At 02:28 AM 5/5/05 -0500, Pat wrote:
woodelf declared on Wednesday 04 May 2005 10:04
pm:
Parker, Kevin wrote:
Do you know what the popular choice was?
My Guess is IBM-DOS ... MS-DOS only came more
popular with the clones. Now what programing languges
did you have back then? Assembler , Pascal and Fortran
come to mind.
Erm, you seem to have left out BASIC, one version of which didn't
require you to have disks to use (ROM BASIC); however, that was
probably more useful on the 5150 PC than the 5160 PC/XT since the PC
had a cassette interface you could use with it, which the XT lacks.
FWIW Also left out Professional Fortran, IBM Cobal, RM Cobal, Basic
Compiler without 8087, Basic Compiler with 8087, APL, Logo and several
more. I've been collecting the stuff and I'm amazed how many different
languages there were. I'm up to about four LARGE boxs of the stuff.
BTW recently picked up an old AT and found an 8" disk drive
controller
in it. I can't remember who made it (Farmer Electonics?) but it's NOT
a compaticard. I powered up the AT to look for any drivers but the
CMOS has lost it's settings so I have to dig up a Setup disk and reset
them before I can access the HD and look for drivers. Checked my stash
and found that all the Setup disks that I have are all for PCs and XTs
so I'e got to go dig deeper to find the right Setup disk.
Joe
I belive that the common generic, i.e. third party, 'AT Setup' utilities
that you'll find on archives like Simtelnet are fully AT Compatible and
should let you set the drive type. They should be available in one of
the utility sections of the archive. If you can't find a vintage-enough
Simtelnet archive, I know I have some of that stuff on old CDROM
collections and can dig for it for you.