80-Bus News

  

April–June 1982 · Volume 1 · Issue 2

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The most surprising thing in the last issue was P. Holy’s letter about Hisoft. [Ed. – See ‘Letters’ in this issue too.] You may remember me waxing ecstatic over their Z80 editor-assembler package for use with CP/M, (“the editor is a joy to use” – shock horror probe!) and saying what good software it is. I have written to them twice, asking fairly difficult questions, and they answered both of my questions promptly. They were very patient when my own carelessness resulted in my being unable to operate the system properly, too! And they put their telephone number at the top of their letters to me… In fact, my confidence in them is such that I ordered their new Pascal 4 compiler for CP/M systems as soon as I saw the advert (which I notice has their Ansaphone number in it) in Personal Computer World. The compiler output is fast machine code, as can be seen by the P. C. W. benchmarks for the earlier version for use with Nas-Sys. And at £40, it is incredibly cheap. A proper review will trip from my Naspen as soon as I have had a good go with the compiler. Unfortunately, I saw the advert too late for this episode’s deadline.

Did you see the nice things Uncle Dusty wrote about my item in Micro-Power? The “copyright notice” that MONITOR.COM produces when given the Y command refers only to the part I wrote, not the whole thing. It is there primarily so that people can see how to add their own commands to the system – I’m a great believer in learning by disassembling!

A particularly nasty gremlin.

I recently joined the Taunton Computer Club, which meets at the Somerset College of Art and Technology on Tuesday evenings, from 6pm to 9pm (at which latter time the “serious” members transfer to the staff bar for further learned discussion, or something…) and took Marvin in to give a sort of demonstration. Everything went well for about an hour and a half, then the system went haywire. After a few minutes head-scratching (my head, not the ones in the disk drive, which I clean much more carefully!) and reset pushing, the system settled down and ran for the rest of the evening without further problems. So I assumed it to be mains noise, caused by all the other machines on the same ring (four RM*8*Z’s, an A*pl*, and a couple of Si**la*rs, if you must know!) and carried on demonstrating my latest bizarre programs.

At home again, the same problem kept cropping up, and finally I had to do something, because it was driving me daft, and it managed to erase an important file from a disk. So I stripped the system down, and found that the cooling fan had extracted all the chalk dust from the atmosphere of the classroom, and stuck it to the back of the processor board. The lessons here seem to be that if you fit a fan, a filter needs to go in too, and it isn’t always the electricity board’s fault. Mind you, it often is their fault, as has been pointed out to me recently, in a letter from a member of the Merseyside Nascom Users Group. They (the electricity people, not MNUG!) are rumoured to be in the habit of constantly sending thumping great pulses down the line to operate their remote controlled equipment. Own up, any SWEB employees who are reading this, and feel they can comment on these libels…

Further delusions of grandeur.

Ever since I saw the article in Personal Computer World a while back on how to interface a Z80 and memory to a 6800 based system, I have been thinking about adding more processing power to a Nascom. Not, I hasten to add, because of any lack of power in the basic system. Possibly you will have heard that some programmers have developed multi-programming systems for Nascoms. Their software will run more than one job at once, and I take my hat off to them, in a figurative way. They have done something on a micro that some mainframe people would have us believe can not be done. But is it something that needed to be done? I think (and this is definitely a matter of opinion) that when the system is to run another job, given the cost of a Z80, it is a better idea to add another processor. I picture an add-on board carrying a processor, some memory and a simple control program. The processor, I suppose, will probably have to be a Z80. The main reason for this is that the Z8000 is still too expensive. There are several even more exotic possibilities, such as

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