Did you know the Apple II had cassette DRM? I didn't.

Started by Ben, February 03, 2015, 21:08:29 PM

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Ben

But, then I read this!
QuoteBefore the Apple II had floppy drives, however, it had an audio cassette interface for storing programs and data.  This was a very primitive system, requiring you to hook up a cassette recorder to your computer and fiddle with the volume knob until things started working.  To read data from tape, you specified a range of memory to fill, and hit the "play" button on your tape recorder.  If all went well, the computer cheerfully beeped at you and off you went.  Loading BASIC programs was even easier, because the start location was pre-determined, and the length was stored on the tape.  All you had to do was type "LOAD".

I recently found myself extracting software from cassette tapes purchased on eBay.  At the start of the project, I thought to myself, "it's awkward to get at the data, but at least there's no copy protection."  As it turns out, I was wrong.
http://www.fadden.com/techmisc/cassette-protect.htm

Greyfox

That's incredible, but not surprised with it been apple. But I sorta remember back in the Atari 8-bit days where they attempted with original cassette tape games commercial high profile ones , I think from Electronic Arts of all companies ;)

That brought back memories wow..lol

zapiy

Brilliant, interesting to read but I guess where there is DRM, there is someone working out the work around. It's a continual fight.

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