Hi Ron --
Sorry for the delayed reply. ADT *does* work in both directions. Here's a
snip from the docs:
***
Apple Disk Transfer (ADT for short) is a set of two programs to
transfer standard 16-sector Apple II disks to and from 140k files
on a Windows computer. The file format is compatible with many
Apple II emulators.
ADT 1.22 Win32 Edition requires the Apple II to have either a
Super Serial Card (or compatible) or an Apple Communications Card
(or compatible). Note that the IIc+ and //c include SSC-compatible
serial ports, but the built-in IIgs serial ports are _not_ hardware-
compatible with SSC.
***
The whole package is in a 142KB zip file -- let me know if you'd like to to
send it your way.
Glen
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Ron Hudson" <ron.hudson(a)sbcglobal.net>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
<cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>rg>; "Glen Goodwin" <acme(a)gbronline.com>
Sent: Sunday, April 18, 2004 7:33 PM
Subject: Re: Apple IIC+ Pointers on getting programs to and from machine.
On Apr 18, 2004, at 1:21 PM, Glen Goodwin wrote:
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave Dunfield" <dave04a(a)dunfield.com>
I think there's a freeware program called ADT
(Apple Disk Transfer?)
which
does
the job with the standard Apple serial card. When
I was looking, there
were two
versions for two different cards.
I've used ADT to perform transfers from a Windows-based PC to an Apple
IIe
and it works very well with either a standard or Super serial card.
Complete docs are included.
If the OP can't find it on the 'Net I'll zip it up and send it along.
I've found a pdf with some instructions already. does it work both
directions?
Will it put a .dsk file back onto a blank floppy?
Glen
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