Wrong.
I have forgotten the address to poke (or is it peek - some such action)
which
causes the AppleII (original, +, and E) to enter the system monitor
software.
Therein it is easily possible to manipulate all manner of system features
and
memory contents. If you need the exact information thus, I shall extract it
from
the manuals, etc that remain in my possession. I own a II+ and a II E,
since it
is only upon such machines that I may execute the Apple Worm (as published
in the May 1985 issue of Scientific American, Computer Recreations column)
which I wrote so many years ago.
William R. Buckley
-----Original Message-----
From: D. Peschel <dpeschel(a)u.washington.edu>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Sunday, November 01, 1998 5:38 PM
Subject: Re: PDP-11/44 boot prompt
"Max
Eskin" <maxeskin(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
I mentioned that all Apple computers have
debuggers/monitors.
That's certainly not true.
You need to substantiate your claim. Which Apple computers don't have ROM
debuggers or monitors?
-- Derek