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Transfered to the ACT SIRIUS USER GROUP (UK) 19/01/2005
A Software Archive for the Sirius Microcomputer
Sirius, ACT Sirius 1, S1, Victor 9000, V9000, Vicki, Vi
INDEX
A Personal Note from Simon Sheppard
The files in this directory are from the archives of Issue, the
organization I founded in 1986 and ran until about 1994. Winding up Issue
was much regretted, because among Sirius users a sense of comradeship
existed unlike that for any other micro.
Yours still Siriusly,
Simon Sheppard
- Click on the filename to download.
- The file size shown is the size of the compressed ZIP file, not its
actual contents. Most of these ZIPs contain many files; PKUNZIP is used
to extract them.
- If lines in the lists below are forced to wrap, for example when
using an enlarged display font on a 640x480 screen, the left and right
columns may no longer correspond.
- Commercial applications software by other companies (e.g. Lotus,
AutoCad) is included here on the understanding that copyright
restrictions no longer apply for unsupported machines. If this is
incorrect please contact me via the address below. Special thanks to
Richard Russell for permission to include IBASIC, the special Sirius
version of BBC BASIC we did, in this collection.
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Public
Domain, Games, Issue News letters etc. |
PD-DIRS.ZIP PD88INTR.ZIP PD88ARTS.ZIP PD88PACM.ZIP PD88SCRA.ZIP PD88CHES.ZIP PD88EMUL.ZIP PD88INEW.ZIP PD88IBIT.ZIP PD88MISC.ZIP PD2BANNE.ZIP PD2-MAIN.ZIP PD2KERM1.ZIP PD2KERM2.ZIP PD2KERM3.ZIP PD2-STRM.ZIP PD3EFONT.ZIP PD3FORTH.ZIP PD3-LISP.ZIP PD3-ARTS.ZIP PD3INEWS.ZIP PD3CENTI.ZIP PD3-UTIL.ZIP PD4TURBO.ZIP PD4-8087.ZIP PD4-MISC.ZIP PD5FORTH.ZIP PD6-ANSI.ZIP PD7-SI.ZIP PD8-XASM.ZIP PD8USNEW.ZIP PD8INTRO.ZIP PD8TEXTS.ZIP PD8PTOOL.ZIP PD8MTOOL.ZIP PD8MISCE.ZIP PD9.ZIP PD10.ZIP ORBIC.ZIP PD1ORBIC.ZIP GAMES1.ZIP GAMES2.ZIP STARTREK.ZIP MISCELLA.ZIP HITCHHIK.ZIP PDBITS1.ZIP PDBITS2.ZIP
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The original
structure of the PD Discs (4k) The first Issue PD disc, games and
articles (5k) Articles (17k) Pacman (23k) Scramble (27k) Chess
(32k) Emulator (74k) Issue Newsletters 1,2,3,4 (9k) Issue info,
how to fix power supplies etc. (9k) The Sirius talks! (26k) The
second Issue PD disc, technical info, intro banner Hardware notes
(6k) Three different Kermits (6k) (9k) (19k) Sirius
Supplementary Technical Reference Manual (148k) (36k) (25k) Lisp
(33k) Articles (23k) Issue Newsletters (13k) Centipede
(9k) Patches and utilities (47k) (2k) (11k) (79k) One disc
dedicated to Forth (130k) ANSI driver (43k) One disc dedicated to
Space Invaders (36k) Z80 and 6502 Cross-assemblers (32k) US news
(10k) Type me Issue News 8 etc. (18k) 'Power Tools' - many
utilities (35k) More tools (38k) Yet more, BAT2EXEC etc.
(60k) Hard disc utilities (238k) Codec drivers and sounds
(280k) Orbic, the Issue Mandelbrot s/w. Stunning graphics
(226k) Orbic, Mandelbrot s/w to exploit the 8087 (COM only)
(13k) BASIC games etc. There may be duplication here (246k) More
games (237k) Startrek game (350k) Miscellaneous PD utilites
(263k) Hitchhiker's Guide, with pre-loader for Sirius (136k) Various
PD bits (27k) (83k)
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System Notes |
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If you have a Sirius with no operating system (boot) disc, by far the
easiest way to go will be to find someone with a working Sirius and have
him make you a copy. At present I have an archive disc but no means of
making a copy, and the disc format is non-standard. However, be assured
that there are still working machines owned by Sirius enthusiasts out
there!
Enough information is here to boot a Sirius from nothing but it would
not be a trivial task. On each boot disc MSDOS.SYS has been archived by
PKZIP (on the Sirius the Bios and DOS are combined in MSDOS.SYS, which is
normally a hidden system file). However what has not been saved is
the (disc) bootstrap to MSDOS.SYS - you would need to run SYS, FORMAT,
SYSELECT or SYSGEN to create a bootable disc. Of course you need a booted
Sirius to do this! IDRIVER is a device driver for an expansion board we
produced which interfaces an external MFM (720K) drive, but we never got
round to writing the code to boot off the external drive. It is also
possible to boot from the serial port.
An interesting project would be to write a PC program which booted a
Sirius via its serial port. Then you could restore the OS, download the
rest of the stuff here and Lo! a working Sirius, started from nothing.
LO80.ZIP is for system hackers. LO80 is the 80th and last version of
the LOROM i.e. half of the Sirius Boot ROM. (The other half, HI12,
containing the floppy, hard disc and serial boot sub-routines, was patched
in an EPROM programmer using a partial disassembly as a guide.) LO80.ASM
is the source code for the system test, screen display on start-up and the
boot itself. The Issue ROMs were based on the Universal ROMs (checksum
F3F7), capable of booting all operating systems.
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