T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3958.1 | AMAX II Plus | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Fri Jul 27 1990 12:47 | 7 |
| I just saw an ad in the August AmigaWorld for the new AMAX II and
AMAX II Plus emulation software/hardware for the Amiga. It allows
use of hard disk partitions and some other bells and whistles.
AMAX II Plus is a card for the A2000 which gives MAC serial ports
and allows full use of midi ports. It also says it can use the
Amiga native 3.5 in drives to read/write MAC disks.
|
3958.2 | interesting | HYSTER::DEARBORN | Trouvez Mieux | Fri Jul 27 1990 16:56 | 11 |
| > It also says it can use the
> Amiga native 3.5 in drives to read/write MAC disks.
I wonder how they did that? Maybe they write those partially formatted
disks that can be read on either machine but only hold about 128K.
I thought the Mac drives were variable speed and it was not possible to
simulate this with the Amiga drives.
Randy
|
3958.3 | yes it can R/W MAC disks | READ::POMEROY | | Mon Jul 30 1990 12:01 | 14 |
| Actually, the AMAX II harware card will be able to read/write Amiga and
MAC disks on standard amiga drives. I am having trouble believing it
myself having recently taken a course which discussed floppies and
floppy controllers in some detail... But, they say it will be able to.
If it can, and I bet it will, I will be buying it ASAP.
bob
refine::pomeroy
(not that I really want to run MAC software too often, but it will
probably come in useful. If you get one, show it to your friends who
want to buy MACs, maybe they will change their minds and go Amiga!)
|
3958.4 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Mon Jul 30 1990 22:43 | 17 |
| David Small of the Atari ST Mac emulator fame, has had his emulator
reading & writing mac disks for some time now. I read an interview
with him where he talked about how reading mac disks could be done:
the mac disk is written at different speeds depending on where
your are on the disk. To read it you need to be able to vary
the speed, 3 possible ways:
1. require a real mac floppy disk drive
2. vary the speed by pulsing the motor on/off rapidly
3. custom hardware so that you can read the disk at 300rpm and
then translate the raw data in software, based on the speed
you know the data was written at.
I believe he went with #3.
Dave
|
3958.5 | Could be either one... | FROCKY::BALZER | Christian Balzer DTN:785-1029 | Tue Jul 31 1990 04:32 | 13 |
| Re: .4
Both methods 2 and 3 are possibilities with the Amax-II+ card.
Remember the Disk2Disk software form CSC? While it wasn't too
successful, it sometimes (or often on some drives ;-) was able to read
1541 disks which are also accessed at different speeds, by pulsing the
disk motor thru software.
I'd assume that a hardware driven pulse could be stable enough to work.
If they choose method 3, this would mean that they have to switch the
entire drive bus which makes this solution despite the additional
hardware the most expensive one short of #1. ;-)
<CB>
|
3958.6 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:07 | 21 |
| re:.5
Is it just me, or does that pulsing the drive motor scheme seem like
a good way to shorten the life of your floppy drive?
Maybe the custom hardware solution might not be needed for the Amiga,
after all, the ST does have a Western Digital floppy controller chip to
deal with.
I'd settle for a 1.44 meg floppy drive that could handle Mac, ibmpc,
and Amiga disks, even if it meant a new floppy controller. Although
some of the hints on usenet implied that there was a software way
of supporting it.
The mystery shouldn't last too long, right? After all, Readysoft is
running ads so they can't be too far from actually shipping :-)
I wonder if they are talking to the Appied Engineering folks about
1.44 meg floppy drives...
Dave
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3958.7 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | Larger than life, and twice as ugly | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:34 | 7 |
|
I remember a few years back UK Amiga whiz Jez San (StarGlider)
commented that one could easily perform 'software quantizing of the
data stream' to read Mac disks. He even threatened to do it himself if
he ever had a spare ten mimutes. :^)
Ed.
|