User`s guide
Stop the Madness (Mac)
ref. ftp://ftp.apple.asimov.net/pub/apple_II/emulators/stm/
Sweet16 for BeOS
http://www.sheppyware.net/
Sweet16 for Carbon
http://www.bernie.gs/
Virtual ][ (II/II+ Emulator for Mac OS X)
http://www.xs4all.nl/~gp/VirtualII/
XGS-DOS (PC) Page
http://www.casaGS.net
ref. http://www.inwards.com/xgs/xgs_resources.html
XGS/32 Page
http://xgs32.emucamp.com/
XGSMac (68k Macs)
ref. http://www.inwards.com/xgs/xgs_resources.html
YAE Page
http://quark.netfront.net:6502/
ref. ftp://ftp.apple.asimov.net/pub/apple_II/emulators/yae/
______________________________
From: Mitchell Spector
004- I'd like to have a program for my //gs that can
perhaps do more reliable file copies than Finder does,
especially in the case of a damaged floppy. Any
suggestions?
I would recommend either ZZCopy or Photonix II, both are freeware and do a
very quick and reliable job at duplicating 3.5 floppies (the former even works
with 400K MFS and 800K HFS Macintosh disks). Either of the two programs work
around damaged sectors on disks.
______________________________
From: kburtch@pts.mot.com, David Empson, Rubywand, The Enforcer
005- I'd like to do some 'serious' Apple II programming.
Where can I find a information about soft switches (i.e.
"PEEKs & POKEs"), monitor routines, and standard names
used for these?
You can find listings of Apple II soft switches and popular monitor
routines in a manual for your computer-- e.g. the Apple II Reference Manual (for
II and II+), the IIe Technical Reference Manual, the Apple IIgs Firmware
Reference Manual, etc..
An excellent guide to many PEEKs & POKEs and monitor routines is the famous
"Peeks, Pokes, and Pointers" poster from Beagle Bros (early 1980's). A fairly
exhaustive guide to important memory locations in the Apple II is What's Where
in the Apple II: An Atlas to the Apple Computer by William Luebbert (1981).