What cards should go in which slots in my Apple II?
CSA2 FAQ Complete - A2wikiA:This depends on what the card is, and what model your Apple II is. Apple IIs traded the 'IRQ' hassles of IBM PCs for more specific functions as to which functions should go in each slot. only available on the Apple ][ and ][+) is pretty much reserved for 'Language Card' 16K RAM upgrades and ROM code for Integer/Applesoft Basic. tends to be used for printers in pre-GS machines, and either a printer or used for Appletalk in GSs, though most software supports printers in any slot.
Related QuestionsWhere do I find out about Apple II Users' Groups?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleEspecially for beginners, a user group is an absolute golden of software, information, and bargain hardware. Several Apple II users groups continue to meet, especially in major cities and on university campi. If a local group listing is 'missing' from your phone book, check for a Mac users group-- a number of Apple II groups have merged with their Mac counterparts.
Related QuestionsHow can I find out more about using and programming my Apple II?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleYou can peruse the newsgroup FAQs Q&A Contents page. You can also check out the Apple II Major Sites page (Csa21MAIN3.txt). All Apple II's come with some version of BASIC installed in-ROM on the motherboard. The original Apple II's have Integer BASIC. Starting with the II+ model, all Apple II's have floating-point Applesoft BASIC in ROM. Owners of early Apple II's can load in Applesoft or plug in a card with Applesoft ROMs.
Related QuestionsWhat Apple II emulators are available and where can I get them?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleThe most popular 8-bit Apple II emus are AppleWin and Apple Oasis, which run under PC Windows, and Apple-PC, which runs under PC DOS and includes support for Mockingboard sound. These programs can turn your PC into an enhanced Apple //e running at least as fast as the real thing using software from virtual disks (disk image files). There are also 8-bit Apple II emus for Macs (one, Catakig, emulates a II, II+, or IIe) and Amiga (Apple 2000).
Related QuestionsWhere can I find an Apple II memory map?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleA memory map for a 128k Apple II along with related soft-switch, etc. information is available as FAQs resource file R032MMAP128.TXT. Transferring Applesoft programs on an Apple II to QBASIC, GW-BASIC, etc. on the PC is mainly a matter of moving a text copy of the program to the PC. (To make a text copy of an Apple II program, you LIST the program to a Text file. See Q&A 017 above.) On the PC, you bring the A2 program text into your BASIC editor.
Related QuestionsWhere can I get games for my Apple II?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - Appleo- Sellers of original and second-hand software (See ads on the comp.sys.apple2.marketplace newsgroup and sites, like KulaSoft, A2Central.com, and Shareware Solutions II.) Also check the Apple II FAQs Vendor listings: o- Regular posters to this newsgroup will often send diskettes with some utilities and games for the cost of diskettes and mailing. o- Apple II archives maintain large collections of software which you can download via PC and transfer to your Apple II.
Related QuestionsI can play on my Apple II?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleA good start is a series of fantasy game articles published, mainly, in the August through November 1999 issues of GS WorldView and since added to from time to. These are now interlinked for easy perusal. The articles cover 1990's through early 2000's interactive fantasy competition releases, Infocom's Lost Treasures I and II, a 'missing Lost Treasure', plus some more recent Zork series releases. Coverage includes brief descriptions plus download links.
Related QuestionsHow and where do I download and upload Apple II files?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleHow: By far, the easiest and quickest way is to access software sites on the net using a PC or Mac. Files can be moved to and from your Apple II via a NULL modem connection with the net computer. If you use a Mac, you may have the option of transferring the files via a ProDOS or HFS diskette or an HFS Zip disk. (For details on hardware, file transfers, downloading, and uploading, see the Telecom-1 and Telecom-2 Q&A.) Where: Today, most users upload software, info files, etc.
Related QuestionsWhere can I buy CD-ROM discs for the Apple II?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleHaving both The Golden Orchard CD and The TABBS CD, I can assure all Apple II and IIgs users that they both contain a wealth of Apple II/IIgs programs, graphics, music, information and a multitude of fantastic archives of great interest and value to any Apple II and IIgs user. Apple Pugetsound Program Library Exchange ( ) is celebrating the 25th anniversary of its User Group founding by releasing the following Apple II Related CD-Rom Books: See the Apple II CD-ROM Info resource file R014CDROMIN.
Related QuestionsWhere did the Apple II Game Gods go?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleInteresting bit of info: about a year and 1/2 ago, i was touring Sculptured Software in Salt Lake City, UT. I had just finished talking to the Mortal Kombat team and was rounding a corner, passing some offices and i noticed a name on the door, "Peter Ward". I instantly thought, "NO WAY!". There was a guy in the office and i said, "Are you Peter Ward???!!" Him: <slight pause> "Wow. You are the ONLY person i've ever met that knew that.
Related QuestionsOld Apple II' sound while action is happening?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleTry Microwave by Jim Nitchals and Jay Zimmerman. Jim worked on sound drivers with Steve Hales (primarily for the Mac) under the company name Halestorm. The company and its technology was later sold to Thomas Dolby's Headspace.
Related QuestionsHow do I get my Apple II game site listed in the FAQs?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleSend an email describing your site to the Apple II FAQs maintainer at . Include "Apple" in the message title.
Related QuestionsCan I read Apple II diskettes on my PC?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleYes. There is a way for some PCs to read Apple II DOS 3.3 and ProDOS 5.25" floppies which are not copy-protected. By "some PCs" I mean that the PC must have two floppy drives (only one has to be a 5.25" drive) and it must be running MS-DOS or Windows 95, 98, or ME. (It won't work with NT, 2000, and XP). You also need a program called "DISK2FDI". (For a link to the program, see Csa21MAIN4.txt.) DISK2FDI reads the Apple floppy and creates a disk image (.do) on the PC.
Related QuestionsWill NetBlaster II network cards work with an Apple computer?
Welcome to SOHOware!Currently, NetBlaster II cards do not have drivers that will operate under the Apple operating system.
Related QuestionsIs there an Apple II program for amatuer radio CW code practice?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleI have a such a program at home. It's called QSO Kid. It requires a IIgs, and from what little I've used it, it seems like a really good program. This is more likely to be an issue for ProDOS-8 programs. The main problem under ProDOS-8 is with programs that insist on referring to devices by unit number (or slot and drive). Network volumes do not have a unit number. Another issue is with filenames.
Related QuestionsIs a graphical user interface (GUI) available for 8-bit Apple II's?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleFor the 128k Enhanced //e and //c series, the ones which come to mind are GEOS, Quark's Catalyst, and MouseDesk (aka Apple II Desktop). GEOS was probably the most popular of the three although it never reached the popularity it gained on the C64 platform. The downside with GEOS is that it isn't ProDOS compatible. So, you are stuck with only using the GEOS compatible programs (GeoPublish, GeoCalc, GeoWrite,....) Catalyst and MouseDesk are both very similar.
Related QuestionsWhat kinds of hard drive systems are available for Apple II users?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleThe most versatile and most common hard drive set-up is an internal SCSI interface card and an external SCSI drive. Hard drives, cd-rom drives, removable media (SyQuest, Iomega), flopticals, and scanners all can be added to the SCSI chain. Insert the card in a slot, connect a cable or two, and change a slot setting. The preferred SCSI card is the RamFAST Rev. D SCSI card. The next best card is the Apple Hi-Speed SCSI card.
Related QuestionsHow can I read Apple II 5.25" floppies on a Mac?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleReading Apple II 5.25" floppies on a Mac requires the addition of special hardware. One company, Kennect, did make two drives that would handle this trick: the Drive 360 and the Drive 1200. They were primarily meant for reading 5.25" PC disks but were also advertised as having the ability to read Apple II DOS 3.3 and ProDOS floppies. Both required a device called the "Rapport", which plugged into the Mac's external floppy port and also gave the internal 3.
Related QuestionsCan I use high-density 3.5" and 5.25" diskettes on my Apple II?
Apple II Csa2 FAQs: 1Main-Start, Part 1/25 - AppleI did some magnetization tests on Double Density (800kB) and High Density (1.4MB) diskette surfaces. The tested DD surface produced more than twice the deflection of the tested HD surface. Clearly, there is a big difference in signal levels required to reliably store data on HD vs. DD. In fact, 5.25" HD (1.2MB) diskettes will not work at all on Apple Disk ][ drives. The 3.5" HD's may work fine on your 800k drives; or, they may just seem to work fine.
Related QuestionsWhere can I find out about Apple II programming?
Apple II comp.sys.apple2.programmer FAQs, Part 1/1 - Exforsy...All Apple II's come with some version of BASIC installed in-ROM on the motherboard. The original Apple II's have Integer BASIC. Starting with the II+ model, all Apple II's have floating-point Applesoft in-ROM. Owners of early Apple II's can load in Applesoft or plug in a card with Applesoft ROMs. All Apple II's include a "monitor" program in ROM. Entering CALL-151 from the BASIC prompt puts you 'in' the monitor.
Related QuestionsNow that I know about the card slots, what cards are available to install in these slots?
D8B FAQsMackie Digital Systems has many different cards available that allow you to customize your D8B for your particular needs. The following four* cards are designed for the Tape I/O and ALT I/O card slots, and each card handles up to eight channels of I/O: DIO8 for either ADAT optical or T/DIF digital formats, available in 16-bit or 24-bit versions.
Related QuestionsCan I use ISA cards in the EISA slots?
PARISC-LINUX: FAQYes. In general it's possible to use use ISA cards in the EISA slots. We already had some success with ISA NE2000 clones and some other cards, but you need to tell the kernel via the eisa_irq_edge boot parameter which ISA IRQs should be available for ISA devices.
Related Questionsedit] Can I accelerate my Apple II?
CSA2 FAQ Complete - A2wikiYes. Over the years, many accelerators were produced for the varios models in the Apple II series. Most of these were slot-based cards such as the AE Transwarp 1-3, though the ZipChip (4 and 8 Mhz models) and RocketChip (5 and 10 Mhz models) were drop-in processor replacements. For the GS, the Transwarp GS and the Zip GS were the only options. No accelerator for any Apple II is available new anymore-- you'll have to look for one used.
Related Questionsedit] How much RAM is in my Apple II?
CSA2 FAQ Complete - A2wikiA:This is easiest to determine with an Apple IIGS. Go to the text control panel by pressing the control, open apple, and escape keys at once, then select the RAM Disk option under the Control Panel option. Note the 'Largest Selectable' entry, and add 256K to that-- that's how much RAM is available to GS programs. (The GS reserves a minumum of 256K for programs, though pretty much only older Apple II software will run in that space).
Related QuestionsWHAT ABOUT APPLE II EMULATION MODE?
Your /// can operate as-is in an emulation mode to make it think it's a 48k Apple //+ (WAP has the emulation software: Disk 3EMM-01). Titan made a ///+// card for the /// you might also be able to find - it increased memory up to 128K in //+ emulation and offered a RAM disk in native mode. You might also be on the lookout at computer garage sales or on eBay for the "Titan ///+//e" - a set of two-cards that really turns your /// into a 128k //e.
Related QuestionsWhere can I find drivers for an Apple LaserWriter II? for down loading?
Frequently Asked Laser Printer Questions - A Bravenet.com Fa...Is there any way to get effective performance from an Epson stylus color 740 in WinXP. Epson doesn't have enough respect for their customers to support this printer with a an XP driver. The Windows native driver is week, at best and at worst just flat doesn't work.
Related QuestionsWhere can I find more information on Apple II series errors?
Exforsys - Apple II Csa2 FAQs: Error List, Part 8/25A good on-screen listing of errors encountered on the IIgs (plus lots of other toolbox, softswitch, etc. info) is available via Dave Lyons's NiftyList CDA package ($15, Shareware). Another good on-screen list is Jeff Tarr Jr.'s ErrorCodes CDA v1.7 ($5, Shareware). Applesoft, DOS 3.3, ProDOS BASIC.SYSTEM, and ErrorWindow error codes are not listed because errors are reported directly in text messages. For codes and descriptions see ...
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