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All-In-One Interface For All Your Retro/Legacy Drives

An anonymous reader writes "Individual computers have announced a new version of they're multi-format floppy controller the Cat Weasel. This new version (Catweasel MK3 PCI/Flipper) has a few surprises such as 3 different interfaces to connect it to the host computer and a socket for an original C64 SID chip :). 'The main purpose of the Catweasel has always been to allow access to non-standard disks using normal PC-disk drives, even if you usually need a completely different computer for that. The capacity of the drive does not matter in this case: A 5.25 inch drive with 1.2MByte capacity will read and write a C-64 disk with 170KByte as well as a 3.5 inch drive with 1.44MByte can access a 1,76MByte Amiga disk. Together with a company that has specialized in data recovery, we're working on the implementation of more than 1100 different disk formats, and it does not matter that this has been classified impossible by others before. Even the 800KByte disks from older Macintosh computers can be used in standard 1.44MB drives, although the original drives have rotated their disks at variable speeds.' Find out more at the Catweasel MK3 PCI/Flipper page."

9 of 250 comments (clear)

  1. Interesting by User+956 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While the windows drivers are a given, I think it's interesting that companies like this will provide linux drivers and support, but no Mac drivers or support. The Mac desktop market is significantly larger than the linux desktop market, so it's not a marketshare issue.

    But then, I guess Mac users are used to just throwing their computers away when it's upgrade time, and buying another one that "just works" (until new hardware comes out).

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
  2. Apple ][ Forever ! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Oh wait, they weren't mentioned. ;-)

    Does anyone know if this will read Apple ][ disks?

    Speaking of reading Apple disks, anyone still got a working Copy II PC board laying around?

    Cheers

  3. This is a Better way to deal with legacy devices by CathedralRulz · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Working in a Windows world and being a developer myself, I'm convinced that one of the biggest reasons for instability and issues holding back OS advancement (maybe for may as well as Win) is having to deal with legacy devices, software, and data formats.

    Ideally, OS and even software developers would look at the latest technology out there and design for that, and then work out legacy issues; the currently seem to do it the other way around.

    Development of device like these may help change that because it demonstrates the possibility for developers to look forward first and perhaps outsource the looking back.

  4. I need something that can accomodate 8 inches... by weave · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Sigh, I have a lot of my very first coding (in Z80 assembly) stored on 8" floppies, CP/M format. I'd really like to get those text files transferred off of them. What a rush it would be (if they are still readable that is. It *has* been 20 years...

    Those puppies held something like 160K and cost $5.00 (in 1980 dollars) a piece.

  5. Re:Amiga crowd? by Bastian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I know a lot of people who are seriously dedicated to the Amiga, and still use their Amigas to this day. I understand there are even more Amiga users in Europe (I'm in the USA).

    Look at all tha Amiga-specific features - you can plug this thing into a PC or an Amiga (apparently it has an ISA connector along one edge and a Zorro connector on the other), you can plug an Amiga keyboard into it, etc. etc.

  6. The real catweazle by gwernol · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For those who don't know, the real Catweazle was a very eccentric British TV show of the early 1970s. A children's cult classic and no mistake.

    --
    Sailing over the event horizon
  7. Will it read Laser / VZ disks? by eggstasy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Small intro: The VZ was a Z80 based computer sold around the world, under many names. VZ in Australia, Laser in Germany, and also known as "Texet" and "Salora Fellow" IIRC.
    We on the vzemu mailing list have been tossing around ideas on how to get the old VZ games up and running on the PC. There's more than one emulator but we could use some more software. We have copied some of the stuff over using some pretty weird processes (like manually typing in memory dumps) but we could use something better. Since these guys are german, who knows?
    Shameless plug:
    If there's anyone even remotely interested in this machine we would LOVE to have you on the mailing list since the active members are currently very few, and for a machine that was sold to hundreds of thousands of people all over the world, only having 5 or 6 ppl interested in its emulation strikes us as a bit odd.
    Anyway you can subscribe by sending a blank email to vzemu-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
    I better go and post a link on the mailing list now! :)

  8. I had a sour experience with Individual/Catweasel by blakespot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I had an Amiga 1200 (060 50MHz, towered) that I was trying to use a PC drive with. (Sold the Amiga to fund the purchase of an iBook 700 recently...) I purchased a Catweasel for the Amiga and could never get it working properly. The reason I went this route is that I was under the impression that the floppy in the A1200 was configured such that certain software would not run on the machine. (It was a very recent A1200, do a google search to find out what I'm talking about).

    Anyway, I was talking with the main guy behind the Catweasel (can't recall his name right off) via e-mail and giving him my situation and photos of different parts of my mobo and he was walking me through the process of getting the drive wired properly w/ the Catweasel, etc. but it was not working. Turns out he had incorrect information regarding the configuration of these late-model A1200's and that my whole wiring, soldering, and Catweasel experience was for naught. As this was being discovered, the guy got tired of going through the back and forth in trying to get Catweasel working on my Amiga, and stopped responding to me.

    Left a sour taste. Wasted $$. I'm sure most people won't have this need for support or this less than ideal experience. My $.02.

    blakespot

    --
    -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
    iPod Hacks.com
  9. Fred Cisin did this years ago with XenoCopy. by Brett+Glass · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's capable of reading more than 400 formats. (About the only thing it couldn't read was Apple IWM disks, which use group code recording.) A brilliant piece of work.