no, I have only talked about data represented in xml ascii, that has three distinct
sections. A overall structure that contains author, and other info. A data section that
contains multiple data blocks with subsections that are identified as files, and finally,
a third which describes the physical arrangement of the data blocks on some type of
media.
best regards, Steve Thatcher
-----Original Message-----
From: Vintage Computer Festival <vcf(a)siconic.com>
Sent: Aug 11, 2004 2:53 PM
To: Steve Thatcher <melamy(a)earthlink.net>et>,
"General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
<cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
Subject: RE: Let's develop an open-source media archive standard
On Wed, 11 Aug 2004, Steve Thatcher wrote:
I know a three section approach that I was proposing
is more
complicated, but from a code standpoint allows total freedom of data
access without having to create a target media let alone have the
computer system to then read the media just to get at the data that was
on a floppy disk. The beauty is that if you need to create a Northstar
system diskette then you can, but if all you need is a copy of the
dump.asm program then you can get that also without having to go any
further than the file you started with.
What you're discussing here are binary images.
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
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