T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1917.1 | Mutant maybe but not Weird! | HPSTEK::SENNA | | Tue Nov 29 1988 13:01 | 1 |
| I think its great! I'd like to know also!
|
1917.2 | Yes! | RAVEN1::EVERHART | | Tue Nov 29 1988 16:47 | 6 |
| Yes. It is possible to write to the mouse port. (At least, one
of my manuals mentions it) There is a register you have to use.
I'll try to find it in my hardware manual tonight.
- Chris
|
1917.3 | Writing to the mouse port. | SUBSYS::BUSCH | Dave Busch at NKS1-2 | Tue Nov 29 1988 17:12 | 5 |
| Digi-View does it when it checks to see if there is a Digi-Droid out there and
when it sends a pulse to the Digi-Droid servo to tell it to rotate.
Dave
|
1917.4 | It's time to warm up the plastic | MEIS::ZIMMERMAN | Ninja turtles fight with honor! | Tue Nov 29 1988 18:42 | 5 |
| Hah! So it's in the HARDWARE manual! Is the Addison-Wesley
A1000-oriented manual good enough for this, or do I have to spring
for the A500/A2000 manual?
- Cliff
|
1917.5 | Unrelated Topic | WJG::GUINEAU | | Wed Nov 30 1988 08:00 | 3 |
|
A500/2000 manual? Have the RKM and Intuituion/Hardware manuals been
updated?
|
1917.6 | I heard it through the grapevine | MEIS::ZIMMERMAN | Ninja turtles fight with honor! | Wed Nov 30 1988 09:52 | 7 |
| There's an A500/A2000 hardware manual that you can order directly
from Commodore for about $40. People have mentioned it elsewhere in
this notesfile. The jist of the comments was that it was overpriced
for what you get, particularly if you already have the A-W hardware
manual.
- Cliff
|
1917.7 | | NAC::PLOUFF | Cider Season Has Begun | Wed Nov 30 1988 10:03 | 18 |
| Whoa... There's the A-W Hardware Manual, which really ought to be
titled Hardware Programmer's Manual, and deals with low-level
programming of the hardware. It's currently out of print and being
updated, so a copy may be hard to find in your bookstore. The A-W
manual is really about 90% software oriented.
There is also an A500/A2000 Hardware Technical Manual, or some such
name, which you can get direct from Commodore. (There's a similar
one for the A1000.) This contains schematics and guidelines for
interfacing peripheral hardware. If you want to find out how
autoconfigure works, here's the place. The Commodore manual is
about 90% hardware oriented, real gates and nanoseconds stuff.
Sounds like the writer of the base note wants the Addison-Wesley
manual.
P.S. If you think $40 is overpriced for the Commodore manual, look
at the price of service manuals or schematic sets for any PeeCee.
|
1917.8 | Hardware Technical Manual? | RAVEN1::EVERHART | | Wed Nov 30 1988 12:26 | 7 |
| Can someone tell me where to order the Hardware Technical Manual?
The one for the 1000. I'm trying to figure out how to interface
some memory with my bus. Also, does it include Autoconfig
documentation, or do I have to get that separately?
- Chris
|
1917.9 | How to Get C-A Tech Manuals | NAC::PLOUFF | Cider Season Has Begun | Wed Nov 30 1988 13:18 | 58 |
| Here is part of an old Usenet posting from CATS. Note that 1.3-related
stuff and the latest Developers' Conference notes have not been
released yet to my knowledge. The IFF disk is the latest version
of all IFF specs and formats, and has been updated since this posting.
(An older version is on Fred Fish disk 46 (??)).
To answer the previous reply, both the A1000 and A500/2000 manuals
contain descriptions of Autoconfigure, expansion bus timing, etc.
The A500/2000 manual is much better written overall.
Wes
--------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE: Support Materials Available From Commodore Sept. 1, 1987
The following is a current list of developer support materials
available directly from Commodore Amiga Technical Support. The prices
are for orders within the U.S.. Canadians should add $2.50 shipping
costs per item. For foreign orders, add $5.00 shipping costs per item.
All prices are in U.S. dollars.
To order any of these items, send a check or money order made
out to Commodore Business Machines, to:
CATS - ORDERS <----- (Department)
Software Administration <=\
CBM <==\ CATS
1200 Wilson Drive <==/ address
West Chester, PA 19380 <=/
Be sure to include your name and address, and the name(s) of
the item(s) you are ordering. If you are a registered developer,
place your developer number on your check and envelope front
for faster service. Delivery may take 4-6 weeks but is generally
much quicker.
DISCLAIMER: All materials are supplied as-is and do not include
updates.
ITEM NAME VERSION PRICES
========= ======= ======
1.2 Native Developer Update 03/18/87 $20 (US)
A1000 Schematics & Expansion Specs 06/09/86 $20 (US)
Developer's Conference Notes 11/05/86 $20 (US)
IFF Docs and Disk 03/25/87 $20 (US)
A500/A2000 Tech Ref Manual 08/87 $40 (US)
AmigaMail Subscription (1 year) -------- $20 (US)
|
1917.10 | POTGO! | RAVEN1::EVERHART | | Thu Dec 01 1988 10:40 | 19 |
| OK. Here's the scoop on writing to the Game ports. There is a
register (on the 8520, I believe) called POTGO that controls all
I/O activity for Potentiometer-type joysticks. This seems to adapt
itself well to reading and writing. As stated in the hardware manual,
there are a total of 4 pins between the two ports that can be written
to. (Pin 9 and 5). Unfortunately, there is no direct support for
this hardware. The registers would have to be manipulated directly
for this to work. I believe the correct registers are POTGOW and
POTGOR or something like that. I can get the exact addresses if
you are still interested after seeing this information. You have
to set the enable bits and write values, and then you have to tell
it to start. There are a lot of timing problems that seem to be
involved, but I've never really tried this, so I can't be sure.
The manual I found this in is the HARDWARE REFERENCE MANUAL. This
would probably be easiest to do in assembly language, but it is
possible in C.
- Chris
|
1917.11 | | MEIS::ZIMMERMAN | Ninja turtles fight with honor! | Sat Dec 03 1988 14:50 | 5 |
|
Thanks for the info! I think I'll try to track down a hardware
manual.
- Cliff
|
1917.12 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Tue Dec 13 1988 18:31 | 15 |
|
I still have my PowerPad. I got it and a couple application when
Toys'R Us decided to dump them (Atari version). I have buried
somewhere around the house info on the protocol it speaks (a copy
of the docs from the C64 PowerPad programmers kit, never found the
Atari version, not sure they ever made one)
The main problem with the PowerPad is the resolution. It has, I
believe, 120x120 points it can sense. But it can sense them
simultaneously. Makes it great for finger painting, but not so
hot for detail work.
I'll hunt for the docs.
-Dave
|