EDU-WARE's Compu-Spell Data Disk, Level 5
Adventure International's Questprobe series: Spider-Man, Incredible Hulk
I bought 'complete' packages of these items on E-bay, adn the disks didn't work.
Naturally, they were sold as UNTESTED..................Grrrrrr........
John
Little Birdie In The Sky....
Why'd you do that in my eye??
I won't holler, I won't cry......
I'm happy elephants can't fly!!
Failure of Apple II disks is actually quite improbable, unless they have
been stored in *very* unfortunate environments--like strong magnetic
fields, high humidity, high temperature, etc. Usually such abuse will
have clearly visible signs--like fungus growing on the media, etc.
Before dismissing the disks as unreadable, check your drive(s). They
could be dirty, off-speed, or a bit out of alignment (so they read disks
they write just fine, but have trouble reading disks written on other
drives).
Of course, games are a particular problem, since they often use copy-
protection methods that decrease the typical error tolerances of an
Apple II disk/drive combo, but don't give up quickly on these disks.
They are hardier than you think!
-michael
NadaNet 3.0 for Apple II parallel computing!
Home page: http://home.comcast.net/~mjmahon/
"The wastebasket is our most important design
tool--and it's seriously underused."
SPIDER-MAN
Is this one of MYSTERIO's(tm) illusions..
..or am I seeing TWO of him?
QUESTPROBE by Scott Adams with art by Al Milgrom...
I have the LOAD'N'GO version.
---
I'd got that one and IIRC Scott Adams' diskettes were not copy
protected, let me check that... I/O error...
Stay tuned,
antoine
> Failure of Apple II disks is actually quite improbable, unless they have
> been stored in *very* unfortunate environments--like strong magnetic
> fields, high humidity, high temperature, etc. Usually such abuse will
> have clearly visible signs--like fungus growing on the media, etc.
Actually, bit rot is not that uncommon. The emulsion hardens over time
and bits flake off or the magnetic basis just neutralizes.
jt
John,
I have been able to create a copy of the two sides of the unprotected
disk of Spider-Man(tm) - You should have received them by email.
And that's correct, with old disks, it is better to clean them before
inserting them into the disk drive and then clean the head drive.
Antoine
People say that, but in almost 30 years, I have yet to see any
diskette "flaking off" its media, except for one very old cheap
(no hub ring, only one side polished, etc.) disk--never on any
disk used by a software manufacturer.
I've successfully read disks with all kinds of damage. The only
kind that have resisted reading were either sharply creased or
actually scratched (by someone on purpose).
I've never seen a case of spontaneous loss of magnetization--it is
always the result of exposure to moderately strong magnetic fields
or (very) high temperatures (the kind that melt plastic!).
I'm speaking here about 5.25" Apple II disks, not 3.5" disks or
any other computer's formats.
I do have to agree with you here. All of my 5.25" disks were made before I
was born, and yet they are still largely error-free all of these years
later. Absolutely amazing! I wish I could say the same for the 3."5 SS/DS
disks used with the Macintosh.
"D Finnigan" <dog...@macgui.com> wrote in message
news:dog_cow-1...@macgui.com...
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<sirg...@optonline.net> wrote in message
news:k2mdf5h1nmuvdbcif...@4ax.com...
--
I think this is unduly harsh. You happened to be the first contributor
who knew where images could be found; thank you for responding. John
evinced considerable frustration in his request, shouting and saying
"Grrrrrr..." I empathize deeply, and the intervening discussion may have
helped inspire patience. John may have had reason to try and recover the
originals, as Antoine suggested. Not all images are pristine and
versions may vary.
Your point about the variability of floppy quality is well taken. For
nearly a decade, outrageous retail prices kept our club's librarians on
a continual search for better price and performance. Their experience
proved invaluable to members.
--
John B. Matthews
trashgod at gmail dot com
<http://sites.google.com/site/drjohnbmatthews>
I am sorry I haven't been able to locate the Eduware disks ;-)
antoine
Others have offered help with images.
I was pointing out that it is very likely that the disks he has
are, in fact, recoverable, and should be regarded as valuable.
It is often worthhile to address the issue "behind" a request as
well as or instead of answering only the request.
-michael
NadaNet and AppleCrate II: parallel computing for Apple II computers!
Home page: http://home.comcast.net/~mjmahon
The original post said two things:
1. Looking for either Emulator images or disks of the following
programs:::::
2. I bought 'complete' packages of these items on E-bay, adn the disks
didn't work.
> Others have offered help with images.
>
> I was pointing out that it is very likely that the disks he has
> are, in fact, recoverable, and should be regarded as valuable.
>
> It is often worthhile to address the issue "behind" a request as
> well as or instead of answering only the request.
It's a win, win...