9/19/2023 0 Comments 2 sided disk applewin![]() Add the zipped disk image(s) to the issue. Please create a new AppleWin issue on GitHub via:Ģ. but in the future for specific troubleshooting of AppleWin issues that involve disk images:ġ. (We saw a few rare titles having problems when I implemented this years ago back in 2014 with AppleWin issue #206.)Īs David points out you can use the command line option: -memclear # to specify the exact memory initialization pattern:Īlan, I was able to snag the disk images from Asimov (Thanks David!) and have created AppleWin issue #1123 for you. We would need to see the actual disk image to track down what the exact cause is but as David suggests it could be the MIP (Memory Initialization Pattern) that is causing this. > What is different about "booting a disk" in AppleWin (as an Apple IIe-enhanced) from an actual Apple IIe machine that would mean that a disk that does boot-up on an actual Apple IIe will instead crash when an image of it is booted in AppleWin? The disk (and image thereof) contains a modified version of DOS 3.3 which, as I say, boots up fine on an actual Apple IIe. On Tuesday, Jat 3:43:25 AM UTC-7, alanr wrote: Some out-of-band data like the volume number that matters. Works, I'm not clear about how that might have happened unless there's Went wrong in the ripping process, but since just about everything else Program is specified (or laid out or executed or.?). So there's definitely something wrong with the way the boot II+ to see what it thought the boot program was, and it just said there Problem with the boot program/specification. I reconstituted the disk image to a real disk and booted it on a GS, and Program, but this DOS that is purporting to save space saw fit to ![]() I was going to INIT another disk and give it a real HELLO (doesn't matter if you give it a //e or II+), give it a 3D0G, and boom, What I did was boot the disk to the same monitor prompt in AppleWin Something like the HELLO program, finds what seems to be some random And, it boots it's DOS fine - but it tries to run PO suffix to see if that changes anything. Which can confuse some tools (AppleWin included). Mislabeled and is actually in ProDOS order even though it says. ![]() It's also possible that the disk image is Is trying to represent, so that's why it would be very interesting toĪctually look at it. Those heuristics are failing to correctly identify what your disk image The actual order, and underlying OS, actually is. Most tools can apply some fairly standard heuristics to figure out what DSK is ambiguous, and offers no clues as to Most image transfer tools always use DOS order for 5-1/4" disks no That a disk was recorded in ProDOS order (again, regardless of reality). Order (regardless of what the original OS was/is). DO suffix meant that a disk was recorded in DOS sector Them out to the outside world, they have the ability to record them inĪn image file in either "order" - not necessarily following what the So if a person is extracting sectors from a disk and copying Sectors on a 5-1/4" disk don't follow in 1,2,3 order. DO files are the ones from disks which booted on my Apple IIe that won't boot in AppleWin.Īpple II disks have something called sector skew, or "order" - physical DSK the "disk" could still be CATALOGged, LOADed from, SAVEd to, etc. DO files but when simply changing the extension from. DO file? Someone converted some actual disks for me, and I was expecting. New Ultima I(newulti1~2.> Also, I might ask, is there a substantive difference between a. *Allow file larger than 143360 bytes can be loaded įor I think most players like me may use I486 to play AppleWin :) *Modify APPLEWIN.HLP(.TXT) to show latest enhancementġ2/09 : *Modify Win32.CS optimize option ,from /G5Fr to /G4Fr. ![]() Modify APPLEWIN.HLP(.TXT) to show latest enhancementġ2/11 : Add PageUP/PageDown HOTKEYS to manipulate Disk1/Disk2 disk-switching Press PageDown ,program will search only *.NIB files for you. If you choose KQ-1.NIB to play in the Dialog Box. *Now the program will detect your latest file selection ,for example , NOTE: You can go back 28 Disks maximumly. ,HOME/DOWN to manipulate Disk2 disk-switching forwardly & backwardly. In the readme file, it reads:ġ2/12 : Add HOME/DOWN HOTKEYS ,now we use PageUp/PageDown to manipulate Disk1 It is actually a feature existed in the old ApplwWin maintained by Michael O'Brien, Wizwom & Terry Hsu. It would be handy for some games which require frequent change of disks. I would like to request for a new feature: use keyboard shortcuts to quickly change disks (cycle through dsk files).
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