, each of which has an associated Help screen. In order to run INSTALL.APP, insert the distribution disk in your floppy drive, double-click on the drive icon, then double-click on the INSTALL.APP icon. On startup, install checks if you have multiple EXTENDOS.CNF files (in the various allowable locations); if you do, it determines which one is being used by EXTENDOS.PRG, prepares to update that one, and issues a message to inform you. Then a dialog is presented that allows you to choose whether you are installing a new version from diskette, or you are reconfiguring your existing version. From then on, the screens allow you to: . select the drives to install from and to, . scan your DMA port(s) for CD-ROM drives and other devices, . set global options, . associate scsi ids with logical devices, and . set various device-related optional parameters. As noted above, each screen has associated Help information which describes how to use it. Note: when you update EXTENDOS.CNF with the install program, any reference to UNI_BDDS.DOS is automatically changed to UNIDRIVE.DOS. In the _very_ unlikely event that you need to use UNI_BDDS.DOS, you will need to modify the EXTENDOS.CNF file manually. In such a case, please feel free to call Anodyne Software for assistance. Using the ExtenDOS Pro information program ------------------------------------------ EXTINFO.PRG is used to gather system and ExtenDOS Pro information and write it to the EXTINFO.TXT file. This information can be helpful in diagnosing both hardware and software problems, and you will probably need to have this information to hand when requesting help from Anodyne Software. Here's how to run EXTINFO.PRG: . Using INSTALL.APP, ensure that both 'Trace table size' and 'Trace data length' are set for the CD-ROM drive(s) you are using (these are options that are settable via the Setup dialog in INSTALL.APP). Use a trace table size of 200 and a trace data length of 48. . Reboot your system, then recreate the failure. . Run EXTINFO.PRG: a) double-click on EXTINFO.PRG from the desktop b) click on 'Create EXTINFO.TXT' c) complete the displayed form specifying your name, address, phone number, email address, etc. (this information is saved in the EXTINFO.TXT file as a means of identifying the file); then click on 'OK' d) EXTINFO.PRG will copy information to the EXTINFO.TXT file (this file is in ASCII text format so you may browse it if you wish). If you need to provide more than one set of debugging data, make sure that you rename EXTINFO.TXT before re-running EXTINFO.PRG, since any existing EXTINFO.TXT file will be overwritten when EXTINFO.PRG runs. Supporting multiple-LUN CD-ROM drives ------------------------------------- The SCSI definition allows up to eight "logical units" (known as LUN 0 thru 7) to be accessed at each SCSI id. Each logical unit can be a totally separate device. In practice, most SCSI devices have only one logical unit (LUN 0), so earlier versions of ExtenDOS and ExtenDOS Pro automatically used LUN 0 for each SCSI (or ACSI) id defined in EXTENDOS.CNF. However, CD-ROM changers (including the Pioneer DRM-602X and DRM-604X) typically implement the changer mechanism as several different LUNs (0 thru n) on one SCSI id, so ExtenDOS Pro has been updated to support this. From a user's point of view, each LUN appears to be a separate drive, so multiple drives must be defined for each changer. How do we define multiple LUNs to ExtenDOS Pro? Since a LUN is an extension of the ACSI/SCSI id, the syntax for dma id in EXTENDOS.CNF has been extended to include LUN. The format of the id is now: D.L where D is the dma id as defined in earlier versions, and L is the LUN. D must be from 0 to 15 inclusive; L is from 0 to 7 inclusive (valid values of course depend on the CD-ROM drive you are using). For traditional drives that only use LUN 0, you can omit the period and the L value; thus existing EXTENDOS.CNF files will continue to work without changes. An example: define a Pioneer CD-ROM changer at dma id 5 to be six drives, P thru U inclusive: *BOS, C:\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS T=0, P:5.0 Q:5.1 R:5.2 S:5.3 T:5.4 U:5.5 *DOS, C:\EXTENDOS\UNIDRIVE.DOS P=16, P:P Q:Q R:R S:S T:T U:U PLEASE NOTE: this feature of ExtenDOS Pro is not yet supported by the installation program. If you have a CD-ROM that uses LUNs other than zero, you'll have to set up your EXTENDOS.CNF file manually. Please feel free to contact Anodyne Software for assistance if required. Known restrictions and incompatibilities ---------------------------------------- 1. IMPORTANT: when using CDaudio to play audio CDs on your CD-ROM drive, all audio output is from the CD-ROM drive itself, _not_ through your system's speaker(s). Most CD-ROM drives provide output sockets at the front (headphone) and rear (RCA jacks or other connector). In order to hear the output from your CD-ROM drive, you _must_ connect one or other of these to your audio equipment. 2. NeoDesk users: if you get a message that "data on the disk is corrupted or damaged" when you double click on the CD-ROM drive icon, or open a folder, turn off the option 'check for executable bootsector' in NeoDesk/Set Preferences/More. 3. TT users: all of the resident components of ExtenDOS Pro (EXTENDOS.PRG, CD.BOS, and UNIDRIVE.DOS/UNI_BDDS.DOS) must be loaded into ST RAM for normal operation. If you have a system with alternate RAM, such as the TT030, do NOT set the program flags to load these programs into alternate (TT) RAM. 4. If a SCSI-2 drive is not recognised by ExtenDOS Pro (see item 13 of "New features"), photoCD _may_ not be supported. This restriction is due to the lack of a standard for photoCD support. If this situation occurs, please contact Anodyne Software for support. 5. Chinon CDS-435 audio support has not been tested. If you have this drive, and the audio playback is not working, please contact Anodyne Software for assistance. 6. The installation program INSTALL.APP does not work properly when installing to a floppy drive. If you have a floppy-only system, please install by following the step-by-step instructions in the manual. If you have any problems doing this, please feel free to email, write, or call Anodyne Software for assistance. 7. We recommend that you always install ExtenDOS Pro in a folder rather than in the 'root' of a disk; installing in the root can cause a number of problems. This is particularly true if you use INSTALL.APP to do the installation. 8. With certain drives (such as those with a lid rather than a tray or caddy), the EJECT button on the CDaudio player program or accessory cannot _physically_ eject the CD-ROM. However, on many such drives (including the NEC 25 and the NEC 3Xp), the EJECT button will _logically_ eject the CD-ROM. This means you will have to open the drive door and close it again in order to access the CD-ROM. 9. If a CD-ROM drive is defined as one of the standard logical drives (A through P), the CHEETAH file copier will exit with the message "can't access BPB". This is a Cheetah problem. It examines each of the drives A through P during initialisation, expecting them to have a low-level file system with FATs and directories just like a hard disk; this is not the case with a CD-ROM. The problem can be circumvented by reinstalling the CD-ROM drive as a logical drive between Q and Z. Acknowledgements ---------------- I'd like to thank a number of people who have taken the time over the last couple of years to help me test ExtenDOS & ExtenDOS Pro on all kinds of hardware and software. It's certainly a much better product due to their efforts, so I'd like to publicly thank the following intrepid beta testers (in alphabetical order): Kim Andersen Lee Benjamin Danny Bhabuta Daron Brewood Alexander Clauss Jerry Coppess Steve Deitz Al Fasoldt Gary Fuhrman Steve Hammond Graham Irvine Bertil Jagard Claude Labelle Rob Perry Doug Steever Frank Tobiassen Dale Wenzelburger My apologies to anyone I've inadvertently omitted; please let me know and I'll include you in the next list. If you have a problem --------------------- As always, you may contact Anodyne Software for help via telephone, electronic mail, or regular mail. If you do so, please be prepared to provide the following information: . your ExtenDOS Pro serial number (from the distribution diskette) . a listing of your EXTENDOS.CNF configuration file . a copy of the EXTINFO.TXT file produced by EXTINFO.PRG. This is particularly important if ExtenDOS Pro appears to install correctly, but you have problems accessing data or audio CDs. See "Using the ExtenDOS Pro information program" above for how to run EXTINFO.PRG. Roger Burrows ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- GEnie: R.BURROWS1 Internet: anodyne@magi.com _or_ r.burrows1@genie.com Mail: Anodyne Software, 6 Cobbler Court, Ottawa, Ontario K1V 0B8, CANADA Phone: (613) 523-7498 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- SCSI - A Game With Many Rules and no Rulebook? Version 1.11 Copyright Gary Field, 1994 - All rights reserved. Special Internet edition - Freely distributable for non-commercial use. Author: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) - SCSI hacker since 1985 With a little help from my friends. Last Updated: September 9, 1994 Trademarks: MSDOS and Windows are trademarks of Microsoft Corp. Unix and Netware are trademarks of Novell Corp. OS/2 is a trademark of IBM Corp. Enough with the legal mumbo-jumbo already. A little scuzzy humor: User#1: I just bought myself a new CDROM drive. User#2: Is is SCSI? User#1: Of course not, it's a really nice one! How do I connect all this stuff to my PC? So you want to play SCSI eh? Be warned, the road can be rough, but the rewards are great. The rules of the SCSI game: o Each SCSI device needs to have a unique identifier (ID) from 0 to 7. The host adapter is usually given ID 7. Each device must have a different ID. o It makes no difference what order devices are connected to the bus in. Any ID can be in any position on the bus. o There must be exactly two terminators for the SCSI bus. If you are playing the FAST SCSI game (meaning that you have a host adapter that handles the FAST protocol and at least one device that uses FAST mode), then you need to use active terminators. See discussions about terminator types in the SCSI FAQ list. o The total length of all SCSI cabling must be less than 20 feet (6 m) (75 feet (25 m) in the differential version of the game). o The cables must flow continuously from one device to the next. No stubs more than 3" (.1 m) long are permitted. o All cables used must have an AC impedance of between 90 and 130 Ohms. This is a tough one! Short of connecting your cables to a RF impedance meter, you need to have faith on this one. Get your cables from a vendor that knows SCSI well. Tip: If you keep the cables really short (like < 2 feet(.6 m) total), you can get away with murder. o For best reliability, all cables should consist of twisted pairs for each SCSI signal. This is not optional in the FAST version. o A player may mix flat and round cable as long as the previous four rules are not violated. In the FAST version you really need to keep such transitions to an absolute minimum. o Devices may be located internal or external to the system's case. The simplest situation being all internal or all external, but mixing is allowed IF all above rules are followed to the letter. o At least one device MUST supply power to the TERMPWR line on the SCSI bus. (see local rules for important details) Local rules: o Supplying TERMPWR is usually considered the responsibility of the host adapter. This TERMPWR voltage must be between 4.25V and 5.25V with both terminators attached to the bus. If your bus seems to work most of the time, but is intermittent, get out the scope or voltmeter and check that TERMPWR is within the above range. In addition, the presence of any noise pulses on TERMPWR will really screw things up. Some external terminators include a capacitor to help reduce noise. o It is assumed that all devices are connected to power supplies that can fully satisfy all the device's power requirements (even during the device's peak load). Also, avoid ground loops by plugging the system and all external devices into the same outlet if possible. These two rules are often overlooked and can result in severe hair loss. o Some vendors may require that any hard disks to be supported by the PC BIOS (Int 13h) interface, be given ID 0 and ID 1 respectively. Check your manual for this one. o Because of the nature of the PC BIOS INT 13h interface, users with drives larger than 1024Kbytes (one Gig), should prepare for extra fun. (see the comp.periphs.scsi FAQ for details) o Some software will allow devices to be powered on only when needed. Other software, may require all devices to be powered on when the system is started. It is recommended that you start out with all devices on until you get everything working. o Some devices power up/down cleanly and will not disturb a running SCSI bus, others do not. If you tell the doctor "It hurts when I do this", he may well reply "Then don't do that". o Most vendors properly key the 50 pin connector on the device, however, it shall be the responsibility of the player to make sure that pin 1 is really connected to pin 1 everywhere. o Smoking is a bad idea, even for SCSI devices. Some vendors don't provide a fuse in the TERMPWR line. Forwarned is forearmed. o SCSI vendors should provide connectors that are called for in the ANSI SCSI spec's. Some will try to pass off 25 pin connectors on unsuspecting players. These vendors need a good slap. Feel free to harrass and ridicule them at every opportunity. o Connecting and disconnecting devices to/from a system while it is powered on is seriously discouraged. It is strictly verboten on any system that caches disk operations (like Unix) since you don't know when bus activity might occur. A word to the wise should be sufficient on this one. o A SCSI device mounted in an external case needs two connectors so that proper bus chaining can be maintained. In an apparent attempt at sick humor, A small number of vendors have played a joke on their customers by supplying only one connector. If you are a victim of this joke, you need to put this abomination at one end of your bus. "Flow-through" terminators are available to help solve the termination problem. Hopefully, you haven't fallen for this prank more than once! (Fool me once - shame on you. Fool me twice - shame on me!) A word about fair play: o Please don't use unshielded cables for SCSI connections outside your computer's case. Many of us use the radio spectrum for something other than a trash heap. Keep your SCSI signals to yourself, no-one else wants them. The object of the game: o A player must construct a working SCSI bus using the devices and adapters supplied to him by multiple vendors. o This SCSI bus should be no longer than necessary to attach all the given devices. Wive's tales: o Some players will tell you that they needed to connect a third terminator or only use one instead of the required two. These players do not realize that these symptoms are the result of having broken one or more of the other rules. Sometimes, plugging in terminator resistor packs backwards or using cables of too low impedance can fool these players into thinking these things are necessary. Forgive them, for they know not what they're doing. Judging: o The computer will be the final judge of adherence to all of the above rules. o The SCSI game is unusual in that everyone can win! The above rules only cover the hardware aspects of SCSI. Without software, you'll undoubtedly find that your newly constructed SCSI bus is rather boring. Software is a whole 'nother game! ---------- SCSI software game: (Also called DRIVERS) Completion of the above hardware game is a pre-requisite. A little history of the game: Whereas the SCSI hardware game has strict rules, the SCSI drivers game has been pretty much a free-for-all. Once, there was total chaos in the land of SCSI. Each vendor provided driver software for the specific devices it decided to support. If a player later decided he wanted to attach a device that was not deemed valuable to their chosen vendor, tough! And to make sure that a player would not write his own drivers these vendors would not provide interface spec's for their host adapters. All vendors supported hard disks, but attaching tapes, or CDROMs was not for the faint of heart. One wise vendor called Adaptec, eventually heard the wailing cries of it's customers and decreed that henceforth SCSI drivers would talk to their host adapters via a protocol to be known as ASPI (Adaptec SCSI Programming Interface). Since ASPI was deemed by many to be too simple for serious players, the ANSI committee came to the rescue with their CAM (Common Access Method). These driver interface definitions changed the SCSI software game forever! Modern players in SCSI software are frequently heard reverently speaking these acronyms. The ASPI definition covers MSDOS, Windows, OS/2, and Netware. CAM covers Unix in addition to these. Still, selection of one of these standards is something of a religious act of faith. Future Domain has wisely chosen to support both by implementing CAM as their native interface and creating an ASPI interface that goes down through CAM to the adapter. CAM cannot be implemented on top of ASPI since CAM is a super-set of ASPI. These days, in the MSDOS/Windows world, selection of SCSI software is pretty much a matter of choosing ASPI or CAM and remaining true to your selection. And so the disks, the tapes and the CDROM all ran happily ever after and DAT's the end of the story... If you think you're ready for real fun, be sure to pick up a copy of the comp.periphs.scsi FAQ from these fine sources: (latest version posted during the first week of each month) comp.answers: comp.periphs.scsi: ftp.wang.com:garyf/scsi Parting shot: Individually we're scuzzy, together we're scum! Don't forget - The early write eats up the WORM! No sir, the terminator will not make your SCSI bus stop running. SCSI FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions for comp.periphs.scsi FAQ history: Created by Johnathan Vail (vail@prepress.pps.com) from articles submitted to him by comp.periph.scsi readers. Maintained by Johnathan Vail until November 1993. Current Editor: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) Last Modified: February 1, 1995 Where to get the latest copy of this FAQ: The comp.periphs.scsi FAQ is posted to Usenet during the first week of each month. In addition, a recent version can be obtained via anonymous ftp from: ftp.wang.com: garyf/scsi/scsi-faq.part* OR rtfm.mit.edu: pub/usenet-by-group/comp.periphs.scsi/comp.periphs.scsi_FAQ_part_* OR via World Wide Web (WWW): http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/scsi-faq/ OR (an old version but in HTML format) http://alpha.med.pitt.edu:9000/LINK/SCSI_FAQ.html Master Table of contents: Part 1 What is SCSI ? How should I lay out my SCSI bus? What should I avoid? Where do I put the terminators? Where should the adapter card be placed? Is it possible for two computers to access the same SCSI disks? What is the problem with the Adaptec 1542C and external cables? Where can I get SCSICNTL.EXE and other Adaptec files? What is the difference between the Adaptec 1542A and 1542B? What are the differences between the Adaptec 1542B and the 1542C? What are the differences between the 1542C and the 1542CF? What kinds of Optical Drives are available? Where can I FTP/download SCSI documents and information? Where can I get SCSI documents? Where can I get information on various disk drives and controllers? How can I contact Adaptec? What is the telephone number of Archive Corporation? What is the telephone number of Fujitsu? What is the address and telephone number for Quantum? What is the telephone number for Seagate? What is the telephone number and address of Conner Peripherals? What is the number for NCR? What is the number for Philips? How can I contact UltraStor? What is the address and telephone number of Wangtek? What is the address and telephone number of Western Digital? What is the phone number of DPT? What is the phone number of Future Domain ? How can I contact Micropolis ? What is FAST SCSI? SCSI terminators should measure 136 ohms? Can someone explain the difference between 'normal' and differential scsi? What are the pinouts for differential SCSI? What are the pinouts for SCSI connectors? Part 2 What is the difference between SCSI-1 and SCSI-2? What is the difference between SCSI-2 and SCSI-3? Is SYNCHRONOUS faster than ASYNCHRONOUS? Is the 53C90 Faster than spec? What are the jumpers on my Conner drive? What are the jumpers for my Wangtek 5150 drive? What is CAM? What is FPT (Termination)? What is Active Termination? Why Is Active Termination Better? How can I tell whether an unmarked terminator is active or passive? Why is SCSI more expensive than IDE? What is Plug and Play SCSI? Where can I get drivers (ASPI and other) for the WD7000 FASST2 host adapter? What if I have a drive larger than a gigabyte (1024MB) ? My SCSI bus works, but is not reliable. What should I look at? Where can I find information about programming using the ASPI interface from DOS and Windows? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ==== QUESTION: What is SCSI? ANSWER From: LSD, L.J.Sak@Kub. Edited by Gary Field ==== SCSI stands for Small Computer Systems Interface. It's a standard for connecting peripherals to your computer via a standard hardware interface, which uses standard SCSI commands. The SCSI standard can be divided into SCSI (SCSI1) and SCSI2 (SCSI wide and SCSI wide and fast). SCSI2 is the most recent version of the SCSI command specification and allows for scanners, hard disk drives, CD-ROM players, tapes [and many other devices] to connect. SCSI is becoming a popular standard. More and more computers use it daily. (e.g. ATARI Falcon and TT, expensive MS-PC's, Amiga, Apples and many others) ==== Question: How should I lay out my SCSI bus? What should I avoid? Question: Where do I put the terminators? Question: Where should the adapter card be placed? Answers From: Nick Kralevich edited by Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) ==== One confusing thing about SCSI is what the SCSI bus is supposed to look like, and how devices should be placed on the bus. The SCSI bus MUST run continuously from one device to another, like this: DEVICE A --------- DEVICE B --------- DEVICE C -------- DEVICE D Where device A, B, C, and D can either be internal or external devices. The devices on the SCSI bus should have at least 4 to 6 inches of cable between devices. This is to satisfy the SCSI-2 requirement that "stubs" be placed at least .1 meters apart. Some devices that have a lot of internal wiring between the connector and the SCSI chip can look like a "stub" or bus discontinuity. The reason for all these requirements is that a SCSI bus is really 18 "transmission lines" in the wave theory sense. A pulse propagating along it will "reflect" from any part of the transmission that is different from the rest of it. These relections add and subtract in odd combinations and cause the original pulse to be distorted and corrupted. The terminators "absorb" the energy from the pulses and prevent relections from the ends of the bus. They do this because they (hopefully) have the same impedance as the rest of the transmission line. The SCSI bus must not have any "Y" shape cabling. For example, setting up a cable that looks like this is NOT allowed: DEVICE B \ \ \ >------------- DEVICE C ----------- DEVICE D / / / DEVICE A Where do I put the terminators? Termination must be present at two and ONLY two positions on the SCSI bus, at the beginning of the SCSI bus, and at the end of the SCSI bus. There must be no more than two, and no less than two, terminators on the bus. Termination must occur within 4 inches (.1 meter) of the ends of the SCSI bus. The following ARE acceptable: +------------+----------+-----------+-----------+---------+ | | | | | | DEVICE A Unconnected Unconnected Unconnected DEVICE B DEVICE C Terminated (adapter -Terminated) +------------+----------+-----------+-----------+---------+ | | | | | | DEVICE A Unconnected DEVICE B Unconnected Unconnected DEVICE C Terminated (adapter) Terminated +------------+----------+-----------+-----------+---------+ | | | | | | Terminated DEVICE A DEVICE B Unconnected Unconnected DEVICE C (adapter) Terminated The following ARE NOT allowed: +------------+----------+-----------+-----------+---------+ | | | | | | DEVICE A DEVICE B DEVICE C Unconnected Unconnected Unconnected Terminated (adapter) Terminated +------------+----------+-----------+-----------+---------+ | | | | | | Unconnected DEVICE A DEVICE B DEVICE C Unconnected Unconnected Terminated (adapter) Terminated Where Should I place the SCSI adapter on the SCSI bus? The placement of the SCSI adapter card can be on the end, at the beginning, or somewhere in the middle of the SCSI bus. Quite frankly, placement of the controller card isn't special. The adapter card is just another device on the SCSI bus. As long as the rules above and in other sections of this FAQ are followed, there should be no problem placing the adapter card anywhere on the SCSI bus. However, if you place the adapter card somewhere in the middle of the SCSI bus, you must be sure to disable termination on the adapter card. As noted previously, a SCSI device is only allowed to have terminations if it's at the end of the bus. Only two terminators are allowed to terminate the SCSI bus, one at each end. One last note: It doesn't make any difference where each SCSI ID is placed along the bus. It only matters that no two devices have the same ID. Don't forget that the adapter has an ID too. (Usually ID 7). ==== QUESTION: Is it possible for two computers to access the same SCSI disks? ANSWER From: burke@seachg.uucp (Michael Burke) ==== Yes, two (or more) systems can be on the same scsi bus as scsi disk and tape drives. As long as the scsi requirements are met - cable lengths, termination and type - the devices can share the scsi bus. The question should be - Are there any O/S' that will allow the sharing of file systems? It would not make sense for two hosts to go about treating shared disks as if they owned the device. Data would be destroyed pretty quickly. On the issue of tape devices, however, O/S' tend to give exclusive usage to an application. In this way, tape drives can be shared much more easily. Disks can be best shared by having two (or more) partitions on a disk. Each host "owning" its own file system. ==== QUESTION: What is the problem with the Adaptec 1542C and external cables? ANSWER From: Scot Stelter, Adaptec (Product Manager for the AHA-1540) ==== Several articles lately have cited the importance of SCSI-2-compliant cables when cabling SCSI bus subsystems. Perhaps the most accurate and technically detailed one was published in Computer Technology Review in March (Volume XIII, No. 3. PP. 6). In short, it explains the double-clocking mechanism that can occur due to cables whose impedance falls below the 90-Ohm SCSI-2 spec. Steep edge speeds on the REQ and ACK lines of the SCSI bus exacerbate the problem, but non-compliant cables are the root cause. Both LAN TIMES in the US (5/24/93, page 115) and CT Magazine in Germany (7/93, page 18) cite this cable problem. In an extensive survey of cables available in the US and Europe, we found that more than half of the cables available have single-ended impedances in the 65 to 80 Ohm range -- below the 90 to 132 Ohms specified in the SCSI-2 spec. It seems that some (not all) cable vendors do not understand the specification, describing their cables as SCSI-2 compliant when they are not. A common misconception is that SCSI-2 means a high-density connector. In fact, there are several connector options. I have published a technical bulletin that summarizes the critical requirements (TB 001, April 1993). An artifact of its faster design left the AHA-1540C with faster edge-speeds than its predecessor, the AHA-1540B. As I have said, this can exacerbate the effect of bad cables. This explains why some users could get their AHA-1540B to work when an early AHA-1540C might not. Essentially, the 1540B was more forgiving than the early 1540Cs. Good cables fixed the problem, but unfortunately for the user, good cables are hard to find. After surveying the cable market and many of our customers, we decided that bad cables were going to be here for a while, and we had to make the 1540C as forgiving as the 1540B was. At the end of April we made a change to the AHA-1540C that involved using a passive filter to reduce the slew rate of the ACK line, the signal that the host adapter drives during normal data transfers. Extensive testing with many intentionally illegal configurations confirms that we succeeded. Prior to release, we tested the AHA-1540C with over 200 peripherals, systems and demanding software programs with no failures. Then, a second team retested the AHA-1540C across a wild combination of temperatures, humidities and other stresses. This testing gives me confidence that the AHA-1540 line continues to serve as the gold standard for SCSI compatibility. ==== QUESTION: What is the difference between the Adaptec 1542A and 1542B? ANSWER From: fishman@panix.com (Harvey Fishman) ==== The AHA-1542A is obsolete and no longer supported by Adaptec. They stopped providing firmware upgrades at some level prior to the equivalence to the 3.10 level of the AHA-1542B firmware. I am not sure just where though. The present latest AHA-1542B firmware is version 3.20, and supports drives up to 8GB under MS-DOS. ==== QUESTION: What are the differences between the Adaptec 1542B and the 1542C? ANSWER from: Terry Kennedy (terry@spcvxa.spc.edu) ==== The 1542C is an an updated model which replaces the 1542B. The 1542C features jumperless setup, having only 8 DIP switches. All other configuration options are set using the 1542C's built-in BIOS configuration utility. Configurable features not found on the 1542B are: o Ability to enable/disable sync negotiation on a per-ID basis (the 1542B could only do it for all ID's on the SCSI bus) o Ability to send "start unit" commands on a per-ID basis o BIOS works with alternate I/O port settings on the adapter o Ability to boot from ID's other than 0 o Software-selectable termination o Software-selectable geometry translation o Additional DMA speeds of 3.3 and 10 MB/sec Additionally, the 1542C uses a Z80 CPU and 8Kb buffer instead of an 8085 and 2Kb buffer as on the 1542B. ==== QUESTION: What are the differences between the 1542C and the 1542CF? ANSWER from: Terry Kennedy (terry@spcvxa.spc.edu) ==== The 1542CF includes all of the 1542C features, and adds "Fast" SCSI operation, providing SCSI data rates of up to 10MB/sec (compared with an upper limit of 5MB/sec on the 1542C). This is unrelated to the host DMA rate. It also has a software-configurable address for the floppy controller and a "self-healing" fuse for termination power. ==== QUESTION: Where can I get SCSICNTL.EXE and other Adaptec files? ANSWER From: randy@psg.com (Randy Bush) and Timothy Hu timhu@ico.isc.com ==== New files from Roy as follows: ftp.psg.com:~/pub/adaptec/... -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 110689 Feb 25 00:29 SCSICNTL.EXE.Z -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 368640 Feb 25 00:27 adse.dd -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 1959 Feb 25 00:25 adse.dd.readme -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 17896 Feb 25 00:37 list -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 99545 Feb 25 00:20 os2drv.zip -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 70801 Feb 25 00:20 scsi_drv.Z -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 66508 Feb 25 00:24 scsi_drv.readm -rw-rw-r-- 1 randy staff 118697 Feb 25 00:17 update.pkg.Z You can get the ASPI specs from Adaptec's Bulletin Board (408)945-7727. [editor] You can also get ASPI spec's from Adaptec's WWW server. ==== QUESTION: What kinds of Optical Drives are available? ANSWER From: joungwoo@mensa.usc.edu (John Kim) ==== As I promised I am posting the summary of what I learned about 128mb optical drives through many kind replies and some effort on my part. The purpose of this informal survey was to aid people (starting from myself) in deciding on which 128mb optical drive to buy. When I posted my questions, it was done only on comp.mac.sys.hardware and forgot to do the same also on comp.arch.storage and comp.periphs.scsi where are less traffic than c.m.s.h. However, as a Macintosh owner myself, this survey was biased toward the Mac world and the mail order houses mentioned specializes in Mac-related products, although the below mentioned optical drives might be usable also with non-Mac platforms (Sun, NeXT, PC-compatibles). My questions were: o what kind of drive you bought from whom at what price o what drive mechanism (MOST, Epson, Fujitsu, Sony, ...) it uses o how fast it is in terms of average seek time & data transfer rate o how noisy the drive is o how large and heavy the drive is o what drive formatting program (eg, FWB or Silver Lining) you use what its goods/bads o the quality of the service of the seller (mail order company, retail store, etc.) Summary In general, these days, some magneto-optical (MO) drives seem to be almost as fast as (if not faster than) ordinary hard drives (HD). The access time of fastest 128MB MO drives (around 30ms) are slower than average HD's access time (15ms) but the transfer rate seems to be about the same (764KBytes/sec) or not much slower. The advantages of the MO drives over the HDs are that your storage space is almost limitless, expandable at a relatively cheap price ($40/120MB = 34 cents/MB) compared to $1/MB rate of HDs or that of SyQuest drives, and the life of the media is very long (they say it's 30 years or rewritable 100,000 times.) Fijitsu 128 REM Portable: At this moment, to my knowledge, 128 MByte optical drives based on Fujitsu mechanism seems to be the fastest, roughly having average seek time of 30ms and average transfer rate of 768KBytes/sec. Another good thing about this Fujitsu drive is that it is more compact in size than previous 128mb optical drives, ie, "portable". I don't know how Fujitsu mechanism (FM) is different from Epson mechanism (EM) and how FM provides a similar performance at a cheaper price in a smaller frame. Maybe using split-head implementation to make the read-write head lighter? Could anybody post info on this? One person tells me that the eject mechanism is too strong, sometimes shooting the cartridge out making them land on the floor. He says Fujitsu told him that the FM's coming out in April will have gentler eject. Epson: The next fastest (or maybe just about the same speed) are Epson mechanism (EM) drives, having average access time of 34ms and transfer rate of 768KB/sec. These achieve faster speed compared to other old mechanisms by having a higher rpm (3600rpm vs. past 2400 rpm). Slower ones: Other mechanisms (Sony, Panasonic, etc.) seem to have been dominating the optical drive market before FM and EM's advent. These have a typical access rate of ~45ms. I don't know if now there are new implementations that make them perform better then FM and EM. Maybe someone can tell us. Noise Level: One thing to consider might be noise of the drive. Different mechanisms may have typical noise level, but one thing sure is that different resellers/companys' drive's noise level differs even for the same drive mechanism, eg, Sony. It looks like different casing produces different noise levels? (Could someone confirm/disconfirm this aspect?) Base on the report in Nov '92 issue of MacWorld, the noise level of MacDirect, MacProduct and DGR 128mb MO drives seem to be OK or quite quiet. This issue of MacWorld deals with removable media drives (optical drives of various capacity, SyQuest, Bernoulli and Flopticals) and you can get some idea on what the differences among different drive mechanisms are. Formatting Software: Another thing to consider is what kind of media formatting software you will use. All companys (or mail order places) seemed to provide for free formatting program with their drives. I don't have the details on this. But an inefficient formatting can result in slow drive performance. The most popular one used to be FWB's Hard Disk Toolkit but Anubis (advertised to improve performance up to 35% [compared to what?]) is beginning to be used also. I don't know if all formatting program and the drive hardware allows to have read and write verify off but by having these turned off you can obtain significant speed boost at the risk of less secure data transfer. MacWorld's report warned that drives from some companys don't let you turn on/off the verify. In the worst case, some come with verify off and no option to toggle it back to ON. 256mb MO drives: In general these have better transfer rate (1.23MB/sec) and a little slower access time (35ms). I feel that this capacity will soon be the next standard. These drives are able to also read/write 128mb cartridges and 256mb will soon be new ANSI and ISO standard. I once heard from a saleperson at a mail order place that these are not reliable yet and he saw many they sold came back with complaints. This may be a non-general instance on a typical drive mechanism (seems to be MOST mechanism). Personally, I feel 128mb is accomodating enough for personal usage at home unless you are dealing with very large data files (eg, large graphic images). ==== QUESTION: Where can I FTP/download SCSI documents and information? ANSWER From: news@mgse.UUCP (News Administator) ==== Last Changed: Thu Sep 24 23:31:09 CDT 1992 (New BBS Phone number) This is a periodic posting of information about some of the archives at ftp.cs.tulane.edu and the available files from the SCSI-BBS, including SCSI, ESDI, IPI, and Fiber Channel documents from the standards committees. These files are available for FTP from ftp.cs.tulane.edu in the directory pub/scsi. Files are stored in file areas as they are found in the BBS with each area having a file named 'files.bbs' that tells what each file is. The file pub/scsi/index.Z list each file area, its descriptions and its files. Thanks to John Lohmeyer of NCR, a majority of the SCSI related files from the SCSI BBS are now available for anonymous ftp. These files were sent to me by Mr. Lohmeyer at his expense so that more people would have access to them. The SCSI BBS (719-574-0424) contains a large amount of data relating to SCSI, and ESDI as well as SCSI-2, IPI, and Fiber Channel, as well as the last revision of the SCSI-1 standard before it went to publication by ANSI. Most of the files in the SCSI archive are either archived with the ZIP utility or compressed with the 'compress' program. Most of the text files are stored as Wordstar word processing files. PKzip for PC/MS-DOS is included in the archive to allow users to break up the .ZIP files, and the PC/MS-DOS binaries and .C source are also in the archive to convert the Wordstar documents to ASCII text. [Added by Gary Field Dec 21,1993] There is also a lot of good information at ncrinfo.ncr.com (apparently this site has been renamed since AT&T bought NCR - see below) ANSWER From: A little birdie told me. ==== This information server is maintained by AT&T Global Information Solutions Co. (formerly NCR Corp.) in the hope of returning some value to the Internet community. It contains information about NCR products, and also about computing-related topics in which AT&T Global Information Solutions as a company, or individuals therein, have interest and expertise. The same information is accessible from ncrinfo.attgis.com by anonymous ftp, gopher, or www. Ncrinfo uses gn, the gopher/http server developed by John Franks (Northwestern U). If you have questions or comments about specific topics, contact the following help addresses: for ncrchips, for parallel, for standards, For other problems, questions, suggestions concerning ncrinfo, contact: Peter Marks (206)489-0501 ==== QUESTION: Where can I get SCSI documents? ANSWER #1 From: kev@hpcpbla.bri.hp.com (Kevin Jones) and jmatrow@donald.WichitaKS.NCR.COM (John Matrow ==== The only literature that I'm aware of is: The SCSI specification: Available from: Global Engineering Documents 15 Inverness Way East Englewood Co 80112-5704 (800) 854-7179 SCSI-1: X3.131-1986 SCSI-2: X3.131-199x SCSI-3 X3T9.2/91-010R4 Working Draft (Global Engineering Documentation in Irvine, CA (714)261-1455??) SCSI-1: Doc # X3.131-1986 from ANSI, 1430 Broadway, NY, NY 10018 IN-DEPTH EXPLORATION OF SCSI can be obtained from Solution Technology, Attn: SCSI Publications, POB 104, Boulder Creek, CA 95006, (408)338-4285, FAX (408)338-4374 THE SCSI ENCYLOPEDIA and the SCSI BENCH REFERENCE can be obtained from ENDL Publishing, 14426 Black Walnut Ct., Saratoga, CA 95090, (408)867-6642, FAX (408)867-2115 SCSI: UNDERSTANDING THE SMALL COMPUTER SYSTEM INTERFACE was published by Prentice-Hall, ISBN 0-13-796855-8 (Seems to be out of print) ANSWER #2 From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) A neat little book called "Basics of SCSI" second edition, was sent to me free of charge by Ancot Corporation, Menlo Park, CA (415) 322-5322. It gives a simplified description of how most aspects of the SCSI bus work and includes some discussion of SCSI-2 issues. ANSWER #3 From: Runar Jorgensen (runar.jorgensen@fys.uio.no) There was a two part article in Byte Magazine. The first part was in Feb 1990 issue, p. 267-274 and the second was in Mar 1990 issue, p. 291-298. Another two part article appeared in Byte in May 1986 and June 1986. ==== QUESTION: Where can I get information on various disk drives and controllers? ANSWER: ekrieger@quasar.xs4all.nl (Eric Krieger) (Updated Sep. 30, 1994) ==== Drive and Controller Guide, Version 4.3 THEREF(tm) is a comprehensive Directory of Hard Drives, Floppy Drives, Optical Drives, and Drive Controllers & Host Adapters. It is designed to help the novice and pro alike with integration problems and system setups. Information is provided in two handy formats; Portrait mode, for those who prefer a normal book-binding type print format, and(or) do not have a printer with Landscape capability. And Landscape mode, for those who pre- fer a computer-printout type format. For printing, a Laserjet is preferred, but not necessary, and setup info is provided. For viewing, LIST(tm) by Vernon Buerg, will provide an excellent result, and allow text searches for finding specific models. By F. Robert Falbo Due many reports about the unavailablity of this file/archive I made sure that the file does exist at the following site: ftp.funet.fi you should find the archive at: /pub/doc/hardware/harddisks/theref43.tar.gz /pub/doc/hardware/harddisks/theref43.readme (In that directory-path there is also a sub-directory Seagate, where you also can find info/files about Seagate-drives). Before you actually get this file, be sure to get/read the file /README.FILETYPES since it explains the used file-extension and which (de-)archiver should be used (and where to find/get them!). Note: In the archive there are files containing Extended ASCII or ANSI characters (mostly used with IBM- and compatible PC's), so it may be a bit unreadable when reading it on non-PC systems, or without using a proper Characterset/Font! ==== QUESTION: How can I contact Adaptec? ANSWER From: jcaples@netcom.com (Jon D Caples) ==== 408 945-8600 Main number 800 959 7274 tech support 800 442 7274 orders, doc, new bios, etc. 408 945-7727 BBS Adaptec's general inquiry number, 800-959-7274, affords access to a FAX-based information retrieval system. In order to preserve the accuracy of this information, I won't go into details about how to use it (since Adaptec may change things without telling me :). For those outside the CAN-US area, or local to Adaptec the direct FAX info number is (408) 957-7150. There are three general topics as of this writing: General Information Sales Information Technical Information Give it a call and request the directory! As of this writing there are over 130 documents available. You need a touchtone phone and the fax number. You'll also be asked for an extension number to stamp on the FAX which will be used to identify the recipient. [editor] As of July 1993 Adaptec bought Trantor. Try (800) 872-6867 (TRA-NTOR) World Wide Web (WWW) URL: http://www.adaptec.com ==== QUESTION: What is the telephone number of Archive Corporation? ANSWER From: jdp@caleb.UUCP (Jim Pritchett) ==== Archive Corporation (800) 537 2248 Tech Support (800) 227 6296 FAX (408) 456-4903 (faxback) FAX (408) 456-4974 (general) [Archive was bought by Conner in 1993 - Gary Field] ==== QUESTION: What is the telephone number of Fujitsu? ANSWER From: Ken Porter (72420.2436@compuserve.com) ==== Fujitsu FactsLine FAX Back service (408) 428-0456 A six page catalog of available documents can be ordered. ==== QUESTION: What is the address and telephone number for Quantum? ANSWER From: kmartine@qntm.com (Kevin Martinez) ==== Quantum Corporation 500 McCarthy Blvd. Milpitas, CA 95035 Technical Support Telephone Numbers: 800 826-8022 Main Technical Support Number 408 894-3282 Technical Support Fax 408 894-3214 Technical Support BBS V.32 8N1 408 434-9262 Technical Support for Plus Development Products 408 894-4000 Main Quantum Phone number ==== QUESTION: What is the telephone number for Seagate? ANSWER From: landis@sugs.tware.com (Hale Landis) ==== Here are the numbers for Seagate's Technical Support. SeaBOARD - Bulletin Board System available 24 hours. Use 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit (8-N-1). USA/Canada 408-438-8771 9600 baud* England 44-62-847-8011 9600 baud* Germany 49-89-140-9331 2400 baud* Singapore 65-292-6973 9600 baud* Australia 61-2-756-2359 9600 baud* * - Maximum baud rate supported. SeaFAX 408-438-2620 Use a touch-tone phone to have information returned to you via FAX. Available 24 hours. Technical Support Fax 408-438-8137 FAX your questions or comments 24 hours. Responses are sent between 8:00AM and 5:00PM PST Monday through Friday. SeaFONE 408-438-8222 Provides recorded information 24 hours or talk to a technical specialist between 8:00AM to 5:00PM PST Monday through Friday. SeaTDD 408-438-5382 Using a Telecommunications Device for the Deaf, you can send questions or comments 24 hours or have a dialog with a technical support specialist between 8:00AM and 5:00PM PST Monday through Friday. ==== QUESTION: What is the telephone number and address of Conner Peripherals? ANSWER From: ekrieger@quasar.hacktic.nl (Eric Krieger) update From: jnavas@ccnet.com (John Navas) ==== CONNER PERIPHERALS, Incorporated 3081 Zanker Road San Jose CA 95134 PAY LINE: (408)456-4500 (408)456-3200 (800)426-6637 Tech Supp:(408)456-3388 FAX LINE: (408)456-4784 BBS LINE: (408)456-4415 ==== QUESTION: What is the number for NCR? ANSWER From: gkendall@ncr-mpd.FtCollinsCO.NCR.COM (Guy Kendall) ==== For data manuals for any NCR chips, please call 800-334-5454 or 719-630-3384. ==== QUESTION: What is the address and telephone number for Philips? ANSWER From: S. C. Mentzer (smentzer@anes.hmc.psu.edu) ==== Philips Consumer Electronics Co. One Philips Drive Knoxville, TN 37914-1810 (615) 521-4316 (615) 521-4891 (FAX) ==== QUESTION: How can I contact UltraStor? Answer From: Ultrastor ==== UltraStor Corporation 13766 Alton Parkway suite 144 Irvine, CA 92718 General (714) 581-4100 Tech. Support (714) 581-4016 FAX (714) 581-4102 BBS (714) 581-4125 email: ultrastor@primenet.com finger: ustor@primenet.com ftp: ftp.primenet.com:users/u/ustor Rob McKinley (mckinley@spss.com) writes that UltraStor is now out of Chapter 11. ==== QUESTION: What is the address and telephone number of WANGTEK? ANSWER From: "Terry Kennedy, Operations Mgr" ==== Wangtek can be reached at: WANGTEK Incorporated 41 Moreland Road Simi Valley, CA 93065 (805) 583-5255 [voice] (805) 583-8249 [FAX] (805) 582-3370 [BBS] now changed to 582-3620 WANGTEK-Europe Unit 1A, Apollo House Calleva Industrial Park Aldermaston, Reading RG7 4QW England (44) 734-811463 [voice] (44) 734-816076 [FAX] 851-848135 [telex] More Info from: Peter Dyballa (pete@riese.thi.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de) Wangtek is now owned by Rexon. Try looking at ftp.rexon.com. They apparently also have a BBS: (805) 582-3620. ==== QUESTION: What is the address and telephone number of Western Digital? ANSWER From: uunet!whale.st.usm.edu!rniess (Rick Niess) ==== 1-714-753-1068 Western Digital 1-714-756-8176 Western Digital 1-714-753-1234 Western Digital 1200/2400 baud: 714-753-1234 9600 baud (Hayes): 714-753-1068 ==== QUESTION: What is the phone number of DPT? ANSWER: From: nglhs@alf.uib.no ==== voice: (407) 830-5522 FAX: (407) 260-5366 ==== QUESTION: What is the phone number of Future Domain? ANSWER: From: garyf@wiis.wang.com (Gary Field) ==== voice: (714) 253-0400 Tech. Support: (714) 253-0440 (For all countries - no foreign tech. support offices)Foreign callers should mention that they are calling internationally when they call in. BBS: (714) 253-0432 ==== QUESTION: How can I contact Micropolis? ANSWER: From: Richard Ravich (Richard_Ravich@microp.com) ==== Tech Support: (818) 709-3325 email:Richard_Ravich@microp.com ==== QUESTION: what is FAST SCSI? ANSWER From: kev@hpcpbla.bri.hp.com (Kevin Jones) ==== There are 2 handshaking modes on the SCSI bus, used for transferring data: ASYNCHRONOUS and SYNCHRONOUS. ASYNCHRONOUS is a classic Req/Ack handshake. SYNCHRONOUS is "sort of" Req/Ack, only it allows you to issue multiple Req's before receiving Ack's. What this means in practice is that SYNCHRONOUS transfers are approx 3 times faster than ASYNCHRONOUS. SCSI1 allowed asynchronous transfers at up to 1.5 Mbytes/Sec and synchronous transfers at up to 5.0 Mbytes/Sec. SCSI2 had some of the timing margins "shaved" in order that faster handshaking could occur. The result is that asynchronous transfers can run at up to 3.0 Mbytes/Sec and synchronous transfers at up to 10.0 Mbytes/Sec. The term "FAST" is generally applied to a SCSI device which can do syncrhonous transfers at speeds in excess of 5.0 Mbytes/Sec. This term can only be applied to SCSI2 devices since SCSI1 didn't have the timing margins that allow for FAST transfers. ==== QUESTION: SCSI terminators should measure 136 ohms? ANSWER From: stevel@coos.dartmouth.edu (Steve Ligett) ==== Yes, that is what you should measure. Let's see how that is so. The terminator contains 18 220-ohm resistors from signals to termpower, and 18 330-ohm resistors from those signals to ground. I've drawn that below: termpower--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 220 ohms-> R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | signals -> o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 330 ohms-> R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ground --+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ When you measure from any one signal to termpower, you aren't measuring that resistor in isolation, you are measuring that resistor IN PARALLEL with the combination of the corresponding 330 ohm resistor plus 17 220+330 ohm resistor pairs in series. I've redrawn the schematic to make this easier to see: termpower--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R <- 220 ohms | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R <- 330 ohms 220 ohms R | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-- ground | | | R <-- 330 ohms | / signal -> o-/ <--------- other stuff that's in parallel ----------> We're trying to measure that one resistor from a signal to termpower, but there's a ton of other stuff in parallel. The resistance of that "stuff" is 330 + 550/17 ohms (the 330 ohm resistor, in series with a parallel combination of 17 550 ohm resistors). The general formula for the equivalent of two resistances in parallel is r1*r2/(r1+r2). Whipping out my trusty spreadsheet, I find that the "stuff" has a resistance of about 362 ohms, and that in parallel with 220 ohms is about 137 ohms. ==== QUESTION: Can someone explain to me the difference between 'normal' scsi and differential scsi? ANSWER From: ralf@wpi.WPI.EDU (Ralph Valentino) ==== "Normal" SCSI is also called "Single-ended" SCSI. For each signal that needs to be sent across the bus, there exists a wire to carry it. With differential SCSI, for each signal that needs to be sent across the bus, there exists a pair of wires to carry it. The first in this pair carries the same type of signal the single-ended SCSI carries. The second in this pair, however, carries its logical inversion. The receiver takes the difference of the pair (thus the name differential), which makes it less susceptible to noise and allows for greater cable length. ==== QUESTION: What are the pinouts for differential SCSI? ANSWER From: ralf@wpi.WPI.EDU (Ralph Valentino) ==== Differential SCSI Connector Pinouts _____________________________________ _____________________________________ | SCSI | | MINI | | | SCSI | | MINI | | | SIGNAL| DD-50P | MICRO | DD-50SA | | SIGNAL| DD-50P | MICRO | DD-50SA | ------------------------------------ ------------------------------------- | -GND | 2 | 26 | 34 | | (open)| 1 | 1 | 1 | | -DB(0)| 4 | 27 | 2 | | +DB(0)| 3 | 2 | 18 | | -DB(1)| 6 | 28 | 19 | | +DB(1)| 5 | 3 | 35 | | -DB(2)| 8 | 29 | 36 | | +DB(2)| 7 | 4 | 3 | | -DB(3)| 10 | 30 | 4 | | +DB(3)| 9 | 5 | 20 | | -DB(4)| 12 | 31 | 21 | | +DB(4)| 11 | 6 | 37 | | -DB(5)| 14 | 32 | 38 | | +DB(5)| 13 | 7 | 5 | | -DB(6)| 16 | 33 | 6 | | +DB(6)| 15 | 8 | 22 | | -DB(7)| 18 | 34 | 23 | | +DB(7)| 17 | 9 | 39 | | -DB(P)| 20 | 35 | 40 | | +DB(P)| 19 | 10 | 7 | | GND | 22 | 36 | 8 | |DIFSENS| 21 | 11 | 24 | | GND | 24 | 37 | 25 | | GND | 23 | 12 | 41 | |TERMPWR| 26 | 38 | 42 | |TERMPWR| 25 | 13 | 9 | | GND | 28 | 39 | 10 | | GND | 27 | 14 | 26 | | -ATN | 30 | 40 | 27 | | +ATN | 29 | 15 | 43 | | GND | 32 | 41 | 44 | | GND | 31 | 16 | 11 | | -BSY | 34 | 42 | 12 | | +BSY | 33 | 17 | 28 | | -ACK | 36 | 43 | 29 | | +ACK | 35 | 18 | 45 | | -RST | 38 | 44 | 46 | | +RST | 37 | 19 | 13 | | -MSG | 40 | 45 | 14 | | +MSG | 39 | 20 | 30 | | -SEL | 42 | 46 | 31 | | +SEL | 41 | 21 | 47 | | -C/D | 44 | 47 | 48 | | +C/D | 43 | 22 | 15 | | -REQ | 46 | 48 | 16 | | +REQ | 45 | 23 | 32 | | -I/O | 48 | 49 | 33 | | +I/O | 47 | 24 | 49 | | GND | 50 | 50 | 50 | | GND | 49 | 25 | 17 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please note that I can only verify the DD-50P connector. The Mini Micro and DD-50SA pinout above is a pin for pin mapping from the SCSI pinout in the FAQ. How to tell if you have a single ended or differential drive: - Use an ohm meter to check the resistance between pins 21 & 22. On a single ended system, they should both be tied together and tied to GND. On the differential drive, they should be open or have a significant resistance between them. Note that most drives today are single ended so you usually only have to worry about this with old drives scavenged from other systems. [ Editor's note: The preceeding comment about differential drives being old is not valid. Differential drives are less common than single-ended ones, because they are mainly used only where longer cable runs are necessary, and they are not generally used in PCs, but state of the art drives are available with differential interfaces. Generally only the higher performance drives have a differential option because of the added cost. - Gary Field ] ==== QUESTION: What are the pinouts for SCSI connectors? ANSWER From: snively@scsi.Eng.Sun.COM (Bob Snively) ==== Originally dated May 23, 1990 The connector families described by the drawings have standard pin numberings which are described the same way by all vendors that I have encountered. The SCSI-2 specification identifies the standard numbering, using that convention. It happened to be documented by AMP, but all the vendors use the same convention. The following diagrams have the outline drawings of connector sockets at the bottom. This is really for reference only, because the connector sockets and plugs are both specified as to their numbering and usually are labeled. There are some minor problems in naming the microconnector conductor pairs, which I have corrected in the enclosed diagram. All the conductor pairs of the Mini-Micro (High Density) connector are in fact passed through on the cables. SCSI-2 defines the RSR (Reserved) lines as maybe ground or maybe open, but they are still passed through the cable. Most present standard SCSI devices will ground those lines. -------------------- microSCSI to SCSI Diagram --------------------------- SCSI Connector Pinouts _____________________________________ _____________________________________ | SCSI | | MINI | | | SCSI | | MINI | | | SIGNAL| DD-50P | MICRO | DD-50SA | | SIGNAL| DD-50P | MICRO | DD-50SA | ------------------------------------ ------------------------------------- | -DB(0)| 2 | 26 | 34 | | GND | 1 | 1 | 1 | | -DB(1)| 4 | 27 | 2 | | GND | 3 | 2 | 18 | | -DB(2)| 6 | 28 | 19 | | GND | 5 | 3 | 35 | | -DB(3)| 8 | 29 | 36 | | GND | 7 | 4 | 3 | | -DB(4)| 10 | 30 | 4 | | GND | 9 | 5 | 20 | | -DB(5)| 12 | 31 | 21 | | GND | 11 | 6 | 37 | | -DB(6)| 14 | 32 | 38 | | GND | 13 | 7 | 5 | | -DB(7)| 16 | 33 | 6 | | GND | 15 | 8 | 22 | | -DB(P)| 18 | 34 | 23 | | GND | 17 | 9 | 39 | | GND | 20 | 35 | 40 | | GND | 19 | 10 | 7 | | GND | 22 | 36 | 8 | | GND | 21 | 11 | 24 | | RSR | 24 | 37 | 25 | | RSR | 23 | 12 | 41 | |TERMPWR| 26 | 38 | 42 | | OPEN | 25 | 13 | 9 | | RSR | 28 | 39 | 10 | | RSR | 27 | 14 | 26 | | GND | 30 | 40 | 27 | | GND | 29 | 15 | 43 | | -ATN | 32 | 41 | 44 | | GND | 31 | 16 | 11 | | GND | 34 | 42 | 12 | | GND | 33 | 17 | 28 | | BSY | 36 | 43 | 29 | | GND | 35 | 18 | 45 | | -ACK | 38 | 44 | 46 | | GND | 37 | 19 | 13 | | -RST | 40 | 45 | 14 | | GND | 39 | 20 | 30 | | -MSG | 42 | 46 | 31 | | GND | 41 | 21 | 47 | | -SEL | 44 | 47 | 48 | | GND | 43 | 22 | 15 | | -C/D | 46 | 48 | 16 | | GND | 45 | 23 | 32 | | -REQ | 48 | 49 | 33 | | GND | 47 | 24 | 49 | | -I/O | 50 | 50 | 50 | | GND | 49 | 25 | 17 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- * NC = NOT CONNECTED CONNECTOR TYPES: DD-50SA ________________________ MINI-MICRO DD-50P | ------------------- | _____________________ ______________ |17 \o o o o o o o o o/1 | | _________________ | 49| o o o o o o |1 | 33 \ o o o o o o o /18 | |25\ o o o o o o o /1| 50| o o o o o o |2 | 50 \o o o o o o o/ 34 | | 50\o o o o o o o/26| --------------- | ------------- | | -------------- | -------------------------- ---------------------- (VIEWED FROM FACE OF CONNECTOR - USE VENDOR NUMBERING SYSTEM AS SPECIFIED) ANSWER From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) Macintosh Plus SCSI Connector Pinouts Note that this connector is NON COMPLIANT WITH ANY SCSI STANDARD! The grounding is insufficient and does not allow for proper twisted-pair transmission line implementation. It is recommended that a short adapter cable be used to convert to the more common Centronics style 50 pin connection rather than extend the 25 pin connection any further than necessary. The Macintosh Plus used a NCR 5380 SCSI chip controlled by the MC68000 processor. ___________________ | SCSI | | | SIGNAL| DB-25S | +-----------------+ DB-25S (female) | -DB(0)| 8 | _____________________________ | -DB(1)| 21 | 13\ o o o o o o o o o o o o o /1 | -DB(2)| 22 | 25\ o o o o o o o o o o o o /14 | -DB(3)| 10 | ------------------------ | -DB(4)| 23 | View from rear of computer. | -DB(5)| 11 | | -DB(6)| 12 | | -DB(7)| 13 | | -DB(P)| 20 | | GND | 7,9,14 | | GND |16,18,24 | | -ATN | 17 | | BSY | 6 | | -ACK | 5 | | -RST | 4 | | -MSG | 2 | | -SEL | 19 | | -C/D | 15 | | -REQ | 1 | | -I/O | 3 | +-----------------+ Pin 25 is NOT CONNECTED in the Mac implementation. Some Future Domain clones connect TERMPWR to pin 25, but are otherwise the same. VOLUME II Volume II Table of Contents: What is the difference between SCSI-1 and SCSI-2? Is SYNCHRONOUS faster than ASYNCHRONOUS? Is the 53C90 Faster than spec? What are the jumpers on my Conner drive? What are the jumpers for my Wangtek 5150 drive? What is CAM? What is FPT (Termination)? What is Active Termination? Why Is Active Termination Better? How can I tell whether an unmarked terminator is active or passive? Why is SCSI more expensive than IDE? What is Plug and Play SCSI? Where can I get drivers (ASPI and other) for the WD7000 FASST2 host adapter? What if I have a drive larger than a gigabyte (1024MB) ? My SCSI bus works, but is not reliable. What should I look at? Where can I find information about programming using the ASPI interface from DOS and Windows? ==== QUESTION: What is the difference between SCSI-1 and SCSI-2? ANSWER From Dal Allen: ==== SCSI-1_versus_SCSI-2 In 1985, when the first SCSI standard was being finalized as an American National Standard, the X3T9.2 Task Group was approached by a group of manufacturers. The group wanted to increase the mandatory requirements of SCSI and to define further features for direct-access devices. Rather than delay the SCSI standard, X3T9.2 formed an ad hoc group to develop a working paper that was eventually called the Common Command Set (CCS). Many products were designed to this working paper. In parallel with the development of the CCS working paper, X3T9.2 sought permission to begin working on an enhanced SCSI standard, to be called SCSI-2. SCSI-2 would include the results of the CCS working paper, caching commands, performance enhancement features, and whatever else X3T9.2 deemed worthwhile. While SCSI-2 was to go beyond the original SCSI standard (now referred to as SCSI-1), it was to retain a high degree of compatibility with SCSI-1 devices. How is SCSI-2 different from SCSI-1? 1. Several options were removed from SCSI-1: a. Single initiator option was removed. b. Non-arbitrating Systems option was removed. c. Non-extended sense data option was removed. d. Reservation queuing option was removed. e. The read-only device command set was replaced by the CD-ROM command set. f. The alternative 1 shielded connector was dropped. 2. There are several new low-level requirements in SCSI-2: a. Parity must be implemented. b. Initiators must provide TERMPWR -- Targets may provide TERMPWR. c. The arbitration delay was extended to 2.4 us from 2.2 us. d. Message support is now required. 3. Many options significantly enhancing SCSI were added: a. Wide SCSI (up to 32 bits wide using a second cable) b. Fast SCSI (synchronous data transfers of up to 10 Mega-transfers per second -- up to 40 MegaBytes per second when combined with wide SCSI) c. Command queuing (up to 256 commands per initiator on each logical unit) d. High-density connector alternatives were added for both shielded and non- shielded connectors. e. Improved termination for single-ended buses (Alternative 2) f. Asynchronous event notification g. Extended contingent allegiance h. Terminate I/O Process messaging for time- critical process termination 4. New command sets were added to SCSI-2 including: a. CD-ROM (replaces read-only devices) b. Scanner devices c. Optical memory devices (provides for write-once, read-only, and erasable media) d. Medium changer devices e. Communications devices 5. All command sets were enhanced: a. Device Models were added b. Extended sense was expanded to add: + Additional sense codes + Additional sense code qualifiers + Field replaceable unit code + Sense key specific bytes c. INQUIRY DATA was expanded to add: + An implemented options byte + Vendor identification field + Product identification field + Product revision level field + Vital product data (more extensive product reporting) d. The MODE SELECT and MODE SENSE commands were paged for all device types e. The following commands were added for all device types: + CHANGE DEFINITION + LOG SELECT + LOG SENSE + READ BUFFER + WRITE BUFFER f. The COPY command definition was expanded to include information on how to handle inexact block sizes and to include an image copy option. g. The direct-access device command set was enhanced as follows: + The FORMAT UNIT command provides more control over defect management + Cache management was added: - LOCK/UNLOCK CACHE command - PREFETCH command - SYNCHRONIZE CACHE command - Force unit access bit - Disable page out bit + Several new commands were added: - READ DEFECT DATA - READ LONG - WRITE LONG - WRITE SAME + The sequential-access device command set was enhanced as follows: - Partitioned media concept was added: * LOCATE command * READ POSITION command - Several mode pages were added - Buffered mode 2 was added - An immediate bit was added to the WRITE FILEMARKS command + The printer device command set was enhanced as follows: - Several mode pages defined: * Disconnect/reconnect * Parallel printer * Serial printer * Printer options + The write-once (optical) device command set was enhanced by: - Several new commands were added: * MEDIUM SCAN * READ UPDATED BLOCK * UPDATE BLOCK - Twelve-byte command descriptor blocks were defined for several commands to accommodate larger transfer lengths. ============================================================================= The following article was written by Dal Allan of ENDL in April 1990. It was published nine months later in the January 1991 issue of "Computer Technology Review". While it appeared in the Tape Storage Technology Section of CTR, the article is general in nature and tape-specific. In spite of the less than timely publication, most of the information is still valid. It is reprinted here with the permission of the author. If you copy this article, please include this notice giving "Computer Technology Review" credit for first publication. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ What's New in SCSI-2 Scuzzy is the pronunciation and SCSI (Small Computer System Interface) is the acronym, for the best known and most widely used ANSI (American National Standards Institute) interface. Despite use of the term "Small" in its name, everyone has to agree that Scuzzy is large - in use, in market impact, in influence, and unfortunately, in documentation. The standards effort that began with a 20-page specification in 1980 has grown to a 600 page extravaganza of technical information. Even before ANSI (American National Standards Institute) published the first run of SCSI as standards document in 1986, ASC (Accredited Standards Committee) X3T9.2 was hard at work on SCSI-2. No technical rationale can be offered as to why SCSI-1 ended and SCSI-2 began, or as to why SCSI-2 ended and SCSI-3 began. The justification is much more simple - you have to stop sometime and get a standard printed. Popular interfaces never stop evolving, adapting, and expanding to meet more uses than originally envisaged. Interfaces even live far beyond their technological lifespan. SMD (Storage Module Drive) has been called technically obsolete for 5 years but every year there are more megabytes shipped on the SMD interface than the year before. This will probably continue for another year or so before the high point is reached, and it will at least a decade before SMD is considered to be insignificant. If SCSI enhancements are cut off at an arbitrary point, what initiates the decision? Impatience is as good an answer as any. The committee and the market get sick of promises that the revision process will "end soon," and assert pressure to "do it now." The SCSI-3 effort is actively under way right now, and the workload of the committee seems to be no less than it was a year ago. What is pleasant, is that the political pressures have eased. There is a major difference between the standards for SCSI in 1986 and SCSI- 2 in 1990. The stated goal of compatibility between manufacturers had not been achieved in SCSI in 1986 due to a proliferation of undocumented "features." Each implementation was different enough that new software drivers had to be written for each device. OEMs defined variations in hardware that required custom development programs and unique microcode. Out of this diversity arose a cry for commonality that turned into CCS (Common Command Set), and became so popular that it took on an identity of its own. CCS defined the data structures of Mode Select and Mode Sense commands, defect management on the Format command and error recovery procedures. CCS succeeded because the goals were limited, the objectives clear and the time was right. CCS was the beginning of SCSI-2, but it was only for disks. Tape and optical disks suffered from diversity, and so it was that the first working group efforts on SCSI-2 were focused on tapes and optical disks. However, opening up a new standards effort is like lifting the lid on Pandora's Box - it's hard to stay focused on a single task. SCSI-2 went far beyond extending and consolidating CCS for multiple device types. SCSI-2 represents three years of creative thought by some of the best minds in the business. Many of the new features will be useful only in advanced systems; a few will find their way into the average user's system. Some may never appear in any useful form and will atrophy, as did some original SCSI features like Extended Identify. Before beginning coverage of "what's new in SCSI-2," it might be well to list some of the things that aren't new. The silicon chips designed for SCSI are still usable. No new features were introduced which obsolete chips. The cause of silicon obsolescence has been rapid market shifts in integrating functions to provide higher performance. Similarly, initiators which were designed properly, according to SCSI in 1986, will successfully support SCSI-2 peripherals. However, it should be pointed out that not all the initiators sold over the last few years behaved according to the standard, and they can be "blown away "by SCSI-2 targets. The 1986 standard allows either initiators or targets to begin negotiation for synchronous transfers, and requires that both initiators and targets properly handle the sequence. A surprisingly large percentage of SCSI initiators will fail if the target begins negotiation. This has not been as much of a problem to date as it will become in the future, and you know as well as I do, that these non-compliant initiators are going to blame the SCSI-2 targets for being "incompatible." Quirks in the 1986 standard, like 4 bytes being transferred on Request Sense, even if the requested length was zero have been corrected in SCSI-2. Initiators which relied on this quirk instead of requesting 4 bytes will get into trouble with a SCSI-2 target. A sincere effort has been made to ensure that a 1986-compliant initiator does not fail or have problems with a SCSI-2 target. If problems occur, look for a non-compliant initiator before you blame the SCSI-2 standard. After that little lecture, let us turn to the features you will find in SCSI-2 which include: o Wide SCSI: SCSI may now transfer data at bus widths of 16 and 32 bits. Commands, status, messages and arbitration are still 8 bits, and the B-Cable has 68 pins for data bits. Cabling was a confusing issue in the closing days of SCSI-2, because the first project of SCSI-3 was the definition of a 16- bit wide P-Cable which supported 16-bit arbitration as well as 16-bit data transfers. Although SCSI-2 does not contain a definition of the P-Cable, it is quite possible that within the year, the P-Cable will be most popular non-SCSI-2 feature on SCSI-2 products. The market responds to what it wants, not the the arbitrary cutoffs of standards committees. o Fast SCSI: A 10 MHz transfer rate for SCSI came out of a joint effort with the IPI (Intelligent Peripheral Interface) committee in ASC X3T9.3. Fast SCSI achieves 10 Megabytes/second on the A-Cable and with wider data paths of 16- and 32-bits can rise to 20 Megabytes/second and even 40 Megabytes/second. However, by the time the market starts demanding 40 Megabytes/second it is likely that the effort to serialize the physical interface for SCSI-3 will attract high-performance SCSI users to the Fiber Channel. A word of caution. At this time the fast parameters cannot be met by the Single Ended electrical class, and is only suitable for Differential. One of the goals in SCSI-3 is to identify the improvements needed to achieve 10 MHz operation with Single Ended components. o Termination: The Single Ended electrical class depends on very tight termination tolerances, but the passive 132 ohm termination defined in 1986 is mismatched with the cable impedance (typically below 100 ohms). Although not a problem at low speeds when only a few devices are connected, reflections can cause errors when transfer rates increase and/or more devices are added. In SCSI-2, an active terminator has been defined which lowers termination to 110 ohms and is a major boost to system integrity. o Bus Arbitration, Parity and the Identify Message were options of SCSI, but are required in SCSI-2. All but the earliest and most primitive SCSI implementations had these features anyway, so SCSI-2 only legitimizes the de facto market choices. The Identify message has been enhanced to allow the target to execute processes, so that commands can be issued to the target and not just the LUNs. o Connectors: The tab and receptacle microconnectors chosen for SCSI-2 are available from several sources. A smaller connector was seen as essential for the shrinking form factor of disk drives and other peripherals. This selection was one of the most argued over and contentious decisions made during SCSI-2 development. o Rotational Position Locking: A rose by any other name, this feature defines synchronized spindles, so than an initiator can manage disk targets which have their spindles locked in a known relative position to each other. Synchronized disks do not all have to be at Index, they can be set to an offset in time relative to the master drive. By arraying banks of synchronized disks, faster transfer rates can be achieved. o Contingent Allegiance: This existed in SCSI-1, even though it was not defined, and is required to prevent the corruption of error sense data. Targets in the Contingent Allegiance state reject all commands from other initiators until the error status is cleared by the initiator that received the Check Condition when the error occurred. Deferred errors were a problem in the original SCSI but were not described. A deferred error occurs in buffered systems when the target advises Good Status when it accepts written data into a buffer. Some time later, if anything goes wrong when the buffer contents are being written to the media, you have a deferred error. o Extended Contingent Allegiance (ECA): This extends the utility of the Contingent Allegiance state for an indefinite period during which the initiator that received the error can perform advanced recovery algorithms. o Asynchronous Event Notification (AEN): This function compensates for a deficiency in the original SCSI which did not permit a target to advise the initiator of asynchronous events such as a cartridge being loaded into a tape drive. o Mandatory Messages: The list of mandated messages has grown: +----------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+ | Both | Target | Initiator | +----------------------+--------------------------+-------------------| | Identify | Abort | Disconnect | | | | | | Message Reject | No Operation | Restore Pointer | | | | | | Message Parity Error | Bus Device Reset | Save Data Pointer | | | | | | | Initiator Detected Error | | +----------------------+--------------------------+-------------------+ o Optional messages have been added to negotiate wide transfers and Tags to support command queueing. A last-minute inclusion in SCSI-2 was the ability to Terminate I/O and receive the residue information in Check Condition status (so that only the incomplete part of the command need be re-started by the initiator). o Command Queueing: In SCSI-1, initiators were limited to one command per LUN e.g. a disk drive. Now up to 256 commands can be outstanding to one LUN. The target is allowed to re-sequence the order of command execution to optimize seek motions. Queued commands require Tag messages which follow the Identify. o Disk Cacheing: Two control bits are used in the CDB (Command Descriptor Block) to control whether the cache is accessed on a Read or Write command, and some commands have been added to control pre-fetching and locking of data into the cache. Users do not have to change their software to take advantage of cacheing, however, as the Mode Select/Mode Sense Cache page allows parameters to be set which optimize the algorithms used in the target to maximize cache performance. Here is another area in which improvements have already been proposed in SCSI-3, and will turn up in SCSI-2 products shipping later this year. o Sense Keys and Sense Codes have been formalized and extended. A subscript byte to the Sense Code has been added to provide specifics on the type of error being reported. Although of little value to error recovery, the additional information about error causes is useful to the engineer who has to analyze failures in the field, and can be used by host systems as input to prognostic analysis to anticipate fault conditions. o Commands: Many old commands have been reworked and several new commands have been added. o Pages: Some method had to be found to pass parameters between host and target, and the technique used is known as pages. The concept was introduced in CCS and has been expanded mightily in SCSI-2. A number of new Common Commands have been added, and the opcode space for 10-byte CDBs has been doubled. o Change Definition allows a SCSI-2 initiator to instruct a SCSI-2 target to stop executing according to the 1986 standard, and provide advanced SCSI- 2 features. Most SCSI-2 targets will power on and operate according to the 1986 standard (so that there is no risk of "disturbing" the installed initiators, and will only begin operating in SCSI-2 mode, offering access to the advanced SCSI-2 capabilities, after being instructed to do so by the initiator using the Change Definition command. o The Mode Select and Mode Sense pages which describe parameters for operation have been greatly expanded, from practically nothing in 1986 to hundreds of items in SCSI-2. Whenever you hear of something being described as powerful and flexible tool, think complicated. Integrators are advised to be judicious in their selection of the pages they decide to support. o the Inquiry command now provides all sorts of interesting data about the target and its LUNs. Some of this is fixed by the standard, but the main benefit may be in the Vendor Unique data segregated into the special designation of Vital Product Data, which can be used by integrators as a tool to manage the system environment. o Select Log and Sense Log have been added so that the initiator can gather both historical (e.g. all Check Conditions) and statistical (e.g. number of soft errors requiring ECC) data from the target. o Diagnostic capabilities have been extended on the Read/Write Buffer and Read/Write Long commands. The ways in which the target can manage bad blocks in the user data space have been defined further and regulated to reduce inconsistencies in the 1986 standard. A companion capability to Read Defect Data permits the initiator to use a standard method to be advised of drive defect lists. o A new group of 12-byte command blocks has been defined for all optical devices to support the large volume sizes and potentially large transfer lengths. The Erase command has been added for rewritable optical disks so that areas on the media can be pre-erased for subsequent recording. Write Once disks need Media Scan, so that the user can find blank areas on the media. o New command sets have been added for Scanners, Medium Changers, and CD ROMs. All of this technical detail can get boring, so how about some "goodies" in SCSI-2 which benefit the common man and help the struggling engineer? First, and probably the best feature in SCSI-2 is that the document has been alphabetized. No longer do you have to embark on a hunt for the Read command because you cannot remember the opcode. In the 1986 standard, everything was in numeric sequence, and the only engineers who could find things easily were the microprogrammers who had memorized all the message and opcode tables. Now, ordinary people can find the Read command because it is in alphabetic sequence. This reorganization may sound like a small matter but it wasn't, it required a considerable amount of effort on the part of the SCSI-2 editors. It was well worth it. Another boon is the introduction for each device class of models which describe the device class characteristics. The tape model was the most needed, because various tape devices use the same acronym but with different meanings or different acronyms for the same meaning. The SCSI-2 tape model defines the terms used by SCSI-2, and how they correspond to the acronyms of the different tapes. For example, on a 9-track reel, End of Tape is a warning, and there is sufficient media beyond the reflective spot to record more data and a trailer. Not so on a 1/4" tape cartridge, End of Tape means out of media and no more data can be written. This sort of difference in terms causes nightmares for standardization efforts. So there it is, a summary of what is in SCSI-2. It's not scary, although it is daunting to imagine plowing through a 600-page document. Time for a commercial here. The "SCSI Bench Reference" available from ENDL Publications (408-867-6642), is a compaction of the standard. It takes the 10% of SCSI-2 which is constantly referenced by any implementor, and puts it in an easy- to-use reference format in a small handbook. The author is Jeff Stai, one of the earliest engineers to become involved with SCSI implementation, and a significant contributor to the development of both the 1986 standard and SCSI-2. SCSI-2 is not yet published as a standard, but it will be available later this year. Until then, the latest revision can be purchased from Global Engineering (800-854-7179). Biography Consultant and analyst I. Dal Allan is the founder of ENDL and publisher of the ENDL Letter and the "SCSI Bench Reference." A pioneer and activist in the development and use of standard interfaces, he is Vice Chairman of ASC X3T9.2 (SCSI) and Chairman of the SCSI-2 Common Access Method Committee. ==== QUESTION: What is the difference between SCSI-2 and SCSI-3? ANSWER From: excerpts of postings by Jeff Stai and others: (Mohit K Goyall - goyall@utdallas.edu), (Andrew E. Lowman - lowman@arizona.edu) ==== Are SCSI-3 hard drives and/or controllers available yet? Allegedly. Previous postings have said "I heard that SCSI-3 has been standardized," but I haven't seen anything firm about it. I've seen controllers advertised by JDR Microdevices and some cheap clones; the Quantum "Empire" drives are also advertised as SCSI-3 by some mail order vendors. Seagate and IBM call their fastest drives (probably comparable in speed to the Quantums, if not faster) "Wide SCSI-2." That's a misnomer. See below. What is the difference between SCSI-3 and Fast & Wide SCSI-2? Wide SCSI-2 required two cables to do 16 bit wide transfers. SCSI-3 defined a single cable, single REQ/ACK 16 bit wide transfer. The reason you are hearing 16-bit single cable being called SCSI-3 is that they CAN. The fact that single cable 16-bit has been around for a while just shows you how much the standardization process lags behind the real world. SCSI-3 is really a family of standards. SCSI was broken up from a single document into different layers and command sets. This was done to allow for different physical transport layers (like fibre channel and SSA) to be defined, and to allow for smaller "bite-sized" projects that maybe get done a little faster ;-) The family includes the following members with TLAs: - SCSI-3 Parallel Interface (SPI): Defines the mechanical, timing, phases, and electrical parameters of the parallel cable we all know and love. Some of the electrical and cable parameters are tightened/improved over SCSI-2. - SCSI-3 Interlock Protocol (SIP): Defines the messages and how the phases are invoked. No real change from SCSI-2, except for some new messages. - SCSI-3 Architectural Model (SAM): In a nutshell, defines a common set of functions and services and definitions for how a physical transport properly gets commands, data, and status exchanged between two devices, complete with error handling and queueing. - SCSI-3 Primary Commands (SPC): All of the commands executed by any and all SCSI devices, like REQUEST SENSE and INQUIRY, etc. - SCSI-3 Block Commands (SBC): Disk commands. - SCSI-3 Stream Commands (SBC): Tape commands. - SCSI-3 Controller Commands (SCC): RAID box commands. - SCSI-3 Multimedia Commands (MMC): For CDROMS etc. - SCSI-3 Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP): SCSI commands over gigabit Fibre Channel. - SCSI-3 Serial Bus Protocol (SBP): SCSI commands over IEEE 1394 High Speed Serial Bus (Apple's "Firewire"). - SCSI-3 Serial Storage Protocol (SSP): SCSI commands over SSA. whew. After perusing the latest issue of Computer Shopper, I came away with the impression that companies are calling F&W scsi-2 hd's SCSI-3. Is this an incorrect assumption, or is F&W SCSI-2 known as SCSI-3? Is this really mostly marketing hype? Actually, there is something to that. TECHNICALLY, what is out there is often a hybrid: SCSI-3 "SPI" silicon with some other hodgepodge of SCSI-3 proposals, all mixed in with SCSI-2 stuff. An earlier posting said that the Quantum Empire ("SCSI-3") drives contain some commands from the SCSI-3 command set, and Adaptec suggested a specific setting on its 2940W controller to work properly with the drive. I understand there are some drives with proposed SCSI-3 command features. These are mostly in the MODE SELECT and in error codes, as I recall. Perhaps someone who knows more about this could elaborate? Note also that the major players (like DC Drives) don't have any "SCSI-3" stuff advertised; only JDR and some cheap clones are promoting it. Besides, Wide SCSI-2 has yet to really catch on (mostly because only a few drives are fast enough to take advantage of it). There is no "wide SCSI-2" because that would mean two cables. Single cable wide SCSI has always been SCSI-3, it just took too d*** long to get into a standard!-) ==== QUESTION: Is SYNCHRONOUS faster than ASYNCHRONOUS? QUESTION: Is the 53C90 Faster than spec? ANSWER From: kstewart@ncr-mpd.FtCollins.NCR.COM (Ken Stewart) ==== I've seen a few comments about our 54C90 being faster than spec. While I doubt the author was really complaining (I got twice as much as I paid for--sure makes me mad ;) I'd like to explain the situation. Along the way, I'll also show that asynchronous is faster on short cables, while synchronous is faster on long cables. The cross-over point occurs somewhere around six feet--assuming that you have our 53C90 family devices at both ends of the cable. The reason has to do with the propagation delay of the cable; the turn around time of the silicon; and the interlocked nature of the asynchronous handshake. 1) We have measured propagation delays from various cables and found an average of 1.7 nanoseconds per foot, which is roughly 5.25 ns per meter. 2) The turn-around time is the amount of time the SCSI chip takes to change an output in response to an input. If REQ is an input then ACK is an output. Or if ACK is an input then REQ is an output. Typical turn-around time for the 53C90 is 40 nanoseconds. 3) The asynchronous transfer uses an interlocked handshake where a device cannot do the next thing until it receives positive acknowledgment that the other device received the last thing. First REQ goes true /* driven by Target */ then ACK is permitted to go true /* driven by Initiator */ then REQ is permitted to go false then ACK is permitted to go false Thus we have four "edges" propagating down the cable plus 4 turn-around delays. Asynchronous transfer requires 55 ns setup and no hold time (paragraph in 5.1.5.1 in SCSI-1 or SCSI-2) which gives an upper speed limit around 18 MB/s. A detailed analysis (assuming 53C90 family) shows that the setup time subtracts out. This is mostly because we are running at one-third the max rate, but also because setup for the next byte can begin anytime after ACK is received true or REQ is received false, depending on who is receiving. You can either take my word for it or draw the waveforms yourself. Thus, the asynchronous transfer reduces to: (4 * 1.7 * 1) + (4 * 40ns) = 167 ns /* 1 foot cable */ = 6 MB/s (4 * 5.25 * 6) + (4 * 40ns) = 286 ns /* 6 meter cable */ = 3.5 MB/s (4 * 5.25 * 25) + (4 * 40ns) = 685 ns /* 25 meter cable */ = 1.5 MB/s note: cables longer than 6 meters require external differential transceivers which add delay and degrade the performance even more than indicated here. Our simulations say that under very best conditions (fast silicon, low temperature, high voltage, zero length cable) we can expect more than 8 MB/s asynchronously. In the lab, I routinely measure 5 MB/s on 8 foot cables. So, if you were writing the data manual for this, how would YOU spec it? The framers of the SCSI spec threw in synchronous mode to boost the performance on long cables. In synchronous mode, the sending device is permitted to send the next byte without receiving acknowledgment that the receiver actually received the last byte. Kind of a ship and pray method. The acknowledgment is required to come back sometime, but we just don't have to wait for it (handwave the offset stuff and the ending boundary conditions). In this mode any external transceivers add a time shift, but not a delay. So if you negotiate for 5 MB/s, you get 5MB/s regardless how long the cable is and regardless whether you are single-ended or differential. But you can't go faster than 5.5 MB/s, except in SCSI-2. Synchronous mode does have a hold time (unlike asynch) but again, setup and hold times subtract out. In SCSI-1 synchronous mode, the speed limit comes from the combined ASSERTION PERIOD + NEGATION PERIOD which is 90ns + 90ns = 180ns = 5.5 MB/s. Our 53C90 family doesn't quite hit the max, but we do guarentee 5.0 MB/s. In SCSI-2, anything above 5.0 MB/s is considered to be FAST. Here the maximum transfer rate is explicitly limited to 100 ns or 10MB/s; you don't have to read between the lines to deduce it. Interesting tid-bit: given a SCSI-2 FAST period of 100 ns and a cable delay of 131 ns on a 25 meter cable, you can actually stack 1.31 bytes in the 8-bit cable. In FAST and WIDE SCSI you can stack 5.24 bytes in this copper FIFO. Hummm... ==== QUESTION: What are the jumpers on my Conner drive? ANSWER From: ekrieger@quasar.hacktic.nl (Eric Krieger) Embellishment from: Henrik Stahl (f92-hst@nada.kth.se) ==== QUICK INSTALLATION GUIDE SCSI Most SCSI host adapters are compatible with Conner drives. Software drivers and installation instructions are provided with the host adapter. The drives are shipped with SCSI ID set to 7. To select a different ID refer to the following: Table A Table B ID E-1 E-2 E-3 ID E2 E3 E4 0 out out out 0 out out out 1 in out out 1 in out out 2 out in out 2 out in out 3 in in out 3 in in out 4 out out in 4 out out in 5 in out in 5 in out in 6 out in in 6 out in in 7 in in in 7 in in in Parity is always ENABLED on the CP3200,CP30060,CP30080,CP30100, CP 30200, CP 3500, CP 3360, CP 30540 and CP 31370. For the CP 340, jumper E-1 to disable parity. All other models, jumper E-4 to disable parity. SCSI drive parameters: Model Hds Cyl Sec Table LED CP2020 2 642 32 A n/a CP340 4 788 26 B 1 CP3020 2 622 33 A 1 CP3040 2 1026 40 A 1 CP3180 6 832 33 A 1 CP3100 8 776 33 A 1 CP30060 2 1524 39 A 2 CP30080 4 1053 39 A 2 CP30100 4 1522 39 A 2 CP30200 4 2119 49 A 2 CP3200 8 1366 38 A 2 CP3360 8 1806 49 A 2 CP3540 12 1806 49 A 2 CP 30080E 2 1806 46 AA C/E CP 30170E 4 1806 46 AA C/E CP 30540 6 2249 59-89 AA B CP 31370 14 2094 59-95 AA B LED 1 LED 2 J-4 Pin 1 = + J-1 Pin 3 = + Pin 2 = - Pin 4 = - On the CP 31370, jumper E5 enables termination. Default is termination on. It may be the same jumper for other models. ==== QUESTION: What are the jumpers for my Wangtek 5150 drive? ANSWER From: "Terry Kennedy, Operations Mgr" ==== First, the disclaimer: This is not an official representation of Wangtek or of my employer. This is info I've discovered by reading publicly avail- able reference material. When changing jumpers, always observe proper anti- static precautions and be sure you have the current configuration written down so you have a known starting point. Ok. Here's the complete scoop on Wangtek 5150ES drives: The current part number for a "generic" 5150ES is: 33685-201 (black faceplate) 33685-202 (beige faceplate) These are referred to as the "ACA version" of the drive. There are _many_ other part numbers for 5150ES drives. If you have one that isn't one of the above, it doesn't mean you have an old or an out of rev drive, it just means it's a special version created for a distributor or OEM, or with different default jumper settings. You can order the Wangtek 5150ES OEM Manual from Wangtek. It is part number 63045-001 Revision D. There are 5 possible logic boards. Here are the jumper options for each: Logic assembly #33678 --------------------- (J10) 0 - SCSI unit LSB 1 - SCSI unit 2 - SCSI unit MSB K - not documented J32 - Diagnostic test connector, default is not installed E1, F1 - SCSI termination power. E1 in = power from drive and to cable, E1 out - power from cable. F1 = terminator power fuse, 1.5A FB. Default is IN. E2 - Chassis ground. E2 in jumpers logic to chassis ground. E2 out isolates through a .33 uFD capacitor. Default is IN. E5 - Master oscillator enable. Test only. Must be IN. E20 - Factory test. Must be OUT. RP1, RP2, RP3 - SIP terminators. Default is IN, remove for no termination. Logic assembly #30559 --------------------- HDR1 - Factory testing. Setting depends on drive. Don't touch. HDR2 - Factory testing. Defaults are pins 15-16, 17-18, 19-20. Don't touch. HDR3 pin 1 - A-B enables buffered mode. B-C disables. Can be overridden by SCSI Mode Select. HDR3 pin 2, 3 - Default data format. Set to B-C for a 5150ES. HDR3 pin 4 - parity enable. A-B enables, B-C disables. (J10) 0 - SCSI unit LSB 1 - SCSI unit 2 - SCSI unit MSB K - not documented E1 - SCSI termination power. E1 in = power from drive and to cable, E1 out - power from cable. E2 - Chassis ground. E2 in jumpers logic to chassis ground. E2 out isolates through a .33 uFD capacitor. Default is IN. E3 - Master oscillator enable. Test only. Must be IN. E4 - Write test mode. Test only. Must be OUT. E5 - Write oscillator enable. Test only. Must be IN. E6 - Disable HDR2. Test only. Must be IN. E7 - Microcontroller clock select. In for a 5150ES. E8 - Write precomp select. Set on a per-drive basis. Don't touch. E9 - RAM size. Don't touch. E10 - Erase frequency. Don't touch. RP2, RP3 - DIP and SIP terminators. Default is IN, remove for no termination. Logic assembly #30600 --------------------- HDR1 - Factory testing. Setting depends on drive. Don't touch. HDR2 - Write precomp select. Set on a per-drive basis. Don't touch. HDR3 pin 1, 2, 3 - SCSI device address. 1 is LSB, 3 is MSB. A-B=1, B-C=0 HDR3 pin 4 - Parity enable. IA-B is enabled. HDR3 pin 5, 6 - Default data format. B-C for a 5150ES. HDR3 pin 7 - Buffered mode select. A-B is enabled. HDR3 pin 8 - Reserved. Must be OUT. HDR4 - Write frequency select. Don't touch. E1 - SCSI termination power. E1 in = power from drive and to cable, E1 out - power from cable. E2 - Chassis ground. E2 in jumpers logic to chassis ground. E2 out isolates through a .33 uFD capacitor. Default is IN. E3 - Hard/soft reset. IN enables hard reset. E4 - Write precomp select. Don't touch. E5 - Clock speed. Don't touch. E6 - Tape hole test. Don't touch. Logic assembly #30552 --------------------- HDR1 - Factory testing. Setting depends on drive. Don't touch. HDR2 - Write precomp select. Set on a per-drive basis. Don't touch. HDR3 pin 1, 2, 3 - SCSI device address. 1 is LSB, 3 is MSB. [Note - HDR3 pins 1-3 are duplicated at another location on the board] HDR3 pin 4 - Parity enable. IN is enabled. HDR3 pin 5, 6, 7, 8 - Default data format. 5,5 B-C, 7-8 A-B for a 5150ES. HDR4 - Write frequency select. Don't touch. E1 - SCSI termination power. E1 in = power from drive and to cable, E1 out - power from cable. E2 - Chassis ground. E2 in jumpers logic to chassis ground. E2 out isolates through a .33 uFD capacitor. Default is IN. E3 - Hard/soft reset. IN enables hard reset. E4 - Write precomp select. Don't touch. E5 - Clock speed. Don't touch. E6 - Tape hole test. Don't touch. Logic assembly #30427 --------------------- HDR1 - Factory testing. Setting depends on drive. Don't touch. HDR2 - Write precomp select. Set on a per-drive basis. Don't touch. HDR3 pin 1, 2, 3 - SCSI device address. 1 is LSB, 3 is MSB. A-B=1, B-C=0 HDR3 pin 4 - Parity enable. IA-B is enabled. HDR3 pin 5, 6, 7, 8 - Default data format. 5,5 B-C, 7-8 A-B for a 5150ES. E1, E3 - Factory test. Must be IN. E2 - SCSI termination power. E2 in = power from drive and to cable, E2 out - power from cable. E4 - Chassis ground. E4 in jumpers logic to chassis ground. E4 out isolates through a .33 uFD capacitor. Default is IN. Firmware - There are many flavors of firmware. I have seen the following parts: 24115-xxx 24144-xxx 21158-xxx the -xxx suffix changes as the firmware is updated. According to the folks I spoke to at Wangtek, the standard firmware is the 21158. The latest version as of this writing is 21158-007. All of these will work with the Adaptec and GTAK. The firmware options (as returned by a SCSI Identify) are on the end of the product string, which is "WANGTEK 5150ES SCSI ES41C560 AFD QFA STD" for the 21158-007 firmware. The 3-letter codes have the following meaning: AFD - Automatic Format Detection - the drive will recognize the format (such as QIC-24, QIC-120, or QIC-150) that the tape was written in. QFA - Quick File Access - the ability to rapidly locate a tape block, and to implement the "position to block" and "report block" SCSI commands. This is compatible with the Tandberg implementation. STD - Standard feature set. ==== QUESTION: What is CAM? ANSWER From: ctjones@bnr.ca (Clifton Jones) ==== Common Access Method. It is a proposed ANSI standard to make it easier to program SCSI applications by encapsulating the SCSI functions into a standardized calling convention. ANSWER From: landis@sugs.tware.com (Hale Landis) ==== You may be able to get the CAM spec(s) from the SCSI BBS ==== QUESTION: What is FPT (Termination)? ANSWER From: jvincent@bnr.ca (John Vincent) ==== FPT is actually really simple, I wish I had thought of it. What it does is use diode clamps to eliminate over and undershoot. The "trick" is that instead of clamping to +5 and GND they clamp to the output of two regulated voltages. This allows the clamping diodes to turn on earlier and is therefore better at eliminating overshoot and undershoot. The block diagram for a FPTed signal is below. The resistor value is probably in the 120 to 130 ohm range. The actual output voltages of the regulators may not be exaclty as I have shown them but ideally they are matched to the diode characteristics so that conduction occurs when the signal voltage is greater than 3.0 V or less than 0.5 V. +--------------- TERMPWR | ____|____ | | | Vreg 1 |-------*-------------------------*--------------- 3.? V |________| | | | | | | | \ +------------* / pullup resistor | | \ | | / | ____|___ | | | | | | | Vreg 2 |----------*----------|--------------- 3.0 V | |________| | | | --+-- | | / \ | +-----------+ /___\ | | | | | | | terminated | *----------*------------- signal | | | | | --+-- | / \ | /___\ | | ___|____ | | | | | Vreg 3 |----------*------------------------- 1.0 V (?) |________| ==== QUESTION: What is Active Termination? ANSWER From: eric@telebit.com (Eric Smith) and brent@auspex.com (Brent R. Largent) ==== An active terminator actually has one or more voltage regulators to produce the termination voltage, rather than using resistor voltage dividers. This is a passive terminator: TERMPWR ------/\/\/\/------+------/\/\/\/----- GND | | SCSI signal Notice that the termination voltage is varies with the voltage on the TERMPWR line. One voltage divider (two resistors) is used for each SCSI signal. An active terminator looks more like this (supply filter caps omitted): 2.85 Volt Regulator +-----------+ +2.85V 110 Ohms TERMPWR -----| in out |------+------/\/\/\/-------SCSI signal | gnd | | +-----------+ | | +------/\/\/\/-------SCSI signal | | GND ---------------+ | +------/\/\/\/-------SCSI signal | etc. Assuming that the TERMPWR voltage doesn't drop below the desired termination voltage (plus the regulator's minimum drop), the SCSI signals will always be terminated to the correct voltage level. Several vendors have started making SCSI active terminator chips, which contain the regulator and the resistors including Dallas Semiconductor, Unitrode Integrated Circuits and Motorola ==== QUESTION: Why Is Active Termination Better? ANSWER brent@auspex.com (Brent R. Largent) ==== Typical passive terminators (resistors) allow signals to fluctuate directly in relation to the TERM Power Voltage. Usually terminating resistors will suffice over short distances, like 2-3 feet, but for longer distances active termination is a real advantage. Active termination provide the following advantages: - Helps reduce noise. - A logic bit can be used to effectively disconnect the termination. - Regulated termination voltage. - SCSI-2 spec. recommends active termination on both ends of the scsi bus. - Improved resistance tolerences (from 1% to about 3%) Added by Editor - Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) - Reduces current drawn from TERMPWR line. In FPT form: - Provides signal overshoot/undershoot clamping on all signal lines ==== QUESTION: How can I tell whether an unmarked terminator is active or passive? ANSWER From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) ==== If you have an Ohm-meter of one kind or another, measure the resistance from the TERMPWR pin to an adjacent GROUND pin. Reverse the probes and take another reading. If the reading is about 30.5 Ohms, with the probes both ways, you have a passive single-ended terminator. If the reading is about 45 Ohms, with the probes both ways, you have a passive differential terminator. Active terminators should read much higher and give very different readings with the probes interchanged. ==== QUESTION: Why is SCSI more expensive than IDE? ANSWER From: landis@sugs.tware.com (Hale Landis) ==== In a typical single drive PC system, ATA (you call it IDE, the proper name is ATA) is faster than any SCSI. This is because of the 1 to 2 millisecond command overhead of a SCSI host adapter vs. the 100 to 300 microsecond command overhead of an ATA drive. Also, ATA transfers data 16-bits at a time from the drive directly to/from the system bus. Compare this to SCSI which transfers data 8-bits at a time between the host adapter and the drive. The host adapter may be able to transfer data 16-bits at a time to the system bus. Of course you could go to Fast SCSI or Wide SCSI but that costs a whole bunch more! But then you asked about cost. The real reason SCSI costs more has to do with production volume. There are about 120,000 drives made per day on this planet. 85% of those drives are ATA. The remainder are SCSI, IPI, SMD and a few other strange interfaces. The actual percent that are SCSI is falling at a very very slow rate. Without the production volume, componet prices are higher, therefor drive prices are higher. And then you must add in the host adapter cost. Compare $15 for ATA vs. $50 for a simple SCSI host adapter. But you probably want a higher quality SCSI host adapter so plan on spending $100 to $500 for one. You figure out how to get people to buy more SCSI drives, say 50,000 per day, and maybe the prices will come down to ATA price levels. Plus you could probably get a very good marketing job at any of the disk drive companies! Of course, each day more and more people are discovering the performance advantage of ATA so your job may not be as easy as you would like. ==== QUESTION: What is Plug and Play SCSI? ANSWER From: leefi@microsoft.com (Lee Fisher) (Updated Dec 7 1993) ==== Plug and Play is the name of a technology that lets PC hardware and attached devices work together automatically. A user can simply attach a new device ("plug it in") and begin working ("begin playing"). This should be possible even while the computer is running, without restarting it. Plug and Play technology is implemented in hardware, in operating systems such as Microsoft Windows, and in supporting software such as drivers and BIOS. With Plug and Play technology, users can easily add new capabilities to their PCs, such as sound or fax, without having to concern themselves with technical details or encountering problems. For users of mobile PCs (who are frequently changing their configurations with docking stations, intermittent network connections, etc.) Plug and Play technology will easily manage their changing hardware configuration. For all users, Plug and Play will reduce the time wasted on technical problems and increase their productivity and satisfaction with PCs. The Plug and Play technology is defined in a series of specifications covering the major component pieces. There are specifications for BIOS, ISA cards, PCI, SCSI, IDE CD-ROM, PCMCIA, drivers, and Microchannel. In a nutshell, each hardware device must be able to be uniquely identified, it must state the services it provides and the resources which it requires, it must identify the driver which supports it, and finally it must allow software to configure it. The first Plug and Play compliant products are available now, as are development kits for drivers and hardware. Twenty different Plug and Play products were shown at Comdex in November 1993. Specifications: The Plug and Play specifications are now available via anonymous ftp at ftp.microsoft.com in the \drg\plug-and-play subdirectory. The files are compressed in .zip format, and are in Microsoft Word format.) Plug and Play ISA files (.\pnpisa\*) errata.zip Clarifications and corrections to pnpisa.doc isolat.zip MS-DOS testing tool to isloate ISA PnP hardware pnpdos.zip Plug and Play device driver interface specification pnpisa.zip Hardware spec for PnP ISA enhancement vhdlzi.zip Hardware spec for PnP ISA enhancement Plug and Play SCSI files (.\scsi_ide\*): pnpscsi.zip Plug and Play SCSI specification proposal scam.zip SCAM (SCSI Comnfigured Auto-Magically) specification Plug and Play BIOS files (.\bios\*): apmv11.zip Advanced Power management spec v.1 vios.zip Plug and Play BIOS spec escd1.zip Spec for optional method of storing config info for PnP BIOS PlayList@Microsoft.COM alias: There is an alias, PlayList@Microsoft.COM, which you can email and get on a Microsoft mailing list related to Plug and Play, where the Hardware Vendor Relations Group (HVRG) will mail out new specifications, announcements, information on workshops, Windows Hardwware Engineering Conference (WinHEC), etc... Compuserve PlugPlay forum: There is a forum on Compuserve, GO PLUGPLAY. This forum is the method for support, discussions and dialogs about Plug and Play. In addition, the forum's library contains all of the current specification. Intel Plug and Play kits: If you are interested in Intel's two Plug and Play kits, either "Plug and Play Kit for MS-DOS and Windows" or "Plug and Play BIOS Enhancements Kit", FAX your name and company information to Intel at 1.503.696.1307, and Intel will send you the information. ==== QUESTION: Where can I get drivers (ASPI and other) for the WD7000 FASST2 host adapter? ANSWER From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) ==== Western Digital stopped producing WD7000 FASST2 cards some time in 1990. Future Domain bought the rights to produce them and as of early 1994 they still do. Columbia Data Products Inc. of Altamonte Springs, Florida still provides driver support for the card. Their SST IV driver package provides support for many types of SCSI devices including disks, tapes, and CDROM. Also included in this package is an ASPI manager driver (equivalent to the Adaptec ASPI4DOS.SYS). I have personally tested this ASPI manager and it works with GNU tar w/ASPI and the Corel CDROM driver, so most other ASPI stuff should work too. Versions of SSTASPI.SYS prior to Oct 1993 do NOT work with the above mentioned programs so be sure to check the file date. There are other useful programs in the package as well. For instance I find the TAPEUTIL program very handy for duplicating tapes. The price of this package is $99 or $85 as an upgrade of a previous version. A pre-requisite to run this software is that the adapter card must have a BIOS ROM version of 3.36 or newer. I don't think cards manufactured before 1989 or so are compatible. Columbia Data Products Inc. 1070 B Rainer Dr Altamonte Springs, FL 32714 (407) 869-6700 ==== QUESTION: What if I have a SCSI drive larger than a gigabyte (1024MB) ? ANSWER From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) ==== The IBM PC/AT BIOS Int 13h disk interface was specified in about 1986 when a large disk drive was about 60 MB. IBM decided that disks wouldn't have more than 1024 cylinders and only allocated 10 bits for the CYL parameter to the INT 13h interface. By 1989, this was already a problem. When vendors began to support SCSI drives under INT 13h, they needed to come up with a translation algorithm between the CYL, HEAD, SECT parameters of INT 13h and the linear block numbers used by SCSI devices. Various vendors chose to map the two such that each INT 13h "cylinder" contained 1 MB. In other words they emulated a drive with 32 heads and 63 sectors per track. At the time, large drives were at about 300 MB, so this worked OK. Once drives larger than 1024 MB arrived, a problem developed. They couldn't provide cylinder values greater than 1023! Changing algorithms became necessary. This is painful since any disk formatted with the old algorithm can't be read using the new algorithm. By the way, different vendors chose different mappings, so drives formatted with one adapter can't necessarily be moved to a different one. Adaptec's newer adapters (e.g. the 154xC and the 154xCF) provide a BIOS control to select the old algorithm or the new one, and they also provide BIOS PROMs for the 154xB that will use the new algorithm. There is an absolute limit of 16 M sectors which means 8 GB assuming 512 byte sectors. The day when this presents another problem is not too far away (1995?) Hopefully, we'll all be running more sophisticated O/Ses that bypass this limitation by then. ==== QUESTION: My SCSI bus works, but is not reliable. What should I look at? ANSWER From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) ==== If you still have problems after you're sure that you have all the ID and termination and cable issues resolved, it's time to dig a little deeper. If you get your SCSI bus to the point where it basically works, but it isn't reliable I have found that the gremlin can be the TERMPWR voltage. With your system fully powered up, and both terminators attached, measure the TERMPWR voltage at the far end of your bus. It needs to be between 4.25 and 5.25 Volts. Many vendors start with the system's +5 VDC and add a regular silicon rectifier diode and fuse in series. Silicon rectifiers have an inherent voltage drop of .6 to 1.0 Volts depending on the current through them. Schottky barrier rectifiers are much better for this application. I always use a 1N5817 myself. If the diode on the host adapter is a 1N400x type, change it to a 1N5817. If you add up the drop across the diode and the fuse and 15 feet of ribbon cable and the connector contact resistances, many times you'll find yourself below 4.0 Volts. When using passive terminators, this can shift the signal threshold and decrease the signal to noise ratio on the bus. If you aren't able to get relief with these methods, sometimes you can solve the problem by having several devices supply TERMPWR to the bus. Sometimes the voltage is high enough, but there is too much noise on the TERMPWR line. This can cause really strange problems! If you can see more than about 200 mV of noise on TERMPWR, add a .1 uF and 10 uF capacitor from TERMPWR to one of the adjacent GROUND lines. You need to have the bus as active as you can get it when measuring the noise. I have actually seen over 1 Volt of noise in some severe cases. Another way you can help to solve TERMPWR problems is to use active terminators. These don't draw as much current from the TERMPWR source and they also have a built in regulator which can operate on lower voltage than the standard passive terminators. The regulator also tends to reduce the noise. ==== QUESTION: Where can I find information about programming using the ASPI interface from DOS and Windows? ANSWER From: Gary Field (garyf@wiis.wang.com) ==== The Adaptec BBS has some documents about ASPI. They also have a WWW server. See the FAQ Question "How can I contact Adaptec?" for phone numbers and URL information etc. Dr Dobb's Journal March 1994 issue pg 154, has an article called "The Advanced SCSI Programming Interface" by Brian Sawert. Example code in C and x86 assembly language is included. The code can be obtained via anonymous ftp from: ftp.mv.com: /pub/ddj/1994.03/aspi.zip. ==== End. ==== `p*PJH8(@Hy?< NA\Hy?< NA\#D#<3HIxg Bg Pg2 RgT`aJk m n#D`pHy`RaJk m n#<`HHy `* DmR /f Wg, Of 3H`HyHy?< NA\?< NA\RSDjT"9>;,= O!67; p,QO;T!@ -  @ -   @ + QO ;  B!;-(  ;-D  /. p -`;F!@ -| @ ;K!@ - @ ; U! @ - !@ #""<!P!$@ - %@ &QO(''< &Q!)@ - *@ +QO -,,< +S!.. <# 403 p 1.$2.@3<& /.\655<)4O!77 <,+6 A!   .x . . . . / /   /<  /X  /t  /  /  /   / 0 0 08  0T   0p  0   0  0   0  0 PP" <4 <9 <@  !>$">;#>R$>i%> >$>  1141P  1l  1 X >  I! X> T!X> Z!X>R!> O! > A!# >  X?L!X ?F! X ?, W! 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I@IJIK ILIVIW IXIbIc IdInIo IpIzI{ I|II III III III III III III III IIIIJJ J4JHJbJvJJJJJJJJ JJJJJJJJJJK K K KK K!K4K5K6KIKJKKK^K_K`KsKtKuKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKL L L L L!L"L5L6L7LJLKLLL_L`LaLtLuLvLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLMM MMM MMM MM)M* M+M<M=M>MNMOMPMaMbMcMpMq MrMM MMM MMM MMM MMM M NN NO( Q(TT^TTU^UV^V( Z^(^^~^_>__`^`aa~78858]889J9: :::[3][ MetaDOS oder CD-ROM nicht | installiert!][Abbruch][3][Es ist kein Fenster mehr |verfgbar!][Abbruch][2][ Daten wirklich lschen? ][Ja|Nein][2][ Die Datenbank wurde noch nicht| gespeichert! Was tun?][Ende|Speichern|Abbruch][3][ Der Speicherplatz reicht | nicht fr diese Operation! ][Abbruch][3][ Fehlerhafte Zeitangaben! | Endzeit mus grer als | Startzeit sein!][Abbruch][3][ Die Audio-CD kann nicht ge- | lesen werden! Ist eine CD im | Laufwerk eingelegt? Unter-| sttzt das Laufwerk das| Kopieren der Audio-Daten? ][Abbruch][3][ Fehler beim Speichern! ][Abbruch][2][ Der CD-ROM-Treiber verfgt| nicht ber alle bentigten| Audiofhigkeiten. Daher| werden viele Funktionen nicht| funktionieren! ][Weiter][2][ Alles Lschen? ][Ja| Nein ]Audio-Daten exportierenDatenbank exportierenSONGDISCREMAIN SONGREMAIN DISC SINGLEPROGRAMSHUFFLEBLOCKSCANCD-PlayerV1.0a01/95Alexander ClaussStresemannstrae 44D-64297 Darmstadt-- Germany --Dieses Programm istFREEWARE!OKDatenbank bearbeitenOKExportTrack:Block A-BStart:Ende:Format:Kanle:Auflsung:Packen:Frequenz:Speziell:HzKBOKAbbruch CDP Datei Bearbeiten Optionen ber CD-Player... ^I ----------------------- Desk Accessory 1 Desk Accessory 2 Desk Accessory 3 Desk Accessory 4 Desk Accessory 5 Desk Accessory 6 Daten speichern ^S Daten exportieren... E --------------------------- Tracks exportieren... W --------------------------- Programm beenden ^Q Datenbank... F4 ------------------ Programm... F3 Normal ^1 Einzel ^2 Programm ^3 Zufall ^4 Block ^5 Anspielen ^6 ---------------------- Einstellungen... O ...sichern Datenbank ASCII-ExportInterpretTitelZeitangabenTracksOKAbbruchEinstellungenLautstrke sichernFensterposition sichernWarnung bei alten TreibernMenzeile bei MultitaskingOKAbbruchReihenfolge programmieren 30 min (C60)45 min (C90)60 min (C120)ZeitanzeigeOKAbbruchTRKIDXTRACKSMINSECREMAIN SONGSHUFFLEREPEAT12345678901234567890123456123456789000001.23 02.46>> VOLUME >>1234567890123456789012345612345678901234567890123456 ber CD-Player... ^I ------------------------------ Datenbank bearbeiten... ^E Datenbank speichern ^S Datenbank exportieren... E ------------------------------ Tracks exportieren... ^W ------------------------------ Einstellungen... O Einstellungen sichern ------------------------------ Programm beenden ^Q Autor __________________________________Interpret: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX__________________________________CD Titel: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX01:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0002:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0003:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0004:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0005:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0006:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0007:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0008:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0009:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0010:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:00Lschen Track 01 000000 __:__.__ 999999000000 __:__.__ 999999 Exportformat WAVE Stereo 16 Bit Nein 49170 25033 _____ 99999 Speicherplatz 1123123RECHNEN 49170 32780 24585 19668 16390 12292 9834 8195 --------- 44100 22050 11025 8000 DVS AVR WAVE SND AU 8 Bit 16 Bit Ja Nein Mono Stereo Trennzeichen ___________________Datensatz: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________________Feld: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Exportieren ___max. Anzahl der Tracks: ___999 CD Inhalt CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Reihenfolge CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Aufteilung 74 __ min 99Aufteilen Optionen Alles bernehmenAuswahl lschenPrg.in Datenbank Normal Einzel Programm Zufall Block Anspielen Üw"T"۔">㜪"r"K*R JT*R JT*RJTҋ3??????????????8"<>K>>|>>>>:,= O!67:  p,QO;T!@ -  @ -   @ + QO ;   B!;-(  ;-D  /. p -`;"F!@ -| @ ;* H!@ - @ ;4D! @ - !@ #"";; !M!$@ - %@ &QO('';E &Q!)@ - *@ +QO -,,;P +S!.. ;[ 403 p 1.$ 2.@3;^ /.\655;a4O!77 ;d+6 C!   .x . . . . / /   /<  /X  /t  /  /  /   / 0 0 08  0T   0p  0   0  0   0  0 PP ;k ;p ;v  ;| P  ; ; ; ;;;<< M!>) O! >,  C!HH>3  1 @1@1@1 @2 @20 @2L @2h @2@2@2 @2 @2 @3 @@ @@ ,+ >A3,('@3H@3d@3@3@3 @3!@3"@4 #@4($@4D %@4` &@4| '@4 @4 )@+**@ )@@;-9 4.4 /X100>T /3!2X433>a 25!5X766>n 56!8X94,::59D!F<D 4 =5$ >@X@??>| >I!BAA5@@T!DCC5\BE!;EE5xDP!HGG>0FO!II ><H C!  5 5 5 5 6  6  >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>??(??$?% ?&?3?4x ?5?j?k5?l???????????????@@@@.@/@0@J@K@L@f@g@h@@@@@@@@@@@ @@A#1A>AaA#-AAAAAA##B B&B'B(B,B-B.BQBt##BBBBBBBBB##CCCCCCCC?Cb##CCCCCCCCC##CDDDDD D D-DP##DsDyDzD{DDDDD##DDDDDDDEE>##EaEgEhEiEmEnEoEE##EEEEEEEF F,##FOFUFVFWFYFZF[F^F_F`FcFdFeFgFhFiFoFpFqFyFzF{FFFFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FGG  GGGG G(G)G*G/G0G1G;G< G=GGGH GIGSGT GUG_G` GaGkGl GmGwGx GyGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GHH H HH HHH  H!H+H, H-H7H8 H9HCHD HEHOHP HQH^H_ H`HtHHHHHHHHHIII)I* I+I>I?I@ISITIUIhIiIjI}I~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJJJJ%J&J'J/J0J1J9J:J;JNJOJPJcJdJeJxJyJzJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJK K K K K!K"K5K6K7KJKKKLK_K`KaKmKn KoKrK{ K~KKKKK KKK KKKKKKKKK KKK KKK KLL LLL LLL L  M M@ M`M( P(RRSS@ST@TU( X(\\]@]^^`^_ __778%8B8899n99::[3][ MetaDOS or CD-ROM not | installed!][Cancel][3][ No more windows available! ][Cancel][2][ Erase record? ][Yes|No][2][ The database is not saved! | Quit program?][Quit|Save|Cancel][3][ Not enough memory left! ][Cancel][3][ Input is not valid.| Time: End value must be | greater than start value! ][Cancel][3][ Cannot read CD! Please check | your drive (and driver | software) supports audio | data...][Cancel][3][ Write error! ][Cancel][2][ The CD-ROM driver doesn't| support all audio commands| needed in this program!][Continue][2][ Delete all? ][ Yes | No ]Export audio tracksExport databaseSONGDISCREMAIN SONGREMAIN DISC SINGLEPROGRAMSHUFFLEBLOCKSCANCD-PlayerV1.0a01/95Alexander ClaussStresemannstrae 44D-64297 Darmstadt-- Germany --CDP is FREEWARE!OKEdit databaseOKExport tracksTrack:Block A-BStart: End:Format:Channels:Depth:Compress:Frequency: Special:HzKBOKCancel CDP File Edit Options About CD-Player... ^I ------------------------ Desk Accessory 1 Desk Accessory 2 Desk Accessory 3 Desk Accessory 4 Desk Accessory 5 Desk Accessory 6 Save database ^S Export database... E ------------------------ Export tracks... W ------------------------ Quit ^Q Database... F4 ----------------- Program... F3 Normal ^1 Single ^2 Program ^3 Shuffle ^4 Block ^5 Scan ^6 ---------------- Options... O ...save Export databaseInterpreterTitleTimeTracksOKCancelOptionsSave volumeSave window positionWarning (old CDROM driver)Menu bar in multitaskingOKCancelPlaying order 30 min (C60)45 min (C90)60 min (C120)Display timeOKCancelTRKIDXTRACKSMINSECREMAIN SONGSHUFFLEREPEAT12345678901234567890123456123456789000001.23 02.46>> VOLUME >>1234567890123456789012345612345678901234567890123456 About CD-Player... ^I ------------------------- Edit database... ^E Save database ^S Export database... E ------------------------- Export track... ^W ------------------------- Options... O Save options ------------------------- Quit program ^Q Author __________________________________ Interpreter: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX__________________________________CD title: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX01:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0002:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0003:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0004:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0005:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0006:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0007:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0008:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0009:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0010:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:00Erase Track 01 000000 __:__.__ 999999000000 __:__.__ 999999 Format WAVE Stereo 16 Bit Nein 49170 25033 _____ 99999 File length 1123123CALC 49170 32780 24585 19668 16390 12292 9834 8195 --------- 44100 22050 11025 8000 DVS AVR WAVE SND AU 8 Bit 16 Bit Yes No Mono Stereo Separation ___________________Record: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________________Field: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Export fields ___max. number of tracks: ___999 CD content CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Order CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Partition 74 __ min 99Divide Options Transfer allErase selectionPrg.in database Normal Single Program Shuffle Block Scan Üw"T"۔">㜪"r"K*R JT*R JT*RJTҋ3??????????????8"<>K>>|>>>>;,= O!67; p-@QO;T!@ -  @ -\  @ + QO ;  B!;-x  ;-  /. p -;F!@ - @ < A!@ - @ < D! @ . !@ #""< !M!$@ .  %@ &QO(''< &Q!)@ .< *@ +QO -,,<( +S!..X <3 403 p 1.t2.3<6 /.655<94O!77 <<+6 N!   . . / / /8 /T /p  /  /  /  /  /  0   04 0P 0l 0  0   0  0   0  1   10  1L PP >% >5>F >W!>h">y#>$>%> >$>  1h 11  1 1 X >  I! X> T!X>M!X?P!? O! ?  N!# ? X?V! X ?,S! X ?? G! X?M B!?f O! ?i  N!HH?q 1@2@2,@2H @2d @2 @2 @2 @2@2@3  @3( @3D @3` @@ @@ ,+ ?3|('@3@3@3@3@4 @4$!@4@"@4\#@4x$@4 %@4 &@4 '@4 @5 )@+**@ )@@;-9 4.5  /X100? /3!2X433? 25!5X766? 56!8X95<,::5X9D!F<D 4 =5t >@X@??? >I!BAA5@T!DCC5BE!;EE5DP!HGG?0FO!II ?<H N!  5 6 6 68 6T  6p ????????????????@ @  @ @@@@@@@@@@"@#@$@'@(@)@,@-@.@5@6@7@_@`(@a@m@n @o@|@}x @~@@5@@@@@@@AAA A#A$A%A?A@AAA[A\A]AwAxAyAAAAAAAAAAAABBBBBBBB BB/B0B1BTB#1BBB#1CC#C$C%CHCk##CCCCCCCCC##DD D D DDDD6DY##D|DDDDDDDD##DDDDDEEE$EG##EjEpEqErEvEwExEE##EEEEEEEFF5##FXF^F_F`FdFeFfFF##FFFFFFFGG###GFGLGMGNGRGSGTGwG##GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGH H HH H$H-H. H/H9H: H;HEHF HGHQHR HSH]H^ H_HiHj HkHqHz HHHHHHHHHHHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HII III III I I*I+ I,I6I7 I8IBIC IDINIO IPIZI[ I\IfIg IhIrIs ItI~I III III III III III III III IIJJJ/JJJ^JpJqJrJvJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJKKKK#K$K%K8K9K:KMKNKOKbKcKdKwKxKyKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKL L L LLL L3L4L5LHLILJL]L^L_LrLsLtLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL LLL LMMMM M MMM MM,M-M.M>M?M@MMMN MOM\M] M^MkMl MmMzM{ M|MM MMM M NN NN( Qz(ST:TzTU:UV:Vz( Z:(]^Z^__z_`:``aZ88K8w89 909::4:::[3][ MetaDOS ou CD-ROM pas| install !][Annuler][3][ Plus de fentre disponible !][Annuler][2][ Effacer l'enregistrement ? ][Oui|Non][2][ La base de donnes n'a pas | t sauvegarde.| Quitter le programme ?][Quitter|Sauver|Annuler][3][ Plus assez de mmoire !][Annuler][3][ L'entre n'est pas valide.| Dure : La valeur de fin doit | tre plus grande que celle de | dbut ! ][Annuler][3][ Impossible de lire le CD ! | Veiullez vrifier le lecteur | et le pilote ainsi que le CD.][Annuler][3][ Erreur d'criture !][Annuler][2][ Le lecteur de CD-ROM n'accepte| pas toutes les commandes audio| utilises par ce logiciel !][Continuer][2][ Tout effacer ? ][ Oui | Non ]Exporter pistes audioExporter la baseCHANSONDISQUEREMAIN SONGREMAIN DISC UNIQUEPROGRAMSHUFFLEBLOQUESCANCD-PlayerV1.0a01/95Alexander ClaussStresemannstrae 44D-64297 Darmstadt-- Allemagne --CDP est FREEWARE!OKEditer la base de donnesOKExporter pistesTrack:Block A-BDbut: Fin:Format:Canaux :Depth:Compression:Frquence: Spcial:HzKoOKAnnuler CDP Fichier Editer Options A propos de CDP ^I ---------------------- Desk Accessory 1 Desk Accessory 2 Desk Accessory 3 Desk Accessory 4 Desk Accessory 5 Desk Accessory 6 Sauver la base de donnes ^S Exporter la base de donnes ...E ------------------------------------ Exporter des pistes ... W ------------------------------------ Quitter ^Q Base de donnes ... F4 ------------------------- Programmation ... F3 Normal ^1 Unique ^2 Program ^3 Shuffle ^4 Block ^5 Scan ^6 ---------------- Options... O ...sauver Exporter la base de donnesInterprteTitreTempsPistesOKAnnulerOptionsSauver le volumeSauver la positionMise en gardeBarre de menu/multitcheOKAnnulerOrdre de programmation 30 min (C60)45 min (C90)60 min (C120)Affiche dureOKAnnulerTRKIDXPISTESMINSECREMAIN SONGSHUFFLEREPEAT12345678901234567890123456123456789000001.23 02.46>> VOLUME >>1234567890123456789012345612345678901234567890123456 A propos de CDPlayer^I ------------------------- Editer base ... ^E Sauver base ^S Exporter base ... E ------------------------- Exporter piste ... ^W ------------------------- Options... O Sauver les options ------------------------- Quitter ^Q Auteur Traduction: Romuald Jouffrey__________________________________ Interprte : __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX__________________________________Titre du CD : __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX01:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0002:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0003:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0004:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0005:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0006:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0007:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0008:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0009:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0010:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:00Effacer Piste 01 000000 __:__.__ 999999000000 __:__.__ 999999 Format WAVE Stereo 16 Bit Nein 49170 25033 _____ 99999 Longueur de fichier1123123CALC 49170 32780 24585 19668 16390 12292 9834 8195 --------- 44100 22050 11025 8000 DVS AVR WAVE SND AU 8 Bit 16 Bit Oui Non Mono Stro Sparation ___________________Enreg.: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________________Champ: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Exporter champs ___Nombre max. de pistes: ___999 Contenu du CD CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Ordre CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Division 74 __ min 99Diviser Options Tout copierEfface slect.Prg. ds la base Normal Unique Program Shuffle Bloque Scan Üw"T"۔">㜪"r"K*R JT*R JT*RJTҋ3??????????????8 =-|=|= === ??????'?S? ?#?[????????'?S? ?#?[???????0mhB 7Zڥ+7Zڥ+01کH 7[کK7[ڭk00mhB ?????7f1H2Zݵ_5Zݵ_5Z]7Zݵ_T7Zݵ_7f1MG?????#v-jI/o-jo#b/jo/jo/mͪn?????#D-v-v#+w-w-???????????????T?????????????????????T????????????????{?;?? ? ??;?{????????????߿?ϟ?Ǐ?Ç???Ç?Ǐ?ϟ?߿???????????????????????????????}?y?q?a?A?A?a?q?y?}??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????($X(A!  hh        ccc   XXXMMM   CCC C!"# $M%&'(X)*+ ,c-./0c1 234X5678M9 :;<C=>C?@A BMCDEFXGHI JcKLMNcO PQRXSTUVMW XYZC[\C]^_ `MabcdXefg hcijklcm nopXqrstMu vwxCyzC{|} ~MXXM CC MXXM CC MXXM CC MM CC MM CC MM C  C      C  C        C C        C   H@UUUV@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@??CDDA.APPA. 88@__@__________XXFYf[vXf[FX__@?@__@_______Y?Y?_XXFYf[vXf[FX__@?@__@__X[[X_Y?Y?_XXFYf[vXf[FX__@?@UUUV@@OHKKHOI8I?OOOp6N06L6O6L6OO@??@___@____q_W_q_]z_q__\ \Gj\j]j\j]j\ _@?@___@_______\\_\ \Gj\j]j\j]j\ _@?@___@__\O]]\O_\\_\ \Gj\j]j\j]j\ _@?`j```gdOeqeWdLqg]zdqdggg\gLfDgLf\gg@??NN@______________p>^0>\>_>\>___?@__@_______Y?Y?__________?@__@__X[[X_Y?Y?___p>^0>\>_>\>___?@UUUV@@OHKKHOI8I?OHHHHHHHO@@?@UUUV@@OHKKHOI8I?OOOOOOOOO@?@UUUR@@@OHKKHOI8I?OHHHHHHHO@@?@UUUR@@@OHKKHOI8I?OHHHHHHHO@@?@UUUR@@@OHKKHOI8I?OHHHHHHHO@@??`qWq]zq\L~DL~\@?@___@||@?@___@|O}}|O||\L~DL~\@?`j``@GDOEqEWDLqG]zDqDGD D D D D D D G@?`j```gdOeqeWdLqg]zdqdggggggggg@?@@J@@@GDOEqEWDLqG]zDqDGD D D D D D D G@?@@J@@@GDOEqEWDLqG]zDqDGD D D D D D D G@?@@J@@@GDOEqEWDLqG]zDqDGD D D D D D D G@??d%6p6p7:MNMN$ and t$lT% x(q%%%&&$&@ &\ &x & &  &&'' '< 6p'X 6~66q('t'#q(#6("6(6 66 6!6"7 7$$$7&(#%.74(&7B$'7P (7^)7l*7z+7,7 -7.7$ 7  ::: : ::: :  :  :    ''''(((8 (T (p (  (  ( : : :  p:(: ;;$ p  ;3 ;C;E  O! ( =8;H p4)/)4-3 p4 @1 @1 @ @1  2/ X )P )l")*X))")*X)*"*0*X*L*h"**X**"** X!*"+"#+,*$X%+H&+d"'+*(X)+*+"++*,X-+., "/,(*0X 1,D 2 ,` " ,|* 544,3P!766@,5 !988@, 7 !;::,9N!=<<-;B!>>;],= O!67;` p-$QO;pT!@ -  @ -@  @ + QO ;w  B!;-\  ;-x  /. p - ;F!@ - @ ;C!@ - @ ;D! @ - !@ #""; !M!$@ . %@ &QO(''; &Q!)@ .  *@ +QO -,,; +P!..< ; 403 p 1.X2.t3; /.655;4O!77 ;+6 C!   . . . / / /8 /T  /p  /  /  /  /  /   0 04 0P 0l  0   0  0   0  0   1  10 PP  ; ;  ; ; P  ; < <0 $>%>$ >5$>F  1L 1h1  1 1 X >]  I! X>h T!X>oM!X>vP!>} O! > C!# > X>E!X >P! X > A! X> M!> O! >  C!HI> 1@1@2@2, @2H @2d @2 @2 @2@2@2 @3  @3( @3D @@ @@ ,+ ? 3`('@3|@3@3@3@3 @4!@4$"@4@#@4\$@4x %@4 &@4 '@4 @4 )@+**@ )@@;-9 4.5 /X100? /3!2X433?* 25!5X766?7 56!8X95 ,::5<9D!F<D 4 =5X >@X@???E>I! BAA5t@T!DCC5BS!;EE5DP!HGG?T0FO!II ?W=H C!  5 5 6 6 68  6T ?`?d?e?f?j?k?l?s?t?u?y?z?{????? ??? ?????????????????????(??? ?@@x @@8@95@:@Y@Z@[@z@{@|@@@@@@@@@@@AAA A!A@AAABAaAbAcAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABB?#0BbBB#.BBBBBC"##CECKCLCMCQCRCSCvC##CCCCCCCCD##D3D9D:D;D?D@DADdD##DDDDDDDDD##E!E'E(E)E-E.E/EREu##EEEEEEEEE##FFFFFFFF@Fc##FFFFFFFFF##FGGGG G G G.GQ##GtGzG{G|G~GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GHH HHHHHH HH"H+ H1HDHEHFHNHOHPHUHVHWHaHb HcHmHn HoHyHz H{HH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HHH HI I  I II II!I" I#I-I. I/I9I: I;IEIF IGIQIR ISI]I^ I_IiIj IkIuIv IwII IIIIIIJ JJ J!J%J>JBJQJRJSJfJgJhJ{J|J}JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJKKKK#K$K%K8K9K:KMKNKOKWKXKYKaKbKcKvKwKxKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKL L L LLL L3L4L5LHLILJL]L^L_LrLsLtLLLLL LLL LLLLLL LLLLLLLLLLMM MMM MMM M M-M. M/M<M= M>MKML MN NNNn NN( Q.(SST.TnTUnUV.( Y(]^^n^_.__`N`a7878l889999:;:[:q[3][ MetaDOS o CD-ROM no estn | instalados!][Cancelar][3][ No hay mas ventanas | disponibles! ][Cancelar][2][ Borrar ficha? ][Si|No][2][ La base de datos no hay sido | grabada! Salir del programa?][Salir|Grabar|Cancelar][3][ No hay bastante memoria | libre!][Cancelar][3][ La entrada no es valida.| Time: El valor final deber | ser mayor que el valor de | comienzo.][Cancelar][3][ No puedo leer el CD. ][Cancelar][3][ Error en escritura! ][Cancelar][2][ El driver CD-ROM no soporta| todos los comandos de audio | necesitados en este programa!][Continuar][2][ Borrar todo? ][ Si | No ]Exportar pistas audioExportar base de datosCANCIONDISCOQUEDA CANCIQUEDA DISCO SIMPLEPROGRAMASHUFFLEBLOQUESCANCD-PlayerV1.0a01/95Alexander ClaussStresemannstrae 44D-64297 Darmstadt-- Alemania --CDP es FREEWARE!OKEditar base de datosOKExportar pistasPista:Bloque A-BPrin.: Fin:Formato:Canales:Calidad:Compresin:Frequency: Especial:HzKBOKCancelar CDP Fichero Editar Opciones Sobre CD-Player... ^I ------------------------ Desk Accessory 1 Desk Accessory 2 Desk Accessory 3 Desk Accessory 4 Desk Accessory 5 Desk Accessory 6 Grabar base de datos ^S Exportar base de datos... E ------------------------------- Exportar pistas... ^W ------------------------------- Salir ^Q Base de datos... ^E ---------------------- Programa... F3 Normal ^N Simple ^S Programa ^P Shuffle ^R Bloque ^B Scan ^C ---------------- Opciones...O ...grabar Exportar base de datosInterpreteTtuloTiempoPistasOKCancelarOpcionesGrabar etiquetaGrabar posicin ventanaAviso (viejo driver CDROM)Menu en multitareaOKCancelarOrden de reproduccin 30 min (C60)45 min (C90)60 min (C120)Mostrar tiempoOKCancelarTRKIDXTRACKSMINSECREMAIN SONGSHUFFLE REPEAT12345678901234567890123456123456789000001.23 02.46>> VOLUME >>1234567890123456789012345612345678901234567890123456 Sobre CD-Player... ^I ------------------------------ Editar base de datos... ^E Grabar base de datos ^S Exportar base de datos E ------------------------------ Exportar pista... ^W ------------------------------ Opciones... O Grabar opciones ------------------------------ Salir del programa ^Q Autor Traduccin: Antonio Lillo__________________________________ Interprete: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX__________________________________Ttulo CD: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX01:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0002:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0003:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0004:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0005:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0006:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0007:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0008:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0009:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0010:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:00Borrar Pista 01 000000__:__.__999999000000__:__.__999999 Formato WAVE Stereo 16 Bit No 49170 25033 _____ 99999 Longitud fichero 1123123CALC 49170 32780 24585 19668 16390 12292 9834 8195 --------- 44100 22050 11025 8000 DVS AVR WAVE SND AU 8 Bit 16 Bit Si No Mono Stereo Separacin ___________________ Ficha: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________________Campo: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Exportar campos ___mx. nm. de pistas: ___999 Contenido CD Ttulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxx Orden Ttulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxxTtulo CD xxxxxxxx Particin 74 __ min 99Divide Opciones Transferir todoBorrar seleccinPrg.en database Normal Simple Programa Shuffle Bloque Scan Üw"T"۔">㜪"r"K*R JT*R JT*RJTҋ3??????????????8"<>K>>|>>>e8 d2 e,`0e$ eeee e dB9L/?< NA\O#x#~### #$#(a#HyN0<`0<r;kB/o `:0<`40<`.0<`(0<`"HP o P@e P@b _/9(Nu _0<Nh"yb0<Na#BgHz?<Ns`?9?<LNAJ9Lg~p yav#p yad#p yaR#p ya@#p y a.# p y$a#$p y(a #(NuH瀠>NMPO @$_NuJ@lD@NuHR!|1|װ!|E!JA4pxrd2E `QB$_Nu2<װ0(Ag(AAfHPa _Jyf ( g"@N3Nup42<d0`QNur4d`QNupQNure`QNuJ@npJAotcBNuA@RBAd2SQNu?JAo.J@fpSAt@e6@AdS`"HQ6NuJo42HA24gS4gm1U$gzH> &(*,."A$A&A(A*A,AH~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H~H`SfL|4J`!Q|`QNuJyf"0(|װgN|ײf (g "@N3Nu?d~V@|| dp yB"HPcR42 hPb2f@? <aT g`00$ C8$i!I!J#H%H$B#B1|2@| d($ "h$h#J%I#B$B@pXNu0#B1Ap@0Nu2 j ||?dg0(Pf@|m$f`l$ C8$i!J!I#H%H$BC0kL|H?>L|H?>L||H?>L|PH?>L|$H?>L|H?>L|H?>L|H?>L|tH?>L|HH?>L|H?>LH? 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Cocker="Bread And Butter - Devo"This City Never Sleeps -Eurithmics a"Cannes - Stewart Copeland-"Let It Go - Luba 90pG Robin BeckTrouble Or Nothing Hide Your HeartDon't Loose Any SleepIf You Were A WomanHold Back The NightSave Up All Your TearsIn A Crazy World Like ThisTears In the RainA Heart For You5Sleepin' With The Enemy First TimeI 8 ET&e Cyndi Lauper True Colors Change Of HeartaMaybe He'll KnowqBoy Blue True ColorsCalm Inside The StormWhat's Going OnIko Iko)The Faraway Nearby911EOne Track Mind 6E&2XClannad Magical Ring Theme from Harry's Gamey Tower HillSeachran Charn tSiailY Passing TimeCoinleach Glas An Fhomhair  I See Rede Ta Me Mo Shui5 NewgrangeThe Fairy QueenThios Fa'n ChostaA GE PE2 Jeff Wayne!Highlights From War Of The Worlds The Eve Of The War Horsell Common And The Heat RayForever AutumnThe Fighting Machinei Thunderchild ) The Red Weed The Spirit Of Man Dead London Brave New World Q F%WGAE Peter GabrielSo Red Rain Sledgehammer A Don't Give Up That Voice Again In Your Eyes y Mercy Street UBig TimeuWe Do What We're ToldYThis Is The PictureQ8A3EC SoundtrackGhostUnchained MelodyGhostaSam DittoQCarlMolly EUnchained Melody(Orchestral) Generique FinEA6%0 `Orb Pomme FritzPomme Fritz (Meat'n Veg) More Gills Less FishcakesWe're Pastie To Be Grill You1Bang'er'n ChipsAlles Ist SchoenmHis Immortal Logness#'2F0I'Sophie B. Hawkinsright beside youRight Beside YouRight Beside You (classic mix) The Ballad Of Sleeping Beauty Right Beside You (extended) rGpU Bryan Adams!(Everything I Do) I Do It For You!(Everything I Do) I Do It For You1"She's Only Happy When She's DancinCuts Like A Knife !(Everything I Do) I Do It For You V83(58AProf. Dr. Reinhard Tausch6 V&$Atem-Entspannung.nl V h hJPf=n0. ,_N]Nugetd NU/$OHV,J V hJPg V hHP66$NB _0,_N]Nugetm RNU/$OHV,J V hJ"Einfhrung in die Atem-Entspannung Praktische Anleitungn"n 9c*Tips fr die tgliche Praxis6N8 P9Mnchener FreiheitIch Will Dich Nochmal"Ich Will Dich Nochmal (Rhythm Mix) La Mich Nie Mehr LosIch Will Dich Nochmal-5 "0` Julee CruiseThe Theme from Twin PeaksFalling9Twin Peaks Theme Floating285 &``Sinead O'ConnorNothing Compares 2 UNothing Compares 2 U -Jump In The River5Jump In The River(Instrumental)1$3 Re7Whitney HoustonI Will Always Love YouI Will Always Love YouJesus Loves Me =Do You Hear What I Hear?p3 Vaya Con DiosWhat's A Woman?What's A Woman? Far Gone Now- Sold My Soul )H$(pa-hacrying in the raincrying in the raini(seemingly) nonstop julycry wolf'&pP Maria McKeeShow Me Heaven"Show Me Heaven (Maria McKee)"Car Building (Hans Zimmer)"Hearts In Trouble (Chicago)eBE# Robin Beck First TimeFirst Time (Remix)UFirst Time (7" Version)MFirst Time (Instrumental)M U3 Phil Collins"a groovy kind of love"A Groovy Kind Of Love}Big Noise(Instrumental)Will You Still Be Waiting@P@P!1 Mike Oldfield Hergest RidgePart One*uPart Two$#`#`4KaomaLambadaLambadaLambada (Instrumental)`'`' Mike OldfieldAmarokAmarokx v /(:H /w:H.KRP.2'rH%.:vrH  xB.CD-Player V1.3d (November 1995) ein Audio-CD-Player fr ATARI ST/STE/TT/Falcon mit CD-ROM-Laufwerk von Alexander Clauss, Stresemannstr. 44, D-64297 Darmstadt Dieses Programm ist FREEWARE. Es darf kostenlos kopiert und benutzt werden. Eine Verbreitung ber Mailboxen, FTP-Server und PD-Serien ist erlaubt. Eine Verbreitung auf CD-ROMs und auf Cover-Disketten von Zeitschriften ist NUR mit meiner schriftlichen Genehmigung erlaubt. Das Programm mu immer komplett weitergegeben werden (siehe LIESMICH Datei). Das Verndern des Programms und der Anleitung ist nicht gestattet. Wenn Ihnen das Programm gefllt und Sie es regelmig benutzen, knnen sie mir natrlich auch eine kleine Spende zukommen lassen; ich wrde mich freuen. WICHTIG: Ich bin natrlich auch an Fehlermeldungen und/oder Verbesserungs- vorschlgen interessiert. Bei Fehlermeldungen bitte immer Rechnertyp, CD-ROM-Typ, CD-ROM-Treiber, TOS-Version, Autoordner-Programme und Accessories angeben. Wenn mglich, bitte genau beschreiben, wie man den Fehler reproduzieren kann. Konstruktive Kritik und Vorschlge fr zuknftige Versionen sind ausdrcklich erwnscht!!! WICHTIG: Ich bitte, bei Anfragen per Post immer auch einen frankierten und adressierten Rckumschlag beizulegen, wenn Sie eine Antwort von mir erwarten. Meine Adresse ------------- Alexander Clauss Stresemannstrae 44 D-64297 Darmstadt -- Germany -- email: aclauss@rbg.informatik.th-darmstadt.de WWW: http://www.student.informatik.th-darmstadt.de/~aclauss/ (Wer mich ber die email-Adresse nicht (oder nicht mehr) erreichen kann, sollte es ber die Post-Anschrift versuchen!) Bankverbindung -------------- Sparkasse Darmstadt BLZ: 508 501 50 Kontonr: 0115032143 --------------------------------------------------------------------------- System-Voraussetzungen ====================== Dieses Programm luft auf allen Atari ST/STE/TT/Falcon (und wahrscheinlich auch auf Medusa und Eagle) mit CD-ROM-Laufwerk und MetaDOS-Treiber. Sowohl CD-ROM-Laufwerk als auch der MetaDOS-Treiber mssen in der Lage sein Audio-Kommandos zu verstehen. Das Programm luft in jeder Auflsung und Farbtiefe. Einige Dialoge knnen leider nicht vollstndig in der ST-Niedrig-Auflsung dargestellt werden. Die Proportionen der Bedienelemente des Hauptfensters sind abgestimmt auf den 8x16 Systemzeichensatz. Das bedeutet: auf z.B. ST-Niedrig- oder ST-Mittel- Auflsungen (8x8 Zeichensatz) sieht das Haupfenster nicht so gut aus. Die 3D-Effekte wirken nur dann gut, wenn mindestens 16 Farben (in der normalen Systempalette) zur Verfgung stehen. Installation ============ Besitzt man nur ein Gert (CD-ROM) welches durch MetaDOS angesteuert wird, mu man nichts weiter beachten. Dieser Abschnitt kann getrost bersprungen werden. Nur wenn man mehrere MetaDOS-Gerte installiert hat, sollte man diesen Abschnitt beachten. Sind mehrere MetaDOS-Gerte (CD-ROMs) angemeldet, hat man mehrere Mglichkeiten, das richtige Gert auszuwhlen: 1) Man bergibt die GemDOS-Kennung des CD-ROM-Laufwerks als Parameter. (Ab TOS 2.0x kann man im DESKTOP CDP.APP mit diesem Parameter anmelden) Der Parameter darf auch die Form 'x.CDP' besitzen (x steht fr die GemDOS-Kennung). Man kann also CDP.APP auf die Dateikennung *.CDP im DESKTOP anmelden. ffnet man eine Datei (sie darf auch leer sein) mit dem Namen K.CDP wird das CD-ROM K: benutzt, ffnet man dagegen G.CDP, wird das CD-ROM G: benutzt. Diese Mglichkeit ist praktisch, wenn man mehrere CD-ROM-Laufwerke (eventuell sogar gleichzeitig) benutzt. 2) Benutzt man nur ein bestimmtes CDROM-Laufwerk als Audio-CD-Player, kann man das Programm von CDP.APP in CDP_x.APP umbenennen - das x steht fr den Laufwerksbuchstaben, der auch vom Desktop fr das CD-ROM verwendet wird. Beispiel: Ist das CD-ROM unter K: im Desktop angemeldet heisst das Programm jetzt 'CDP_K.APP'. HINWEIS: Es darf sich nur ein(!) Programm mit dem Namen CDP_x.APP im Verzeichnis befinden. Ansonsten kann nicht entschieden werden, welches gestartet wurde. Installation als Accessory ========================== Das Programm kann auch als Accessory installiert werden. Wegen einer Einschrnkung des GEM (Speicher, der durch ein Accessory reserviert wurde, gehrt leider nicht dem Accessory, sondern dem gerade laufenden Programm. Der Speicher wird deshalb beim Starten und Beenden eines Programmes wieder freigegeben) mssen beim Betrieb als Accessory Abstriche in Kauf genommen werden (In einer Multitasking-Umgebung gibt es diese Einschrnkung nicht!) Beim Betrieb als Accessory gibt es folgende Einschrnkungen (Single-TOS): * Die Dialoge ffnen sich systemmodal (d.h. nicht in einem Fenster). [ Das ist allerdings keine Einschrnkung des GEM, sondern ein Problem meiner GEM-LIB, die bei Fenster-Dialogen noch Probleme mit der AC_CLOSE-Message hat ] * Es knnen keine neuen CDs in die Datenbank aufgenommen werden, dazu msste nmlich dauerhaft Speicher angefordert werden. Inwieweit es Probleme mit GEM-Autostart-Programmen (z.B. alternative Desktops) gibt, kann ich nicht sagen. Wenn es Probleme gibt, mu man auf den Einsatz als Accessory verzichten. Da das Programm auf jeden Fall Speicher anfordert (direkt nach dem Starten), fr die Datenbank und fr die RSC-Datei, knnen Probleme nicht ausgeschlossen werden. Ohne GEM-Autostart- Programme sollten alle Speicheranforderungen stattfinden, solange ausschliesslich der Desktop als Hauptprogramm aktiv ist. Dann gehren alle angeforderten Speicherblcke zum Desktop, und der wird ja nie beendet. Wenn ein Autostart-Programm aber schon gestartet wird, bevor der CD-Player seinen bentigten Speicher angefordert hat, wird es Probleme geben, sobald dieses Programm beendet wird. Es gibt irgendeinen (unsauberen?) Trick, mit dem man auch aus einem Accessory dauerhaft Speicher anfordern kann. Wenn mir jemand diesen Trick verrt, kann ich die Einschrnkungen beim Accessory-Betrieb eventuell vermeiden. Was kann das Programm ===================== Das Programm bietet fast alle Funktionen eines normalen Audio-CD-Players. Es verwaltet ausserdem noch eine kleine Datenbank, in der Titel und Interpret der einzelnen CD-Tracks eingegeben werden knnen. Mit Hilfe dieser Datenbank kann das Programm die gerade eingelegte CD identifizieren und im Klartext Titel und Interpret anzeigen. Jeder einzelne Track der CD wird natrlich auch als Text angezeigt. Mit Hilfe dieses Programms kann man weiterhin Tracks (oder beliebige Ausschnitte davon) auf Festplatte kopieren (ohne Umwege ber D/A- und A/D-Wandler). Es stehen dazu verschiedene Sampleformate zur Verfgung. Da die Atari-Rechner mit der Samplefrequenz von 44100 Hz einer Audio CD leider nicht viel anfangen knnen, kann beim Abspeichern auf Festplatte auch noch eine Umrechnung auf Atari-(Falcon) bliche Frequenzen stattfinden. Das Haupfenster von 'CD-Player' =============================== Der Aufbau dieses Fensters orientiert sich an normalen Audio-CD-Playern. Die Knpfe, die ein CD-Player hat wird man auch in diesem Fenster finden. Sie knnen auch mit der Tastatur ausgewhlt werden. Unterste Reihe: --------------- 1. Eject (Taste E): Die Schublade des CD-ROM-Laufwerks wird ausgefahren. 2. Stop (Taste S): Die Audio-Wiedergabe wird gestoppt. 3. Play (Taste P): Die Audio-Wiedergabe wird begonnen. 4. Pause (Taste P): Die Wiedergabe wird gestoppt, kann aber an dieser Stelle fortgesetzt werden. 5. Skip Back (Taste -): Springt an den Anfang des aktuellen Tracks; wenn man schon dort ist, an den Anfang des vorherigen Tracks. 6. Back (Taste B): Springt 2 sec zurck. Drckt man zustzlich eine SHIFT-Taste, dann 6 sec. 7. FWD (Taste F): Springt 2 sec vor. Drckt man zustzlich eine SHIFT-Taste, dann 6 sec. 8. Skip FWD (Taste +): Springt an den Anfang des nchsten Tracks. 9. Disk-Symbol: Popup mit weiteren Funktionen: 'ber CD-Player' (Control-I): Informationen ber das Programm 'Datenbank bearbeiten' (Control-E): Man kann Titel und Interpret der gerade eingelegten CD eingeben und/oder alle anderen Eintrge bearbeiten. (siehe unten) 'Datenbank speichern' (Control-S): Speichert die Datenbank. 'Datenbank exportieren': Die Daten der Dateinbank werden in einer ASCII-Datei ge- speichert, die in Datebbank-Programmen importiert werden kann. 'Tracks exportieren' (Control-W): Speichert Tracks auf Festplatte. (siehe unten) 'Einstellungen' (Alternate-O) Programm-Einstellungen verndern. 'Einstellungen speichern' Die Einstellungen werden gespeichert. 'Programm beenden' (Control-Q): Das Programm wird beendet. 10. Titelauswahl: Der abzuspielende Titel kann direkt in einem Popup-Men ausgewhlt werden. Sind die Daten zur CD schon in der Datenbank vorhanden, werden hier alle Titel im Klartext angezeigt. Die Titel knnen auch ber die Tastatur ausgewhlt werden: einfach eine (bis zu zweistellige) Zahl eintippen. Die anderen Knpfe: ------------------- (Im eingeschalteten Zustand leuchtet im Display ein entsprechender Text auf) A (Taste F1), B (Taste F2): Mit diesen beiden Knpfen kann man zwei Stellen (A und B) der CD markieren. Die jeweilige Stelle (Zeit) wird dann unten rechts im Display angezeigt. Ein weiterer Klick auf diese Knpfe lscht die jeweilige Marke wieder. Bei einem Doppelklick auf A oder B springt der Player an diese Position. Beim Speichern von Audio-Daten auf Festplatte (siehe unten) kann man auf Wunsch genau den Ausschnitt zwischen A und B speichern. Auf diese Weise kann ein Ausschnitt sehr einfach bestimmt werden (Play, FWD, Back etc.) um ihn dann mit der Funktion "Track exportieren" zu speichern. PROGRAM (Taste F3): Die Reihenfolge, in der die Titel gespielt werden, kann hier festgelegt werden. Im Dialog findet man zwei Listen (CD-Inhalt und Reihenfolge). In der Liste 'CD-Inhalt' werden alle Titel der CD aufgezhlt, in der Liste 'Reihenfolge' werden die Titel in der gewnschten Reihenfolge aufgezhlt. Die Reihenfolge bestimmt man, indem man die Titel aus der Liste 'CD-Inhalt' an die gewnschte Stelle in der Liste 'Reihenfolge' verschiebt. Auch unter 'CD-Inhalt' kann man in die 'Reihenfolge'- Liste verschieben; beim Abspielen wird der Player dann an dieser Stelle in den Pause-Modus versetzt. Titel aus der 'Reihenfolge'-Liste knnen wieder entfernt werden: die entsprechenden Titel kurz anklicken (selektieren) und dann 'Lschen' auswhlen. Das Umsortieren in der Liste ist durch einfaches Verschieben mglich. 'Alles bertragen' bertrgt alle Titel der CD in die 'Reihenfolge'- Liste. Wenn man die CD auf Kassette berspielen will, kann man mit 'Aufteilen' die Titel der 'Reihenfolge'-Liste so aufteilen, da sie gut auf die angegebe Kassettenlnge passen. Dazu werden -Eintrge in die Liste eingetragen, die Titel zwischen diesen Eintrgen sind maximal die angegeben Zeit lang. Mit dem Knopf Zeitanzeige kann man die jeweilige Lnger der Titel einblenden. Mit dem Knopf 'Programm in Datenbank' kann die programmierte Reihenfolge in die Datenbank bernommen werden. Wenn die CD das nchste Mal ins Lauf- werk gesteckt wird, kann dieses Programm sofort benutzt werden. (Daten- bank speichern nicht vergessen) DATABASE (Taste F4): CD-Datenbank bearbeiten (siehe unten). PLAY-MODE (Taste F5): Abspiel-Modus - Normal (Control-1): Die Titel werden von vorne nach hinten gespielt. Nicht gespielt werden 'ausgeschaltete' Titel. - Einzel (Control-2): Es wird nur ein Titel gespielt. - Programm (Control-3): Die Titel werden in der programmierten Reihenfolge abge- spielt. - Zufall (Control-4): Die Titel werden in einer zuflligen Reihenfolge gespielt. 'Ausgeschaltete' Titel werden nicht gespielt. - Block (Control-5): Nur der bereich zwischen den Marken A und B wird gespielt. - Anspielen (Control-6): Alle Titel werden 10 sec angespielt. Kann abgebrochen werden durch Play, Pause, Stop etc. TIME (Taste F6): Im Display wird die Zeitanzeige umgeschaltet zwischen 'Song': Zeit, die vom aktuellen Lied schon gespielt wurde. 'Disc': Zeit, die von der CD schon gespielt wurde. 'Remain Song': Zeit, die vom aktuellen Lied noch gespielt werden. 'Remain Disc': Zeit, die von der CD noch gespielt werden. REPEAT (Taste F7): Die CD (bzw. der Track) wird, sobald sie (er) komplett gespielt wurde, nochmals gespielt. Volume: (Taste > fr lauter; Taste < fr leiser) Die Lautstrke fr den Kopfhrerausgang kann festgelegt werden. Datenbank bearbeiten (F4) ==================== Liegt eine CD im CD-ROM-Laufwerk, die sich noch nicht in der Datenbank befindet, wird automatisch ein leerer Datensatz erzeugt den man jetzt mit den Daten der CD ausfllen kann (Titel und Interpret der CD und die Titel der einzelnen Lieder). Befindet sich die CD schon in der Datenbank, so wird der entsprechende Datensatz angezeigt. Wenn man bestimmte Titel einer CD nicht mag, kann man sie ausschalten, so da sie nicht mehr gespielt werden. Ist das Kstchen vor dem Titel angekreuzt, wird der Titel gespielt, sonst nicht. Ausnahmen: Bei direkter Titelauswahl (Popup oder per Zifferneingabe ber die Tastatur) und im SINGLE-Modus knnen grundstzlich alle Titel gespielt werden. Mit den Pfeil-Buttons kann man zu den anderen Datenstzen wechseln. Mit den Doppelpfeilen kann man schnell mit gedrckt gehaltener Maustaste durch die Datenstze blttern. Mit dem Lschen-Button wird der angezeigte Datensatz gelscht. Auch mit den Tastenkombinationen ALT-P und ALT-N kann man zurck bzw. vor blttern. Datenbank exportieren ===================== Die Daten der CDs knnen in einer Datei gespeichert werden, die in richtigen Datenbanken importiert und bearbeitet werden kann. Da es sich um eine ASCII-Datei handelt, mu man angeben, durch welche Zeichenkombination Datenfelder bzw. Datenstze getrennt werden. In den Eingabemasken werden alle Zeichen durch Komma getrennt. Die Zeichen knnen direkt eingegeben werden; dann mssen sie mit ' oder " umschlossen werden. Alternativ kann auch der ASCII-Code als Dezimalzahl angegeben werden. Beispiel: 13,10 Trenung durch ASCII-Code 13 (CR) und 10 (LF) "," Trennung durch Komma. Ausserdem kann in diesem Dialog noch angegeben werden, welche Datenfelder exportiert werden sollen. Tracks exportieren (Control-W) ================== Hier kann man einzelne Tracks (oder Ausschnitte davon) der CD auf Festplatte speichern. Geht dabei der Speicherplatz auf der Platte aus, erhlt man eine Fehlermeldung. Die Datei wird aber noch korrekt geschlossen so da man sie trotzdem verwenden kann. Auch wenn man die CD aus dem CD-ROM Laufwerk nimmt, whrend man Audio-Daten auf Festplatte speichert, wird die Datei korrekt geschlossen. Track: Mit den '+'/'-'-Buttons kann man einen Titel anwhlen. Mit einem Klick auf den Track Zhler (zwischen '-' und '+') kann man sich einen Titel auch direkt aus einem Popup (im Klartext) aussuchen. Die genaue Start- und End-Zeit des Tracks wird in den folgenden beiden Feldern eingetragen. Block A-B: Falls zwei Stellen (A und B) auf der CD markiert wurden, kann man hiermit genau den Ausschnitt zwischen A und B auswhlen. Die entsprechenden Zeiten werden in Start und Ende-Felder bertragen. Start/Ende: Die Start- und Ende-Zeit kann hier auch mit der Tastatur verndert werden. Die Noten-Buttons dienen zur akustischen Kontrolle. Der Button bei Start spielt die CD ab der eingegebenen Zeit ab. Der Button bei Ende spielt die letzten 10 sec bis zur angegebenen Ende-Zeit. Speicherplatz: Hier wird angezeigt wievel Speicherplatz die Datei auf der Festplatte bentigen wird. Der Wert wird bei allen nderungen, die ber einen Button stattfinden, automatisch neu berechnet. Aber wenn Start und Ende-Zeit per Tastatur gendert werden, kann das nicht automatisch geschehen. Deshalb kann man auch mit dem Rechnen-Button den Speicherplatzverbrauch neu be- rechnen lassen. Exportformat: Hier werden Einzelheiten ber das gewnschte Dateiformat eingestellt. Nicht alle Kombinationen dieser Einstellungen sind erlaubt. Das Programm sorgt dafr, da nur erlaubte Einstellungen vorgenommen werden. Format (Dateiformat): DVS: Wird vom Programm WinRec (fr Falcon) benutzt. AVR: Wird z.B. vom System-Audio-Manager (SAM) benutzt. WAVE: PC/Windows, wird aber auch von einigen Atari-Programmen untersttzt SND,AU: Bis auf die Endung (AU/SND) sind beide Formate identisch. Wird benutzt in der Unix-Welt (und auch auf dem Mac). Frequenz (in Hz): Die ersten acht Frequenzen sind die auf dem Falcon benutzten Frequenzen. Einige der Frequenzen findet man mit kleinen Abweichungen auf dem STE und TT. Die letzen vier Frequenzen werden auf dem Atari normalerweise nicht untersttzt, aber wenn man die Daten auf anderen Rechnerwelten (PC/Mac/Unix) benutzen mchte, kann man sie verwenden (eventuell auch auf Ataris mit Zusatzhardware). Achtung: Jede Umrechnung der Frequenz fhrt zu leichten (hohe Frequenz) bis starken (niedrige Frequenz) Qualittseinbuen. Speziell (Frequenz): Mchte man die Daten auf eine ganz bestimmte Frequenz umrechnen, welche nicht in der eben beschriebenen Auswahl vorhanden ist, kann man sie hier eingeben. Erlaubt sind im Prinzip alle Werte - welche Frequenzen sinnvoll sind, mu man aber selbst entscheiden. TT und STE-Besitzer knnen hier natrlich die exakten Frequenzen eintragen, die ein TT bzw. STE verarbeitet (diese weichen von den Falcon-Frequenzen leicht ab). Kanle: Stereo oder Mono. Bei Mono werden beide Kanle zusammengemischt. Auflsung: 8 oder 16 Bit. Der Falcon benutzt normalerweise 16 Bit pro Samplewert, auf STE/TT werden nur 8 Bit verwendet. Bei 8 Bit gehen erhebliche Mengen an Informationen verloren und klingt daher deutlich schlechter. Aber 8 Bit bentigen dafr nur halb soviel Speicherplatz. Packen: Bei den Sampleformaten DVR und AU/SND knnen die (16 Bit) Daten gepackt gespeichert werden. Die Kompressionsrate liegt bei genau 50%. Prinzipiell mu man beim Packen leichte Qualittseinbuen erwarten. Beide Packverfahren fhren aber zu wesentlich besseren Ergebnissen als die Speicherung mit 8 Bit Tiefe (welche den gleichen Platzbedarf hat). Einstellungen ============= Normalerweise ffnet sich das Hauptfenster nach dem Starten in der Bildschirmmitte. Wem das nicht gefllt, kann hier angeben, ob die aktuelle Position gespeichert werden soll. Beim nchsten Start ffnet sich das Fenster dann an dieser Position. Die am CD-ROM-Laufwerk eingestellte Lautstrke wird normalerweise beim Programmstart nicht verndert. Wem das auch nicht passt (weil z.B. direkt nach dem Einschalten des Computers die Lautstrke auf Maximum steht), kann auch hier die aktuelle Einstellung speichern, welche beim nchsten Start eingestellt wird. In Multitasking-Umgebungen (Mag!C, MultiTOS, Geneva) kann man die Menleiste abschalten. Alle Funktionen des Programms sind natrlich auch weiterhin erreichbar. Falls der verwendete MetaDOS CD-ROM-Treiber nicht alle vom CD-Player verwendeten Audiokommandos untersttzt, meldet sich das Programm nach dem Starten mit einem entsprechenden Hinweis. Diesen Hinweis kann man natrlich auch unterdrcken. Dialoge ======= Die Dialoge werden in Fenstern dargestellt. Dadurch werden in einer Multitasking-Umgebung keine anderen Programme angehalten. Das Hauptfenster kann aber nur bei geschlossenen Dialogen bedient werden. Die Dialoge knnen auch mit der Tastatur bedient werden. In den Buttons sind manche Buchstaben unterstrichen. Drckt man die Alternate-Taste zusammen mit diesen Buch- staben, whlt man diesen Button aus. In Popup-Mens kann man auch mit Cursor-hoch/runter und Return einen Menpunkt auswhlen. UNDO schliet ein Popup-Men ohne eine Auswahl zu treffen. Einige Hinweise: ================ Damit das Programm alle seine Dateien findet (und die Dateien auch im richtigen Verzeichnis speichern kann), sollte das aktuelle Verzeichnis beim Start von CDP.APP, das Verzeichnis sein, indem sich CDP.APP befindet. Auch sollte man darauf achten, da kein anderes Programm (z.B. ein alternativer Fileselector) das aktuelle Verzeichnis von CDP verndert. Ab CD-Player Version 1.2 werden auch die Zeiten jedes einzelnen Titels in der Datenbank abgelegt. Sie knnen somit auch exportiert werden. In alten Datenbanken sind diese Zeiten aber noch nicht vorhanden. Um sie in die Datenbank zu bertragen, mssen die jeweiligen CDs nur in das CD-ROM eingelegt werden. Sobald der Player die CD erkannt hat, sind die Zeiten auch in der Datenbank vorhanden. Die Zeiten stehen auf 00:00, falls zur CD noch keine Zeitinformationen vorliegen. Es ist mglich, da einige Funktionen des Programms nicht funktionieren, weil entweder der CD-ROM-Treiber oder das CD-ROM-Laufwerk diese nicht untersttzen. Voll funktionsfhig ist das Programm beispielsweise mit den CD-Tools (Treiber) und dem Toshiba XM-4101 (Laufwerk). Einige Funktionen des Programms (z.B. SHUFFLE und SINGLE) erfordern es, da fr jeden zu spielenden Titel ein Kommando an MetaDOS (bzw. an das CD-ROM- Laufwerk) gesendet werden mu. Das bedeutet: wenn man das Programm beendet whrend eine CD abgespielt wird, wird die CD normalerweise bis zum Ende durchgespielt unabhngig von den Einstellungen (SHUFFLE, SINGLE etc.) von CDP, da es nun keine Kommandos mehr an das Laufwerk schicken kann. Die vom Programm untersttzen Sampleformate wurden alle in einer Artikel- serie der ST-Computer beschrieben (vielen Dank an die beiden Autoren dieser Serie: Harald Schnfeld, Bernd Spellenberg). Das Programm ist in Pure-Pascal geschrieben, die Routinen zur Frequenz- umrechnung und die Packroutinen (DVS: Deltapack, AU/SND: u-Law) in Assembler. Versionsliste ============= Version Datum Bemerkung ------------------------------------------------------------------- V1.0 12.12.1994 - erste verffentlichte Version V1.1 15.01.1995 - Auch wenn das Progamm vorher beendet wird, wird jetzt die CD unter Umstnden noch bis zum Ende abgespielt. - Lngere Eingabefelder bei Titel-Eingabe - Voreinstellungen des Programms in CDP.INF - ASCII-Export der Datenbank (zur Verwendung in richtigen Datenbanken) - Peinlicher Fehler aus V1.0 beseitigt: Bei CDs, welche nicht in der Datenbank vorhanden waren, ging das Programm davon aus, da alle Tracks ausgeschaltet waeren. Daher konnte man unbekannte CDs nur titelweise bzw. im SINGLE-Modus abspielen :-( - Mehrere MetaDOS-Gerte: Das gewnschte CD-ROM wird jetzt ber den Dateinamen des Programms bestimmt (Umbenennen auf CDP_x.APP - x ist Gemdos-Kennung). V1.1a 16.01.1995 - Schon wieder ein paar Bugs entdeckt :-( Doppelklick auf B hatte die CD ab Marke A statt ab Marke B gespielt. Das Abspielen ab Marke A bzw. B hatte nicht korrekt geklappt (Eine Umrechnung ging daneben). Jetzt sollte es aber funktionieren. V1.2 07.02.1995 - An alle, die noch 'alte' MetaDOS Treiber benutzen, die nur einen Teil der Audio-Kommandos untersttzen: CDP.APP kann jetzt auch hiermit die CD abspielen (Es erscheint ein entsprechender Warnhinweis nach dem Programmstart). Es wird dann aber nicht alles funktionieren. Abhilfe: Einen aktuellen audio- fhigen CD-ROM-Treiber benutzen. - Bei Datensatz-Eingabe kann man nun auch durch Cursor- hoch/runter durch die Titeleintrge scrollen. - Durch ein "Nachlaufen" des CD-ROMs konnte es passieren, da Titel bersprungen wurden, bzw. bei SINGLE & REPEAT wurde eventuell der nchste (falsche) Titel gespielt. Das sollte jetzt nicht mehr passieren. - Zwischen den Titeln gab es immer eine winzige Pause beim Abspielen (fr jeden zu spielenden Titel wurde ein MetaDOS-Kommando aufgerufen). Normalerweise fllt das nicht auf, aber es gibt CDs bei denen die Titel in- einander bergehen. Hier strt die Pause natrlich (auch wenn sie nur sehr kurz ist). Ab V1.2 tritt keine Pause mehr auf. - Die Position des Hauptfensters und die Lautstrke kann auf Wunsch gespeichert werden. Die Lautstrke wird dann beim Programmstart auf den gespeicherten Wert gesetzt. Normalerweise wird sie nicht verndert. - Neue (und alte) Betriebsmodi: * Programm (vom Benutzer festgelegte Reihenfolge) * Block (beliebiger Ausschnitt -> Blockmarken A,B) * Single (nur einzelne Titel) * Zufall (zufllige Reihenfolge) * Normal (komplette CD von vorne bis hinten) * Anspielen (Titel werden 10sec angespielt) - Viele Funktionen sind jetzt auch ber die Menzeile erreichbar. Die Menzeile kann in Multitasking- Systemen abgeschaltet werden. - Die Zeiten der einzelnen Titel werden jetzt auch in der Datenbank abgelegt und knnen somit auch exportiert werden. V1.2a 06.03.1995 - Bugfix: Die Auswahl von 'Datenbank bearbeiten' fhrte zum Absturz, wenn keine CD eingelegt war :-( - Jetzt funktionieren auch im Pause-Modus die verschiedenen Zeit-Modi. V1.3 07.06.1995 - Das Einladen der Datenbank geht jetzt wesentlich schneller. - Programmieren-Dialog: Zeitangabe in Pause-Elementen. (Angabe der Zeit seit dem letzten Pause-Element) - Mixed-Mode-CDs bereiten jetzt keine Probleme mehr (falls ein 'moderner' CD-ROM-Treiber benutzt wird) - Bugfix: Fensterkoordinaten wurden falsch gespeichert. - Untersttzung von langen Dateinamen (z.B. auf Minix-FS unter MiNT). - Luft jetzt auch als Accessory (mit Einschrnkungen unter Single-TOS) - Schnellers Blttern durch die Datenbank mglich (Doppelpfeile: Maustaste gedrckt halten) - Unter Magic blieben die << und >> gedrckt. Jetzt geht's auch unter Magic. Dieses Verhalten wurde wahrscheinlich durch einen Bug in Magic hervorgerufen. Laut Profibuch liefert evnt_multi() immer(!) auch den Status der Maustasten zurck, unter Magic scheint das aber nicht zu funktionieren. - Iconify des Hauptfensters wird untersttzt. - Einige kleinere Bugfixes. V1.3a 07.07.1995 - Schnere 3D-Dialogoptik bei Falcon/MTOS/MagiC 3. (ltere Versionen von MagiC 3 stellen die Dialoge leider nicht ganz korrekt dar) - Einige Bugfixes. - Wenn das Programm als ACC installiert ist und das Fenster ist geschlossen, wird jetzt seltener die aktuelle Position der CD erfragt. Bei langsamen CD-Treibern (wie z.B. FALCON.BOS) wird dann nicht mehr soviel Rechenzeit verbraucht. - Der FALCON.BOS-Treiber unterschlgt leider die Endezeit des letzten Titels. Dadurch kam es zu "Hngern" beim Abspielen des letzten Titles, da das Programm der Meinung war der Titel wre zuende. Jetzt wird bei fehlender Endezeit diese auf 100:00:00 gesetzt. Jetzt sollte es keine "Hnger" mehr geben, allerdings stimmen die "Remain"-Zeiten nicht mehr (naja, vorher hatten sie schlielich auch nicht gestimmt) V1.3b 29.09.1995 - Die Popup-Mens zur Titelauswahl werden mit Slidern versehen, wenn mehr als 20 Titel zur Auswahl stehen. Damit kann man jetz immer alle Titel direkt auswhlen. - Iconify jetzt auch fr die Fenster-Dialoge. (Aber immer noch kein ALLICONIFY) - Bugfix: Nachlaufen der Anzeige bei kurzen Blcken (Repeat- Modus) entschrft. - Bugfix: Zwischen den Titeln konnte es zu Aussetzern kommen (trat besonders dann auf, wenn es das Programm durch irgendwelche Dialoge blockiert wurde). - Bugfix: Wenn man im Repeat-Modus im letzten Titel einer CD 'Skip Vorwrts' drckte, spielte das Programm wieder den letzten Titel. Jetzt spielt es den ersten Titel. V1.3c 31.10.1995 - Bugfix: Die Minuten-Anzeige stand manchmal flschlicherweise auf '01'. Zumindest eine Situation, in der der Fehler auftrat ist jetzt gefunden. - Kleine Anpassungen an die GENEVA 4 3D-Optik (diese ist leider nicht ganz MTOS kompatibel) - Kleine Bugfixes. V1.3d 13.11.1995 - Workaround fr den EGON!-Treiber eingebaut. Mindestens Version 2.3 von EGON! besitzt einige Bugs, die verhindern, da alte Versionen des CD-Players korrekt funktionieren. Jetzt sollte der CD-Player auch mit EGON! laufen. 0x. .Ֆ0/܎a.ղ0  0 .  02_ 0B _0Rj_ D*/ܚ.(.6(.(.& ============================================================================ InterActive supported software scheme 10th October 1995 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- About the scheme ---------------- Joe Connor started a Supported Shareware scheme in 1993 to encourage authors of German/French etc software to produce and support English language versions of their software AND to encourage UK users to register their software. With over 900 UK registered users the scheme has been expanded and re-launched as InterActive. The proven benefits of local support includes: - Key to remove features reserved for registered users available - Local telephone, post and Email support - Free update service - No hassle handling foreign currency - Labelled Master disk and registration letter - ST-Guide on-line hypertext help (some software) - Other software (dependent on disk space) The registration fees are set to cover the currency handling, stationary, media and postage costs incurred in mailing out master disks and providing comprehensive support. Although originally a UK support scheme everyone is welcome to register via InterActive as an alternative to registering directly with the author/s. The currently supported software is: Version Software UK-Fee Status and description ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- v1.73e Kandinsky 16 [S] Vector art using GDOS/Speedo/NVDI3 v2.02e Kandinsky 30 [S] Upgrade from v1.73 costs 16 v1.40e Two-in-One 13 [S] Archive manager, twin selector style v4.8 GFA Flydials 13 [S] Enhanced GFA GEM routines [G] v1.04e GFA Patch 6+ [F] GFA patch for compiler v3.5e Everest 11 [S] Text editor, fast and ultra compatible v2.7i gale 11 [S] File compare, edit and patch editor v5.7 GSZRZ 16 [C] XYZmodem protocols [ACC/PRG/030] v1.4b OCR 10+ [F] Optical Character Recognition v1.3b CD-Player 6+ [F] Play audio CDs v0.98b CAB 6+ [F] Crystal Atari Browser, html browser [ACC/PRG] v1.4e ST-Guide 6+ [R] Hypertext help system [ACC/PRG] v2.62e PacShell 11 [S] Archive manager, alt. desk style [GD] v10.94 STG Creator 6+ [F] Create hypertexts the easy way! v3.6 IdeaList 13 [S] Complete printer management [ACC/PRG] v2.03e Adresse 16 [S] Name & Address database [ACC/PRG] v1.5 Munch 23 [S] Art package, mono only v1.36e TurboBlanker 10 [S] Falcon screensaver/accelerator[ACC/PRG] v1.14a Freedom 16 [S] Alternative non-modal file selector v0.59eb Thing 12 [S] Desktop replacement, full AV server Christoph Zwerschke 10* [F] LED Panel, DiskCake, FontSel, Ikarus etc Internet Access Pack 15* [F] CAB plus STiK, on-line OVL file & scripts ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Key: =Sterling +=Minimum *=All titles [C]=Commercial [S]=Shareware [F]=Freeware [R]=Fairware [G]=German [GD]=German Docs [ACC]=Accessory [PRG]=Application [030]=Separate 030 version ============================================================================ How to register inside the UK ----------------------------- 1) Calculate the total amount for the software you wish to register 2) Make a cheque payable to InterActive for the required amount 3) Be sure your name and address is included and *legible*! 4) Send cheque to the address below Contact ------- Mail: 65 Mill Road, Colchester, Essex, CO4 5LJ, England Email: Internet: jconnor@cix.compulink.co.uk NeST: 90:102/168.0@nest.ftn Fido: 2:255/80.64@fidonet.org Turbonet: 100:1021/6.4@turbonet.ftn Telephone: UK+(0)1206 852602 Leave a message on the answerphone! How to register from outside the UK ----------------------------------- Add 1 to your order total to cover postage and send: - A cheque payable *in Sterling* drawn on a *UK* bank address - A Eurocheque - An international Post Office Girocheque payable *in Sterling* - Cash! Sterling, Dollars and DMs are all fine Update services --------------- New releases are highlighted each month in the Shareware column of ST Applications and often featured in the Shareware pages of Atari World. Subscription details for either magazine available on request. By post ------- To receive an update send a self addressed envelope including return postage and an unlabelled unformatted double sided floppy disk. Please state clearly: 1) The software you'd like updated 2) The version you're currently using If you have Internet access --------------------------- You can obtain the latest English language releases via anonymous ftp, www, gopher, telnet or batch ftp from: micros.hensa.ac.uk WWW URL - http://micros.hensa.ac.uk/ Program Path on hensa ------------------------------------------------- Munch: micros/atari/tos/p/p028/munch15e.lzh Two-in-One: micros/atari/tos/n/n140/2in1140e.zip gale: micros/atari/tos/p/p111/egale27i.zip Thing: micros/atari/tos/p/p119/thng59eb.zip PacShell: micros/atari/tos/q/q113/pacsh262.zip OCR: micros/atari/tos/n/n122/ocr14a.lzh ST-Guide: micros/atari/tos/o/o001/st-gui14.lzh Everest: micros/atari/tos/n/n139/evrst35e.zip Kandinsky: micros/atari/tos/n/n141/kand173i.zip The Atari area on hensa is maintained by Denesh Bhabuta who also offers support for over twenty other Atari packages and produces a newsletter containing details of the latest files on hensa. To be added to the mailing list or if you have any other queries concerning hensa Email Denesh: danny@micros.hensa.ac.uk If you have a modem but no ftp access ------------------------------------- You can obtain the latest English language releases by logging onto 42BBS: SysOp: Colin Fisher-McAllum Telephone: UK+(0)1256 895106 Other BBSs and ftp sites are allowed to carry the on-line archives but because minor updates to the English language version are sometimes made without changing the version number hensa and 42BBS are the places to go to ensure you have the very latest versions! Joe Connor --------------------------------------------------------------------------- I///a//y /e/G/y/i//y /m/G/y/q/K/a /w/V/y /{//</Ĕ//yd%6<6<7:,L L $ `@d t\| T<$x(q%%%%& &( &D &` &| &  &&&''$ 6<'@ 6J6X6fq('\'#q(#6t("6(6 66 6!6"66$$$6(#%.7(&7$'7 (7*)78*7F+7T,7b -7p.7~$ 7  :,:1:6 :B :N:S:Z :b  :j  :p    'x''''((  (< (X (t  (  (  :u : :  :(: ::    : ::   O!=8:  4(0),3 4 @1 @1 @ @1  2/ X ) )8")T*X)p)")*X))")*X**4"*P*X*l*"** X!*"*"#**$X%+&+0"'+L*(X)+h*+"++*,X-+.+"/+*0X 1, 2 ,, " ,H* 544,d3P!766@,5 !988@, 7 !;::,9N!=<<,;E!>>:,= O!67:  p,QO;T!@ -  @ -   @ + QO ;   B!;-(  ;-D  /. p -`;"F!@ -| @ ;* H!@ - @ ;4D! @ - !@ #"";; !M!$@ - %@ &QO('';E &Q!)@ - *@ +QO -,,;P +S!.. ;[ 403 p 1.$ 2.@3;^ /.\655;a4O!77 ;d+6 C!   .x . . . . / /   /<  /X  /t  /  /  /   / 0 0 08  0T   0p  0   0  0   0  0 PP ;k ;p ;v  ;| P  ; ; ; ;;;<< M!>) O! >,  C!HH>3  1 @1@1@1 @2 @20 @2L @2h @2@2@2 @2 @2 @3 @@ @@ ,+ >A3,('@3H@3d@3@3@3 @3!@3"@4 #@4($@4D %@4` &@4| '@4 @4 )@+**@ )@@;-9 4.4 /X100>T /3!2X433>a 25!5X766>n 56!8X94,::59D!F<D 4 =5$ >@X@??>| >I!BAA5@@T!DCC5\BE!;EE5xDP!HGG>0FO!II ><H C!  5 5 5 5 6  6  >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>??(??$?% ?&?3?4x ?5?j?k5?l???????????????@@@@.@/@0@J@K@L@f@g@h@@@@@@@@@@@ @@A#1A>AaA#-AAAAAA##B B&B'B(B,B-B.BQBt##BBBBBBBBB##CCCCCCCC?Cb##CCCCCCCCC##CDDDDD D D-DP##DsDyDzD{DDDDD##DDDDDDDEE>##EaEgEhEiEmEnEoEE##EEEEEEEF F,##FOFUFVFWFYFZF[F^F_F`FcFdFeFgFhFiFoFpFqFyFzF{FFFFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FFF FGG  GGGG G(G)G*G/G0G1G;G< G=GGGH GIGSGT GUG_G` GaGkGl GmGwGx GyGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GGG GHH H HH HHH  H!H+H, H-H7H8 H9HCHD HEHOHP HQH^H_ H`HtHHHHHHHHHIII)I* I+I>I?I@ISITIUIhIiIjI}I~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJJJJ%J&J'J/J0J1J9J:J;JNJOJPJcJdJeJxJyJzJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJK K K K K!K"K5K6K7KJKKKLK_K`KaKmKn KoKrK{ K~KKKKK KKK KKKKKKKKK KKK KKK KLL LLL LLL L  M M@ M`M( P(RRSS@ST@TU( X(\\]@]^^`^_ __778%8B8899n99::[3][ MetaDOS or CD-ROM not | installed!][Cancel][3][ No more windows available! ][Cancel][2][ Erase record? ][Yes|No][2][ The database is not saved! | Quit program?][Quit|Save|Cancel][3][ Not enough memory left! ][Cancel][3][ Input is not valid.| Time: End value must be | greater than start value! ][Cancel][3][ Cannot read CD! Please check | your drive (and driver | software) supports audio | data...][Cancel][3][ Write error! ][Cancel][2][ The CD-ROM driver doesn't| support all audio commands| needed in this program!][Continue][2][ Delete all? ][ Yes | No ]Export audio tracksExport databaseSONGDISCREMAIN SONGREMAIN DISC SINGLEPROGRAMSHUFFLEBLOCKSCANCD-PlayerV1.0a01/95Alexander ClaussStresemannstrae 44D-64297 Darmstadt-- Germany --CDP is FREEWARE!OKEdit databaseOKExport tracksTrack:Block A-BStart: End:Format:Channels:Depth:Compress:Frequency: Special:HzKBOKCancel CDP File Edit Options About CD-Player... ^I ------------------------ Desk Accessory 1 Desk Accessory 2 Desk Accessory 3 Desk Accessory 4 Desk Accessory 5 Desk Accessory 6 Save database ^S Export database... E ------------------------ Export tracks... W ------------------------ Quit ^Q Database... F4 ----------------- Program... F3 Normal ^1 Single ^2 Program ^3 Shuffle ^4 Block ^5 Scan ^6 ---------------- Options... O ...save Export databaseInterpreterTitleTimeTracksOKCancelOptionsSave volumeSave window positionWarning (old CDROM driver)Menu bar in multitaskingOKCancelPlaying order 30 min (C60)45 min (C90)60 min (C120)Display timeOKCancelTRKIDXTRACKSMINSECREMAIN SONGSHUFFLEREPEAT12345678901234567890123456123456789000001.23 02.46>> VOLUME >>1234567890123456789012345612345678901234567890123456 About CD-Player... ^I ------------------------- Edit database... ^E Save database ^S Export database... E ------------------------- Export track... ^W ------------------------- Options... O Save options ------------------------- Quit program ^Q Author __________________________________ Interpreter: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX__________________________________CD title: __________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX01:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0002:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0003:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0004:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0005:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0006:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0007:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0008:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0009:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:0010:____________________________________________________________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX00:00Erase Track 01 000000 __:__.__ 999999000000 __:__.__ 999999 Format WAVE Stereo 16 Bit Nein 49170 25033 _____ 99999 File length 1123123CALC 49170 32780 24585 19668 16390 12292 9834 8195 --------- 44100 22050 11025 8000 DVS AVR WAVE SND AU 8 Bit 16 Bit Yes No Mono Stereo Separation ___________________Record: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________________Field: ___________________XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Export fields ___max. number of tracks: ___999 CD content CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Order CD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxxCD-Titel xxxxxxxxx Partition 74 __ min 99Divide Options Transfer allErase selectionPrg.in database Normal Single Program Shuffle Block Scan Üw"T"۔">㜪"r"K*R JT*R JT*RJTҋ3??????????????8"<>K>>|>>>p n&4||&l  d$8. ,@@I '@$7\(7\*| (Ma|JkpC +1fCg@g@r`yt"( +"g "( YHAY+A2Ag2gC@Ca09EvS@CQA +$- 0(0*pNuaJk "o" pNuHa.'|,|0|#a8Jkh(|"v ЄaJkPAH g* (g g: (g0R n$`ACIpag|1Apa +"g8 +XH@X'@0+X7@ +XH@X'@ +XH@X'@ `'k7k'k'k `xACQpagf|1Axa +"g6 +XH@X'@0+X7@ +XH@X'@ +XH@X'@ `'k7k'k'k`l*PFH8(@Hy?< NA\Hy?< NA\#@#83DIxg Bg Pg2 RgT`aJk m n#@`pHy`RaJk m n#8`HHy`* DmR /f Wg, Of 3D`Hy Hy?< NA\?< NA\RSDjT"98p #< <"<LNu Dm8 ,=f0TUDrv  g0k  n$ԁւ"RSfNurNuH&( 9@z nйp n&4||&l  d$8. ,@@D*%  D*% D*%ĪcIDgWD*%gWcID                             `*D$oI*)JLHz?<&NN\O"j)IDA W*j,Jf J-gRMJg"Rp Af^&MRM Rf Gf Vf =fp#@JgNJ&I P@Jf"Ͱf ,Ma*N#MJfB` _fj Pfd Bf^ PfX =fRYIJfLrpg: 0e< 9dҀ` Ae( zd" Fc ae Ҁ`²$W`"JfgBN&IAp }bB0,Ha8N"@$ p lxep@)@l)Ih"`BQ)Id`BQ ,, o2V@ l$)I B"Y"XI#I2B"24)I\(" VA"Ad?<`J0fF" lxeT)A0 ,80BAHAR@&,8HCBCHCFC׬8.I/ S// / ?<?<JNAO NNlN>`\ON ,Hg/?<?<NMPO?<LNAJ =fJRNrtB0m B nҁ&ҁҁ҃҂`.g g+g fv RNJg)A( NNu ,p",?NAXOJgp> nf?NAXOL$N^NuNVH!4*H&IBA&r gr fRM`Jgtp@"g"[@g@gU@g `RM$M~`RM-M~` RM&`&~Jg.JgVDHH`r g r gp`pJgRM`JgB`xHxNdXOJg/ p?p?pF?NA\O$_B J"naB L,N^NuNVBHn/?<>NATONx?/HT?<?/B?<BNA/@2/ ?ABo>BBg?Hx?<BNAO rJWD?A NAO p0LTNuH'$./*o ,/$p)@t",tJgJkf/NpXOJgzJo / /?r??NAO *JkRJg pf Hl`Hx?r@?NAO z`.g  XR Hl`Hx?r@?NAO ` p f Nb` @/ /?r??NAO NFL$Nu)_PHT2/.?o ?A?<BNATON)_PHTJfpN> //o/@?<@NATON// "QS@t `| SAgU@c дgSAW  _ $Nu/2H@t `WWf(CQQ`дWWf CQQ g$Nu/./p)@t",tJk"dl AJpg A `p )@p.NuH./ /NXO*@ fp`*-gBUp`0-H/NRXOBUJtgp`pL NuH?4./(*o,,/0/NPXO&@ fp`>+H+g JhgHzHxp?p@?NAO f0+H/NXOJg// /NBO `zz M ///N(O (JoP Ѕr 5f0 MSHHx//NO &JCf Ѕ `p@g M N<"ځfJtgp` L,NupaNVH/4..,./NLXO*@ f p)@p` >-H-gJhgHzHxp?p@?NAO -gHxB/NO *Jjp`g//. /N$O *` n -H-Hp@Ѐe^(,4l( O ",\(p@Ѐm&A`:HxpH?NA\O(p@Ѐm$ Ѐc( m(</pH?NA\O&@ g-K Hd"`"H nCN-@윀f ." 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Hn/N, nB .*nN^NuJjDJjDaDNuaDDNuJjDaDNu/HA4fH@HAHB4g0H@40HB2$Nu/v AdQC AdYC A dUCJAkSC4HBBBHC604HAdSCЁr2HCH@A&$NuH0$&HBHgHCHgCHBBBЂL NuNuANNuStack space exhaustedNVH -H bm/0< [ON|OFF] *error* %s press Return to exit ExtenDOS Pro is not loadedinvalid ExtenDOS Pro cookietranslat v%s is incompatible with ExtenDOS Pro v%d.%d1.0drive %c is not a CD-ROM drive ((((( H ((((( H --8-Z-| (> """"H`" U"h HA$HUO/?/ ?A0N U"h .?/?/6/-/ NOJgVp?Bgr ?t?// // a U"h@ hP.?/ / N HѮp>r??t ?// // aO8`p?r??t?// // aOx`( S@"RA????// // ?A>afO8/&p@o HѮ .䰭m Hr?t??r?// /6/ a" U"h@ - hP.?/ / N U"hD.N U"h8.N U"hT.N U"hd.NRmL,N^NuNVH?4*n m0o m"PUOp?NXO;m0~&Mv` m2'HRGXKp$րm0mpmf/ a^XO m<(` / a Documentation for TRANSLAT v1.0 (2 February 1997) ================================================= TRANSLAT version 1.0 is Freeware by Roger Burrows, Anodyne Software. It is hereby placed in the public domain, and may be freely copied and distributed. Please keep the program executable and this documentation together - thanks. Who needs this anyway? ---------------------- Anyone with ExtenDOS Pro and a CD-ROM disk with lowercase filenames that appear in (e.g.) an item selector but aren't accessible when selected. The included program enables a feature of ExtenDOS Pro that is normally disabled (filename translation) and thereby provides access to the files on these disks. Contents -------- This archive file contains TRANSLAT.TTP and TRANSLAT.TXT (you're reading it now). Installation ------------ Just copy TRANSLAT.TTP to your boot drive (probably best in your EXTENDOS folder). When to use it -------------- If you have a CD-ROM disk whose directory listing shows lowercase names, you will need to use TRANSLAT.TTP in order to access any of the files or to see inside any of the folders. Temporary use ------------- For temporary use (effective until you next boot your system), you can run TRANSLAT.TTP from the desktop. Just double-click on TRANSLAT.TTP, and in the resulting dialog box, enter the logical drive letter of your CD-ROM drive, followed by a space, followed by the word ON, e.g. P ON Permanent use ------------- You need to manually add one line to your EXTENDOS.CNF file for each CD-ROM drive you have, using an editor that can save files as ASCII text. Most editors have an option to do this. ***IMPORTANT*** If you save EXTENDOS.CNF as a word-processing document, ExtenDOS Pro will probably not be able to understand it, and will report an error during startup. Each line you add will run TRANSLAT.TTP to change the setting for a specific drive, and must follow all the ExtenDOS Pro control lines (the ones that begin with an *). We recommend putting them in sequence at the end of EXTENDOS.CNF. Each line looks like this (differing only in the drive letter referenced): C:\EXTENDOS\TRANSLAT.TTP P ON So, assuming you have just one CD-ROM drive, your EXTENDOS.CNF file after modification should look something like this: ; ; some (optional) comments ; *BOS, C:\EXTENDOS\CD.BOS T=20, Z:5 *DOS, C:\EXTENDOS\UNIDRIVE.DOS P=12 B=6 R/W, P:Z C:\EXTENDOS\TRANSLAT.TTP P ON Detailed contents of the *BOS & *DOS lines will depend on the options selected during installation/configuration. Turning translation off ----------------------- There should be no need, under normal circumstances, to turn translation off. However, if you experience any problems with translation turned on, you may wish to turn it off as part of the problem isolation process. You can turn it off by running TRANSLAT.TTP from the desktop. Just double-click on TRANSLAT.TTP, and in the resulting dialog box, enter the logical drive letter of your CD-ROM drive, followed by a space, followed by the word OFF, e.g. P OFF Getting the current translation status -------------------------------------- If you can't remember whether translation is on or off, or you just want to verify the status, you can run TRANSLAT.TTP from the desktop to report the status. Just double-click on TRANSLAT.TTP, and in the resulting dialog box, enter the logical drive letter of your CD-ROM drive by itself. The translation status of the drive will be displayed on the screen. ABOUT ExtenDOS Pro ------------------ ExtenDOS Pro is an extension to Atari's TOS that supports a wide range of CD-ROM drives on all Atari TOS systems, including the ST, TT, and Falcon. ExtenDOS Pro is available from your Atari dealer or direct from Anodyne Software at the address below. Anodyne Software 6 Cobbler Court Ottawa Ontario K1V 0B8 CANADA. 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