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z9001:software:turbo [2019/06/14 13:08] volkerpz9001:software:turbo [2019/06/22 13:19] – [Historie] volkerp
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 Rechtes Bild: Kopierschutz. Animiertes Gif, bei Internet Explorer ggf. Internetoptionen/Erweitert/Multimedia/Animationen wiedergeben aktivieren. Rechtes Bild: Kopierschutz. Animiertes Gif, bei Internet Explorer ggf. Internetoptionen/Erweitert/Multimedia/Animationen wiedergeben aktivieren.
  
-Der Turbo von Sven Huth ist das mit Abstand fazinierendste Programm für den Z9001: Ein Turbo-Loader, der mit normalem KC-Block-Load beginnt und unvermittelt in den Turbo-Modus übergeht. Dabei flackern am Rand Farbbalken, wie man es sonst nur von Turbo-Loadern vom ZX Sprectrum oder C64 kennt.+Der Turbo von Sven Huth ist das mit Abstand fazinierendste Programm für den Z9001: Ein Turbo-Loader, der mit normalem KC-Block-Load beginnt und unvermittelt in den Turbo-Modus übergeht. Dabei flackern am Rand Farbbalken, wie man es sonst nur von Turbo-Loadern vom ZX Sprectrum oder C64 kennt (s. Bild ganz oben).
  
 Das Programm ist vollgestopft mit Debug-Hürden und Kopierschutzverfahren. Original lässt sich Turbo nur mit sich selbst und nur als Turbo-Aufzeichnung kopieren, es sind dabei auch nur 8 Generationen möglich. Beim Speichern einer 9. Generation stürzt der Rechner (absichtlich) ab. Wenn man Glück hat, bekommt man den kompletten Absturz incl. Foto (s. Bild-Animation) Das Programm ist vollgestopft mit Debug-Hürden und Kopierschutzverfahren. Original lässt sich Turbo nur mit sich selbst und nur als Turbo-Aufzeichnung kopieren, es sind dabei auch nur 8 Generationen möglich. Beim Speichern einer 9. Generation stürzt der Rechner (absichtlich) ab. Wenn man Glück hat, bekommt man den kompletten Absturz incl. Foto (s. Bild-Animation)
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 //**Pionierhaus**:\\ ... Then we met Sven Simon Huth. This guy was a wizard! In a queer, shy way he sat at a computer somewhere in the corner of the room and just "did his stuff". First we noticed that the programs on his tapes where saved with "turbo"-speed. He showed us a cool copy program - "TURBO" - which could do such things. We couldn't even think of how this was possible! He told us that it was written in Assembler and there was some kind of magic in this word... We eagerly copied Turbo and loved it instantly. Soon it came out, that HE had written the Turbo... I can't describe our respect for him. If he said something, and this was not very often and in a shy, silent voice, it was just like words from inside the computer. He just knew everything. His BASIC became a strange mixture of ultra-long basic lines, where a new line-number was only inserted, if you need a GOTO to that line. The programs where full of calls right into the "BETRIEBSSYSTEM". I bought my own Betriebsystem-listing right after that. He, of course, seemed not to need it since he had all in his head. He had a few tapes full of every program that had ever been made for the KC87 and the tape-covers where written with pencil in a small and neat writing. I can remember that he had a "TONKOPFDREHER" attached to his shoulder bag with a fishing line. This was a small, self-made skewdriver you needed to adjust the tape tracking of the recorders.  We didn't even know, that this was possible and Mr. Freudenberg was always a bit angry about it.  I still played a lot but at the same time I started to programme. I took a course in assembler-programming with Mr. Berg. The course was held at Z1013 computers -- a construction set with a similar asm-instruction set as KC87. I didn't like this computer, maybe because it looked clumsy and self-made, but in fact it was pretty good. Now we wrote a lot of programs for the KC87. Not the slow and stupid BASIC-programs but Paint-programs and games. Sven brought a debugger called "deb" which could be loaded to different addresses in memory. You easily could write assembler (or machine-code since there where no labels or names but straight addresses) with it, and I started to write a version of "sokoban" which I had seen on a PC1715 with Jochen. Jochen's father was some kind of engineer and he always had the newest stuff at home. Sokoban worked and I loved to see others playing with it. It has a secret code to jump to the last level after that you saw a picture of ALF which I painted in the KC87 cursor-graphic with Andreas' PaintBox program. In sokoban there was a mistake in the keyboard - function of which some friends still make jokes about.// //**Pionierhaus**:\\ ... Then we met Sven Simon Huth. This guy was a wizard! In a queer, shy way he sat at a computer somewhere in the corner of the room and just "did his stuff". First we noticed that the programs on his tapes where saved with "turbo"-speed. He showed us a cool copy program - "TURBO" - which could do such things. We couldn't even think of how this was possible! He told us that it was written in Assembler and there was some kind of magic in this word... We eagerly copied Turbo and loved it instantly. Soon it came out, that HE had written the Turbo... I can't describe our respect for him. If he said something, and this was not very often and in a shy, silent voice, it was just like words from inside the computer. He just knew everything. His BASIC became a strange mixture of ultra-long basic lines, where a new line-number was only inserted, if you need a GOTO to that line. The programs where full of calls right into the "BETRIEBSSYSTEM". I bought my own Betriebsystem-listing right after that. He, of course, seemed not to need it since he had all in his head. He had a few tapes full of every program that had ever been made for the KC87 and the tape-covers where written with pencil in a small and neat writing. I can remember that he had a "TONKOPFDREHER" attached to his shoulder bag with a fishing line. This was a small, self-made skewdriver you needed to adjust the tape tracking of the recorders.  We didn't even know, that this was possible and Mr. Freudenberg was always a bit angry about it.  I still played a lot but at the same time I started to programme. I took a course in assembler-programming with Mr. Berg. The course was held at Z1013 computers -- a construction set with a similar asm-instruction set as KC87. I didn't like this computer, maybe because it looked clumsy and self-made, but in fact it was pretty good. Now we wrote a lot of programs for the KC87. Not the slow and stupid BASIC-programs but Paint-programs and games. Sven brought a debugger called "deb" which could be loaded to different addresses in memory. You easily could write assembler (or machine-code since there where no labels or names but straight addresses) with it, and I started to write a version of "sokoban" which I had seen on a PC1715 with Jochen. Jochen's father was some kind of engineer and he always had the newest stuff at home. Sokoban worked and I loved to see others playing with it. It has a secret code to jump to the last level after that you saw a picture of ALF which I painted in the KC87 cursor-graphic with Andreas' PaintBox program. In sokoban there was a mistake in the keyboard - function of which some friends still make jokes about.//
 +
 +{{:z9001:software:kassette_shuth.jpg?200|tape-covers written with pencil in a small and neat writing}}
  
 **kommerziell ??** **kommerziell ??**
  • z9001/software/turbo.txt
  • Zuletzt geändert: 2020/12/14 12:41
  • von volkerp