On 10/30/2016 08:56 AM, william degnan wrote:
On Oct 30, 2016 8:48 AM, "allison"
<ajp166 at verizon.net> wrote:
On 10/30/2016 04:01 AM, emanuel stiebler wrote:
On 2016-10-29 09:21, allison wrote:
On 10/29/2016 09:55 AM, emanuel stiebler wrote:
> Was there a version of kermit for CP/M ?
yes and there were more than a few modem/terminal programs.
for CP/M 68K?
When people say CP/M its nearly always in the context of
8080/8085/NSC800/Z80 or maybe 8088/86
CP/M-68 was rare but likely there was Kermit for it as all versions of
kermit were based on
the same effort. Myself I never used it as I had the alternates like
modem-7 or MEX.
A basic file transfer program was a trivial thing.
Allison
I have a disk labeled Sage II Cp/m 68 (000) Kermit. That is what the OP
was looking for, for his newly acquired Sage II. We were discussing how to
image theae disks, I don't have a 96tpi - capable drive set up on my
current disk imaging station otherwise I'd have simply uploaded an .IMD
file. Short term he needs cp/m 68 from somewhere else.
I assume OP'er has checked jim battle ' sage II website.
Bill
Much has been imaged and is over in
bitsavers.org... Software stride
and sage.
What it requires is a Real Computer(tm) with disk drives not one of the
latest octa-core Vunderkind M$ PCs.
An older box with a FD55GFV and one of the better 3.5" should handle all
but 8" and hard sector needs.
I keep a Dell 486 powered pizza box for that as it has all the 5.25 and
3.5 capability, for an OS winders3.11
is fine as its really DOS and moderately useful as it runs teledisk
still. Also the smaller pentium box with
linux as its got that as well. Either than or a CP/M-80 machine with a
bunch of drives, MY s100 crate
has that from 8 though 3.5. A Qbus pdp-11 with the full compliment of
floppies from RX02, though
5.25 and 3.5" can do it as well.
Allison