Only forgiveness is left for me:)Īlso I admire your directness as always. However that was the wrong approach considering he hadĪlready taken as close a look as his tunnel allowed. I have skirted the issue to this point preferring to have the op takeĪnother closer look. "You can lead a man to slaughter but you can't make him think":) >development you could use Aztec C or cc65. It does work! It is also covered inĬhapter 10 of The New Apple II User's Guide. It's a VT100 emulator and I have used it to make a terminal to a Mac OS X If you still can't get Kermit to go, try DCOM. > do uppercase, even though I've got the shift key mod installed, but that > the RPi and log in, after realizing that I had to hit the right arrow key > I've gotten really close to getting it to work. > I have a Videx Ultraterm card in slot 3, an Apple SSC in slot 1, and a 16K So I think my only real choice is Kermit-65. > Since I've got a II+, I cannot use ProTERM, Z-Link, or Modem.MGR (the > I'm trying to use my Apple II+ as a vt100 terminal to my Raspberry Pi. If we work together, and help out newbies, maybe we can actually grow the community. My two daughters have been fascinated with the Apple II+ since I brought it out of the basement and put it on the desk next to the shiny MacBook. I think the Raspberry Pi is yet another way. Your work with the Aztec C Programming Language clearly shows that there are new things to be done with the Apple II. People come to 2 because it is one of the only places where we can talk freely, respectfully exchange ideas, and have fun with the Apple platform. There are not that many of us that are willing to play around with 30-year old technology, and our numbers are shrinking. No matter what we may hope for, the Apple II community is a _small_ one. I did download the entire Kermit source from Columbia, and I read the entire manual. The characters are both upper and lowercase, and they are only taking up "half" the width of 40-column characters. In my original post, I mentioned that my Apple II+ is _already_ in 80-column mode. > I'm going back to writing my manual, not that anyone reads them anymore. > There's ahole load of communications programs there as well. > The Kermit that is on asimov comes with a program that sets 80 column in the On Sunday, Febru10:12:09 AM UTC-7, Bill Buckels wrote: Should probably double-dog test this program. Also, while I think of it, someone besides me Preservation tag acceptable to CiderPress.ĬiderTag comes complete with source and a Win32 build environment for those Tricks will strip the header from an Apple II Binary Program and use it toĬreate a new headless file copy with the header info as a file attribute This download also includes the Win32 Utility CiderTag which among other Main topic is "retro" Serial Communications in Aztec C65, but included are Executables and Disk Images are included. This download is intended to be overlaid over the current AppleXĭistribution for anyone who wants to build the programs, but can also simplyīe downloaded, and used as-is. Subject: Announcing the Resurrection of the Aztec C65 3.2b Utilities and let me know if its DOS 3.3 or ProDOS that you use if you do It would be nice if it did help you.YouĬould always send me your kermit in PM and I'll see if it is in fact inĪztec C. Have configured the shell to 89 columns beforehand. If its a DOS 3.3 kermit, inside the Aztec C DOS 3.3 Shell making sure you Try running it aganst kermitĪlso you might want to start kermit from inside the Aztec C ProDOS Shell or The config utility is available as noted below. >Aztec C configuration utility to set the peripheral properties. >If the Kermit you are using is written in Aztec C65 you could try using the I have been able to get other programs to use the full 80 columns, so I know it's not a card problem.ĭoes anyone have any ideas for settings that I can change, either on the Kermit side, or on the Raspberry Pi side? But even though the Ultraterm is in "80-column mode", only half the screen gets used because it just wraps at 40 columns. I *think* I've configured Kermit correctly, and over on the RPi side, if I do "stty size" it reports 80 columns by 24 lines. My real problem is that the terminal width seems to be stuck at 40 columns, even though the II+ is in 80-column mode. I can't seem to get the shift key to do uppercase, even though I've got the shift key mod installed, but that isn't a big deal. I was able to connect up to the RPi and log in, after realizing that I had to hit the right arrow key on the II+ to toggle upper/lowercase. I've gotten really close to getting it to work. I have a Videx Ultraterm card in slot 3, an Apple SSC in slot 1, and a 16K language card in slot 0. Since I've got a II+, I cannot use ProTERM, Z-Link, or Modem.MGR (the vt100 module requires a IIe). I'm trying to use my Apple II+ as a vt100 terminal to my Raspberry Pi.
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