
- #COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE SERIAL#
- #COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE SOFTWARE#
- #COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE PC#
- #COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE DOWNLOAD#
They will stay in memory till you unlink them. This script loads all my C compiling modules without a big memory loss. I use "NMLink rcm2 c.prep c.comp cnoy c.opt rma rlink touch". Mike Knudsen wrote these utilities for his custom C compiler he used for compiling Ultimuse3. This way you can let then set there till you need them. This is handy for loading multiple modules and not using a lot of memory. This way, MNLoad and NMLink exit from memory after the modules are loaded and the modules only take up as much memrory and the module size itself. I put both of these in the same section since they both do the same thing (almost) NMLoad and NmLink will attempt to load/link modules into memory without assigning them into memory without allocating the data space.


#COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE SOFTWARE#
The sources for this unique piece of software will be on the disk It will use up to 1.75 meg of ram on a 2 meg system!! (bootsize and software dependant). Need a bigger ramdisk? Deiniz /r0 then dmode /r0 sct=xxxx and make it as many sectors as you need, then just use it. Need the memory back after awhile? Just deiniz /r0 and it's gone ! All memory is properly returned to OS-9 and available for other programs. If it hasn't been called since the bootup, it will automatically format itself before the file operations occur. Installed in your boot, it uses no more memory than the space it takes to hold the modules. This ramdisk doesn't have to be inized, initted or formatted. The unique thing about this ramdisk is it's simplicty as well as it's usefulness. I have this ramdisk in every NirtOS-9 Level 2 bootfile I run. MyRam is by far the best ramdisk I've ever used. I have the old Level 1 C sources so it can definately be compiled for both Computers. I have used arc since the OS-9 Level 1 days but I'm not sure if the current version I have is Level 1 compatible. Here is the "usage" message straight form arc itself: I always ask, "You don't have arc?"Īrc not only copies files, it copies directories and multiple sub-directories, all with just a simple command line. When I talk to other Coconuts about moving files from drive to drive, they always say "just use dsave and.". Arc is a file copy utility that "out-copies" any other such utility that I've seen. I suggest visiting the DriveWire website to get all the details as well as the downloads.

To list all of DW's capabilities here would take several pages. Drivewire turns the Coco into a Coconut's dream machine. In RSDOS, using HDBDOS, the Coco has access to the 4 original (real) floppy drives as well as 256 virtual drives.
#COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE SERIAL#
With NitrOS-9, the Coco has access to as many as 4 virtual hard drives, serial communications via telenet, remote terminals, and DW Midi. With just a minimal amount of software on your Coco and a Coco serial to DB-9 serial cable, DW opens up a whole new world of computing to the Color Computer 1, 2, & 3.
#COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE PC#
DW also offers a Midi Synthesizer for using your favorite Coco Midi sequencer without any external hardware other than your PC & your Coco. DW is a file server that you run on your Windows/Mac/Linux machine so that your Coco has access to any Coco software you have stored there. DriveWrie (DW) has to be one of the BEST enhancements to the Coco enviroment in 25 years.
#COMPUTER IN OS X UTILITIES AFTER WIPE NO DRIVE DOWNLOAD#
At the bottom of the page will be a download for the disks.įirst and foremost on the list is a program that's not even a Coco program.

Also, when I can, I will include the sources. whether there's a 6309 version, and their usage. I will try (when I know) to list if they are Level 1-2 specific. With all that said, here is a list of the utilities that I find very useful for OS-9/NitrOS-9. With the release of most Coco software to Public Domain, the availability of Coco software is endless. So needless to say, I amassed a large Coco library. I also ended up with several boxes of Coco disks from friends who were leaving the Coco for bigger machines. We also had 2 or 3 local BBSs that had active Coco download sections. I never had my own Delphi or Compuserve accounts but I did have a friend who was on Delphi, so we spent quite a few "all nighters" doing downloads and copying them to disk so I would have some software and utilities. Since I started using OS-9, I have gathered together quite a few utilities that make OS-9 much easier to live with. I start using a Color Computer in about 1984 and starting using OS-9 Level 1 sometime around 1985.
