I have a Tandy, or some kind of data cassette recorder. Never use it for
data, but it's an excellent voice recorder and player.
-Mike
Andrew Gammuto wrote:
I never saw anybody use the cassette port for practical purposes. In fact, I
never saw a cassette drive from IBM. Good trivia question. Has anybody ever
seen one? I do remember reading something years ago about hobbyists using
the cassette port for plugging in wierd hardware hacks.
The original PC came with Cassette Basic. As I recall, defaulted to that if
you had no DOS boot disk. GWBasic and BasicA had to be loaded off the DOS
disk.
-----Original Message-----
From: Zane H. Healy <healyzh(a)ix.netcom.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, January 26, 1998 11:45 PM
Subject: Re: Development, round II
>> BTW has anyone ever seen someone use the cassette port? I supported
>>several hundred early PC user's and never even heard of anyone using the
>>cassette port.
>
>Well, just off the top of my head, the original IBM PC came with two 5 1/4"
>floppy drives. That tells me you'd have to be crazy to even attempt using
>the cassette interface. Either that or have some special purpose
>application (don't even want to imagine what).
>
> Zane
>
>
>| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Adminstrator |
>| healyzh(a)ix.netcom.com (primary) | Linux Enthusiast |
>| healyzh(a)holonet.net (alternate) | Classic Computer Collector |
>+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
>| For Empire of the Petal Throne and Traveller Role Playing, |
>| see
http://www.dragonfire.net/~healyzh/ |
>| For the collecting of Classic Computers with info on them. |
>| see
http://www.dragonfire.net/~healyzh/museum.html |
>
>
>