cabbie@chinet.UUCP (Richard Andrews) (10/10/86)
I have been contemplating a mod to the XL-XE line of Atari computers. It is a uart (RS-232 port). The way that I see it, it wouldn't require too much work. It would be interrupt driven for receive and transmit. There are two unused interrupt vectors in the OS, namely VPRCED and VINTER at locations $202-203 and $204-205. The uart would be mapped to $D700-$D70F. The code for the actual IO would boot from disk like the the 850 code does now. I have the chip count up to 3 chips and now I have two questions- 1) Is anyone interested in such a mod either internal or external to their machine as a public domain item? (internal would be neat...just a DB-25 connector out the rear.) 2) Is anyone interested in marketing such a modification? The total cost to build should be around $25-$30 tops. Any comments?????? reply to.... Rich Andrews ...ihnp4!chinet!cabbie
DYOUNG@D.ISI.EDU (C. David Young) (10/11/86)
An internal uart would be wonderful because we could then run disk I/O and printer I/O simultaneously with serial I/O. I heartily recommend a public domain item. David Young -------
jhs@MITRE-BEDFORD.ARPA (10/11/86)
I understand the R:Verter gives you another very cheap way to get an RS-232 port, namely use the existing serial I/O channel used for the peripherals, together with MC1488-14889 level converters, the only external chips you need. The "UART" is already implemented in the POKEY chip and all you need to make it work is the software (which may be tricky, but as it uses no silicon, software is free, isn't it?). Does anyone out there in net-land know where to get a driver for the R:Verter? Is is Public Domain? -John Sangster jhs@mitre-bedford.arpa
jhs@MITRE-BEDFORD.ARPA (10/11/86)
The little general purpose interface people were asking me about (and of which I sent schematics out to a lot of people) has a MC6850 ACIA port, which can run 19.2 Kbits/sec independent of the SIO bus. I could probably get my cousin to do up a PC board of this thing if I wheedled him a little. It is designed to run from the parallel port of the 800XL, but maybe there's a way to bring it out of the cartridge port on the old 800. I wouldn't mind having one of that type myself now that I have an 800 sitting around also. David, what do you have down there, an old 800 or other assorted 8-bitters? -John Sangster jhs@mitre-bedford.arpa ...ihnp4!linus!mbunix!jhs
sharakan@think.COM (Eric Sharakan) (10/18/86)
A.I.D. (makers of the r:verter) used to have a BBS where any owners of R:verters can login using the serial number of their device. The BBS contained all versions of their handlers, as well as some other neat things. I don't know if it is still operational, you should call them to find out. (They are located in Fla.) I have yet to see any of their handlers in the public domain. -- Eric Sharakan, Thinking Machines Corporation, Cambridge, Ma., 02142 ARPA: SHARAKAN@THINK.COM UUCP: ...!{ihnp4,seismo,...}!think!sharakan
cabbie@chinet.UUCP (Richard Andrews) (10/23/86)
In article <6507@think.COM> sharakan@godot.think.com.UUCP (Eric Sharakan) writes: >A.I.D. (makers of the r:verter) used to have a BBS where any owners of >R:verters can login using the serial number of their device. The BBS >contained all versions of their handlers, as well as some other neat >things. I don't know if it is still operational, you should call them >to find out. (They are located in Fla.) > >I have yet to see any of their handlers in the public domain. >-- The R-VERTER and any of the software is NOT in the public domain. R-Verter is a copyrighted program of Advanced Interface Devices, Inc. Rich Andrews ...ihnp4!chinet!cabbie