Category: Australian Apple Review

Apple Assembler – A Review

by Craig KirkwoodAustralian Apple Review April 1986 LAST MONTH WE LOOKED AT the components of a microcomputer, discussed the use of high level languages and learnt how to access the Apple’s “mini assembler” from the monitor. That’s all well and good, but let’s extend our knowledge a little further and take a closer look at the heart of the Apple; presenting the 6502. The 6502 microprocessor was originally designed by a company called MOS Technology Inc., who were a “breakaway”…

The Apple As A Computer Terminal

Communications packages for the Apple II by Graeme PhilipsonAustralian Apple Review March 1984 An increasingly popular use of microcomputers, the Apple of course included, is as terminals. With the addition of a few bits of hardware and software the Apple 11 can become a complete intelligent terminal, capable of communicating via normal telephone lines with mainframe computers, databases, electronic mail services – anything that you can use a conventional terminal for. What sorts of things? Many people are still unaware,…

Logo- The cry of the Turtle is heard in the land

by Ian Gronowski Australian Apple Review V1 No 3 March 1987 In recent years Logo has become one of the most popular teaching languages. Designed at MIT by a team headed by Seymour Pappert, it has been successfully implemented on most micros, though the versions for the Apple have received the most acclaim. The hardest thing about writing an article on Logo is to try to prevent it from turning into a review of “Mindstorms”. “Mindstorms” is a book by…

Rounding in BASIC

by Graeme PhilipsonAustralian Apple Review March 1984 BASIC is in many ways a great computer language. It is very easy to learn, in fact it was originally designed as a language to teach people how to program. The letters “B.A.S.I.C.” stand for “Beginners All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code”. It is also suited to a wide range of applications: just about any programming job can be written in BASIC. Many other languages are much better suited for particular jobs, but few match…

Program A Winner at the Track

by Gareth PowellAustralian Apple Review March 1984 I wrote this article originally for the “Weekend Australian”. To those select few who already read that august paper, my apologies. However, there is a consolation prize. The “Weekend Australian” charged $2 for the program listing that appears at the end. You get it free. Dick Francis writes thrillers about horse racing. And damn good they are too. Francis is writing about something at which he is an expert, for he was a…