AmigaEd wrote:
The A1000 running the Wartrans AmigaBasic program will apparently only do 9600 baud reliably. I compressed the file because the uncompressed version would take hours to transfer.
Hi AmigaEd,
I've had the higher than 9600 baud, data loss, problem before, on my A2000 @ 7.12 MHz.
I
was able to get data at 19,200, only when transferring a file, but NOT displaying the text on the screen, as I was receiving it (through a modem, on a phone line). Oh wait, it was at 14,400. I never had a 19,200 baud modem, but I think it would work. What I was doing was getting all the text messages from usenet, from the last time I was on, and it was displaying them on screen, and saving to ram. It couldn't display, and save fast enough. But when I requested it transfer as a file, to be opened later, I had no problem. The program I was using (Ncomm) was compiled, not Basic. Probably, basic is too slow, Amiga Basic, is uncompiled, to boot.
Maybe Amiga Basic hits a barrier at 512 K (who needs more than 640, right?)! It's another fine crap ms-dos product, after all!!!!
.adf files can be broken down into pieces, when they're made, I believe. Make 2 440K files, and use the "join" command to put them back together.