23 Years Later: the Apple II Receives Another OS Update (arstechnica.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Yesterday, software developer John Brooks released what is clearly a work of pure love: the first update to an operating system for the Apple II computer family since 1993. ProDOS 2.4, released on the 30th anniversary of the introduction of the Apple II GS, brings the enhanced operating system to even older Apple II systems, including the original Apple ][ and ][+. Which is pretty remarkable, considering the Apple ][ and ][+ don't even support lower-case characters. You can test-drive ProDOS 2.4 in a Web-based emulator set up by computer historian Jason Scott on the Internet Archive. The release includes Bitsy Bye, a menu-driven program launcher that allows for navigation through files on multiple floppy (or hacked USB) drives. Bitsy Bye is an example of highly efficient code: it runs in less than 1 kilobyte of RAM. There's also a boot utility that is under 400 bytes -- taking up a single block of storage on a disk. The report adds: "In addition to the Bitsy Boot boot utility, the ProDOS 2.4 'floppy' includes a collection of utilities, including a MiniBas tiny BASIC interpreter, disk imaging programs to move files from physical floppies to USB and other disk storage, file utilities, and the 'Unshrink' expander for uncompressing files archived with Shrinkit."
than Windows 10.
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
> is pretty remarkable, considering the Apple ][ and ][+ don't even support lower-case characters.
Wrong, there was a Prodos for the Apple][
> Apple ][ and ][+ don't even support lower-case characters
There was a program that piggy-backed the char display and used graphic mod to display lowercase characters, even supported accentss. Had bee used by word-processors back then. AppleWord and the Jane environment.
And Yes I affirm, there was a Prodos for the Apple][ back then.
Léa Gris
I recall that when Apple decided stop selling the Apple IIe, school districts were genuinely upset because they were still using them heavily. They had very large educational software libraries that would now become obsolete as they could no longer buy replacement systems.
If the market is there and willing to pay, Apple would have been foolish to not serve it. They could have probably continued selling IIe systems well into 1995 if they wanted. It's pretty crazy just how entrenched the Apple II was in schools.
I understand this is an independent developer's work. How can he name the software like Apple's product, and even print "(c) Apple Computers Inc" on it? Shouln'd that awake Apple's army of evil lawers?
Not everything is about the newest and shiniest, AC.
Sometimes a nice jolt of nostalgia for a lost era in time just feels good. That's what this is for. Running a game in an emulator does not recreate the experience.
The whir and grind of the disk drive, the clacking of the keys, the authentic tones from the real sound chips... For a brief moment, one can feel like they were 8 years old again.
That is what this is about. Now, go take your soulless devotion to consumerism elsewhere.
Apple made an add-in card for Macintosh LCs (Popular in education) that let it run apple II software, and was designed to be IIe compatable. It was pretty popular and apple made a LOT of them - So many that I remember about a decade ago someone was selling off a warehouse of them for about 20 bucks each. (Should have picked one up. Now they go for 200)
Pretty clever bit of kit too. It had an interface for the older drives, and could use/create disk images as needed. (You could copy your entire library and run it off the mac hard disk) Some hardware was on the card, the rest was implemented in software. Ran great. Even emulated the color artifacts in the display hardware a lot of software relied upon to work properly.
> Which is pretty remarkable, considering the Apple ][ and ][+ don't even support lower-case characters.
Then why did Apple have a "Tech Note #141" describing how to install the Shift-Key Mod ???
* https://archive.org/stream/II_II-Shift-Key_Modification/II_II-Shift-Key_Modification_djvu.txt
Without an 80-column card, those machines do NOT display lowercase characters. That is to say, out of the box, neither the ][ nor the ][+ does what you think it does. Your citation says as much.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"