Subject: Re: wierd II clone From: Tebo X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.12 (X11; I; SunOS 5.7 sun4m) MIME-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 References: <210819992355382667%news001@macgeek.org> <1dwzhml.1n3d35j1fn64fiN@ppp088.sgci.com> X-URL: news:1dwzhml.1n3d35j1fn64fiN@ppp088.sgci.com Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii NNTP-Posting-Host: vader.mds.mdh.se Message-ID: <37c6a8b6@news.mdh.se> Date: 27 Aug 1999 17:03:18 +0100 X-Trace: 27 Aug 1999 17:03:18 +0100, vader.mds.mdh.se Lines: 21 >> As for myself, I owned a no name Taiwan II+ clone. It had at the time what >> I though was cool, built in macros on the keyboard which had a bunch of >> DOS 3.3 commands on them. >Ah yes, I had one too. Those macros were very handy. Mine had >lower-case capability, too. The keyboard to my clone "UNITRON 2200" have those built in macros too, applesoft-commands and dos-commands. Verry handy when doing basicprogramming. I really missed that feature when I started to programming C and Pascal on PC. The only drawback is that the macro-key is the same that changes from uppercase to lowercase and also used when doing reset. Constantly changeing to lowercase when not wanting to. There is allso two keys to make your own macros for the numeric keys. I have pictures of the Unitron2200computer at http://www.mds.mdh.se/~frv95pen/apple2/bilder/ It have drivecontroller and Z80 built in on the motherboard. When you boot it, it says "DISK ON" instead of "APPLE ]["