On Sun, 20 Sep 2015, ben wrote:
So did it matter? You ran Basic or played games from
cassete.
Sure. But, I was never happy with cassette for program nor data storage.
I bought an Expansion Interface the day that it became available, but I
never bought a drive from Radio Shack nor IBM. Bare drives were already
available much cheaper. And the MPI B51 came out soon after. Split band
positioner worked better for me than spiral cam.
And, of course, I already had a small stack of TM100-1 drives in 1981,
when I needed some for 5150 PC.
That was for domestic systems, heaven help you lived
out of USA
for computers.
True. I was in driving distance of Silicon Valley.
And, I never thought that the Micropolis 100tpi would ever be the
mainstream. I bought one, and got a Micropolis OS with it that I never
used. Their 48tpi drive, however, was the most reliable, albeit slow,
drive for my TRS80s.
96tpi, admittedly took a little longer to be available, but it
seemed an obvious better choice than 100tpi, just for the [admittedly
flawed] interchange possibility. Many years later, in a pile of TM100-4
drives, I got a TM100-4M, even though I could never find one when I wanted
one.
--
Grumpy Ol' Fred cisin at
xenosoft.com