I have just buy the 1278b, and the included software is rediculus. Multicom (Dos). It’s set within the Tower of Nightmares before it was destroyed, and you’ll meet up with Dess and help her with her experiments as the general narrative. There are three bosses in the Fractal, and if I didn’t have our pocket developer cheats along for the ride, I probably would have cost the team the win. Guild wars nightfall crack. Serial idm startimes. Throw the software away. They have a old win version at their site but they *sell it*!!!!! Capitalist swine eh? A product with no software for today PC's? Are these guys for real? Get a clue, this modem was based on an old CP/M machine of the last century. But MFJ still sells Multicom for Windows! Go to their website and search for MFJ-1289W. TNX Joe N4EWS Don Berry: Joe, I would be surprised to find much software that supports transference between users in either the security controls or the EULA. Here's some news.the old version of 'Multicom for Windows' (not the one. Apparently, the author wrote the software and MFJ then brought it 'in house'. What the hell do you want? I bet you paid $5 for it, and now you're complaining that you want it to work like a $25 WiFi card. Anyway does anyone know any today soft who work with this thing? Why i feel like sucker? Get AGWPE for Win-Dos or a KISS ROM and hook it to Linux. Then you can relive the 1980's again. But somehow I think this modem is too complex for you. You seem to be non-technical?? 'Howard Goldstein' wrote Gene Storey wrote:: this modem was based on an old CP/M machine How so? You'll see lots of TNC source code start at 0x0100 for development. The Z-80, and I/O on the TNC-2 were all common to CP/M machines. I developed C programs on my H-89 for TNC-2 for 10 years. My last project was a port of parts of Xinu on the DRSI TNC-2 modem from my H-89 CP/M machine. ![]() Ah--C/80 from Software Toolworks! I think I paid $20 bucks for it, and sold about $20,000 worth of software using it (non-Ham). Alas, my H-89 CRT blew out before the computer did, so I interfaced a Micromint Apple Sprite Video card (cut off the Apple bus, drilled holes for wires, and super- glued it into a rectangular hole made into the H-89 development board), and hooked it up to my TV. 40 characters wasn't the same as 80 though (once you've seen speed and line length, there's no going back:-) The color and sprites were neat though. Finally broke down and bought an IBM clone with a flip-top case, running 4.88 MHz (used that until 1993 when I bought a honkin 66 MHz motherboard!) That's about the time I got into ISDN routers and really started making money. 'Howard Goldstein' wrote Gene Storey wrote:: this modem was based on an old CP/M machine How so? You'll see lots of TNC source code start at 0x0100 for development. The Z-80, and I/O on the TNC-2 were all common to CP/M machines. I developed C programs on my H-89 for TNC-2 for 10 years. My last project was a port of parts of Xinu on the DRSI TNC-2 modem from my H-89 CP/M machine. ![]() Ah--C/80 from Software Toolworks! I think I paid $20 bucks for it, and sold about $20,000 worth of software using it (non-Ham). Alas, my H-89 CRT blew out before the computer did, so I interfaced a Micromint Apple Sprite Video card (cut off the Apple bus, drilled holes for wires, and super- glued it into a rectangular hole made into the H-89 development board), and hooked it up to my TV. 40 characters wasn't the same as 80 though (once you've seen speed and line length, there's no going back:-) The color and sprites were neat though. Finally broke down and bought an IBM clone with a flip-top case, running 4.88 MHz (used that until 1993 when I bought a honkin 66 MHz motherboard!) That's about the time I got into ISDN routers and really started making money. They have a old win version at their site but they *sell it*!!!!! A product with no software for today PC's? Are these guys for real?
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