It's hard to beat the FoenixMgr python scripts to send data directly to RAM from a modern computer, but once simply copying from modern PC to F256K SD card is functional for those without the cartridge RAM expansion, that bload command is gonna get some serious usage again from me.
Despite this being a 'new' machine (< 6 months old depending on how you count), the ecosystem of utilities and workflow has been evolving for 3-4 years and most, if not all of the original developers are still with the project. Personally, I write code in VS Code and use 64Tass on a modern machine and with one mouse click, the code is in the F256 and running; it's extremely easy to pull memory back and forth for examination as well. A 'modern' ML monitor was just released as well and more on the way. From a SuperBASIC perspective, Paul created an off-host workflow where you can code procedurally on your Linux, Mac, or PC and then push the BASIC source in, likewise but I haven't played with it as of yet; I do like working within SuperBASIC directly. That's part of the experience. Thank you for the comment (sorry for not replying sooner, it was buried in a bunch that needed review).
very interesting machine this :) it.s this some new retro computer?
It's hard to beat the FoenixMgr python scripts to send data directly to RAM from a modern computer, but once simply copying from modern PC to F256K SD card is functional for those without the cartridge RAM expansion, that bload command is gonna get some serious usage again from me.
Despite this being a 'new' machine (< 6 months old depending on how you count), the ecosystem of utilities and workflow has been evolving for 3-4 years and most, if not all of the original developers are still with the project. Personally, I write code in VS Code and use 64Tass on a modern machine and with one mouse click, the code is in the F256 and running; it's extremely easy to pull memory back and forth for examination as well. A 'modern' ML monitor was just released as well and more on the way. From a SuperBASIC perspective, Paul created an off-host workflow where you can code procedurally on your Linux, Mac, or PC and then push the BASIC source in, likewise but I haven't played with it as of yet; I do like working within SuperBASIC directly. That's part of the experience. Thank you for the comment (sorry for not replying sooner, it was buried in a bunch that needed review).
i check some page this and only saw for this machine have + 256k ram cassete
Might want to shave off those last 30 sec.