CP/M survey
Allison
ajp166 at bellatlantic.net
Thu Apr 19 09:33:16 CDT 2007
>
>Subject: Re: CP/M survey
> From: Jeffrey Armstrong <jba at sdf.lonestar.org>
> Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2007 12:08:11 +0000 (UTC)
> To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
>
>
>>> >
>>> >Subject: CP/M survey
>>> > From: Mark Tapley <mtapley at swri.edu>
>>> > Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 09:09:45 -0500
>>> > To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
>>> >
>>> >DEC Rainbow (8087, 832k (max for -A model), but
>>> that's irrelevant to CP/M-80).
>>>
>>> Not true as the rainbow also ran CP/M-80/88 as it
>>> was a dual CPU (has a z80).
>>>
>>> Allison
>>
>> Could it access more then 64k under CP/M-80? Don't
>> you mean CP/M-86? Not to nit pick...
>> I don't know about specific Rainbow revisions, but I
>>was under the impression the 'bow could go up to 896k.
>>Maybe I'm thinking of the Tandy 2000 via an 3rd party upgrade.
>
>I think Mark was trying to say that an 8-bit CP/M program on the Rainbow
>can only access 64k RAM, which is true, under Rainbow CP/M-86/80. A
>16-bit program could access all of the Rainbow's system RAM under CP/M.
Of course and I referred to that. What I avoid trying to do was say, hey
it's a Z80 and 8bitters like 8080 and Z80 without only address 64k. Granted
you can hang bank hardware on them and extend but the addressing is
still only 64k.
>And he's also right about the memory. A 100A maxed out at 832k, while a
>100B/100+ maxed out at 896k. This is because 100A models shipped with
>128k on the motherboard, while 100B/100+ models shipped with 192k. So
>when a maxed-out ram expansion card was installed, the 100A still had 64k
>less than an equivalent 100B/100+.
>
>One interesting thing about 16-bit programs on CP/M-86/80 on the Rainbow
>was that some were confused by too much RAM. The most notable examples
>are all the Rainbow ports of Infocom adventures; they all complain about
>"not enough memory" if you have more than 512k or something like that.
Unlike PCs were 640k was all there was.
Allison
More information about the cctech
mailing list