<QBASIC was available for the M9900 from Marinchip for $220, according to
<their ad. It was a compiled Basic, article states you didn't need line
<numbers! Sounds like Microsoft stole from Marinchip, too, since this versio
<was available in 1981 for the Marinchip 9900 system!
Ah, kids!
Prior to the advent of the PC in 1981:
Qbasic was a MS product befor they became a OS house. They used to be
heavy in languages and big apps. DRI (AKA CPM) was know for the OSs.
MS offered languages and apps like Multiplan for APPLE (6502), 9900,
8080/z80, 16032, z8000 and I'm certain I've forgotten a few.
So anywho, Qbasic was the MS answer to C-basic which was a semi compiled
non line number dependent basic. Qbasic is not fully compiled to native
machine assembly language. I know this as I still maintain a PC app
written in Qbasic (as recently as last week)! Qbasic also tried to copy
the Borland "IDE" <Integrated Development Environment> used the Turbo<insert
language here> they had for z80 and later PCs, in that you could edit, run
interpretively and then compile the working result.
Oh, Qbasic also called runtime subroutines from the library for floating
point math (and other things too).
Allison
<
<> ----------
<> From: Andy Frueh[SMTP:andyfrueh_at_hotmail.com]
<> Reply To: ti99_at_theriver.com
<> Sent: Tuesday, November 16, 1999 4:16 PM
<> To: ti99_at_theriver.com
<> Subject: RE: TI99: Is the following true?
<>
<> Hmmm...I guess where I'm getting confused is the way it handles floating
<> point...It DOES "do it" but it does it by converting it to an integer,
<> right? I guess that's what non-coprocessor machines must do, too.
<>
<> Oh well, 3 and 4 are still true, and I really dispute this is a "real"
<> story, even if elements of it ARE true. Especially that quote! :-)
<>
<> I don't have the magazine to look this up. Can we get more info on this
<> BASIC?
<>
<>
<> >From: "Yates, Ben" <BYates_at_mobilnet.gte.com>
<> >Reply-To: ti99_at_theriver.com
<> >To: "'ti99_at_theriver.com'" <ti99_at_theriver.com>
<> >Subject: RE: TI99: Is the following true?
<> >Date: Tue, 16 Nov 1999 16:07:34 -0500
<> >
<> >Look in the July/August 81 99'er magazine. Marinchip created a 9900 base
<> >system.
<> >To answer your questions:
<> >The 9900 cannot do floating point in hardware. Neither could the 8088 or
<> >286
<> >without coprocessors. It emulates it in the ROM.
<> >QBASIC WAS a basic that sold for $220 (find it in the above magazine).
<> >
<> >
<> > > ----------
<> > > From: Andy Frueh[SMTP:andyfrueh_at_hotmail.com]
<> > > Reply To: ti99_at_theriver.com
<> > > Sent: Tuesday, November 16, 1999 4:02 PM
<> > > To: ti99_at_theriver.com
<> > > Subject: Re: TI99: Is the following true?
<> > >
<> > > 1. Who would name their computer PC/OT given what that means?
<> > > 2. Can't the 9900 DO floating point? Why emulate it?
<> > > 3. When has a governor EVER cared about technology...or publicly made
<> >such
<> > >
<> > > silly comments?
<> > > 4. The R in RISC means Reduced, not rinkydink
<> > > 5. AFAIK, QBASIC is a MS program, and not something that runs on a
<> 9900
<> > >
<> > > Based on that, I'd guess the following is NOT true. :-)
<> > >
<> > >
<> > > >From: "Yates, Ben" <BYates_at_mobilnet.gte.com>
<> > > >Reply-To: ti99_at_theriver.com
<> > > >To: "'ti99_at_TheRiver.com'" <ti99_at_TheRiver.com>
<> > > >Subject: TI99: Is the following true?
<> > > >Date: Tue, 16 Nov 1999 15:46:43 -0500
<> > > >
<> > > >from
http://www.fourmilab.ch/autofile/www/section2_46_5.html
<> > > >
<> > > > <<...>> <<...>> <<...>> <<...>> <<...>>
<> > > >Next: Dear Jim Meadlock... Up: AutoBits Previous: CAD: The Final
<> > > >
<> > > >Marinchip Defeats IBM PC/AT In Benchmark
<> > > >
<> > > >Mill Valley, California, Mayday 1986.
<> > > >John Walker, President of Marinchip Systems Ltd., announced today
<> that
<> > > the
<> > > >Marinchip 9900-based PC/OT (Personal Computer/Obsolete Technology)
<> > > >resoundingly defeated the IBM PC/AT in an intense floating point
<> > > benchmark,
<> > > >even though the PC/AT was equipped with the 80287 math coprocessor.
<> > > >The benchmark was an optical ray tracing program involving primaril
<> > > >floating point computations, including evaluation of trigonometric
<> > > >functions. The Marinchip 9900 PC/OT executed the program in 69.32
<> > > seconds,
<> > > >while the IBM PC/AT took 93.79 seconds to execute the same program.
<> > > >``Our PC/OT executed this real-world engineering program 26 percent
<> > > faster
<> > > >than IBM's much vaunted PC/AT, even though our 9900 processor was
<> > > operating
<> > > >at 2 megahertz, one third the speed of the PC/AT's 80286 CPU, and th
<> > > fact
<> > > >that the PC/OT was emulating floating point in software instead of
<> >using
<> > > a
<> > > >mathematics coprocessor. This benchmark vindicates our RISC
<> (Rinkydink
<> > > >Instruction Set Computer) architecture, and clearly demonstrates th
<> > > >superiority of our proprietary QBASIC language for scientific
<> > > >applications.'', said John Walker.
<> > > >The IBM PC/AT benchmark was run in Lattice C version 2.14, using th
<> > > ``-P''
<> > > >memory model (large code, small data). The standard Lattice 2.14
<> >library
<> > > >was
<> > > >used. The results calculated by the Marinchip PC/OT and the IBM PC/A
<> > > >agreed
<> > > >to 15 decimal places.
<> > > >Commenting on the results, California Governor George Dookmayjeun
<> said,
<> > > >``It
<> > > >just goes to show you how a bunch of clean living Californians can
<> beat
<> > > the
<> > > >spit out of those drug-soaked greasy Florida scumbags. Look, I don't
<> >give
<> > > a
<> > > >flying fork what you quote me as saying, but please spell my freakin
<> > > name
<> > > >right!''. <<...>>
<> > > >
<> > > >Editor: John Walker
<> > > >
<> > > >
<> > >
<> > > ______________________________________________________
<> > > Get Your Private, Free Email at
http://www.hotmail.com
<> > >
<> >
<> >
<>
<> ______________________________________________________
<> Get Your Private, Free Email at
http://www.hotmail.com
<>
<
Received on Tue Nov 16 1999 - 21:40:24 GMT