Get one of those CD to casette adaptors, it looks like a regular casette but with a stereo jack lead comming out of one corner. Put that in the datacasette and plug that into the sound card input.
That should give you something plugged into either the line in (if you have it) or the mic in.
Cheers,
Lee.
What a cool idea!!! That could work.
Btw, Inside of the old C2N model, there is an extra connection (for a second tape deck it seems). Inside of the new model, there isn't....
Jeff, Set VICE to use regular files on the harddisk instead of a disk image. Then when saving, loading etc, the files will be stored as normal PC files on the harddisk in the directory you choose.
Boray wrote:Btw, Inside of the old C2N model, there is an extra connection (for a second tape deck it seems). Inside of the new model, there isn't....
I'm not sure it was meant for daisy chaining, but rather internal testing of the unit. The question was brought up by readers of a computer magazine many years ago, but the technical staff on the magazine didn't find a good use of the connector.
Yet another cable solution is to build or buy a C2N cable for connecting the datassette directly to the PC and use mtap tools. I haven't tried this, but for someone who likes tapes more than disks, it seems a technologically excellent solution as you get more or less a digital transfer rather than going through wave files.
In this case, -r means the samples are reversed (inverted?). The specs of the WAV file are 44.1 kHz, 8-bit mono but it doesn't say if that is signed or unsigned data (should be unsigned I believe).
That means we should have two entries within 20 lines and my one out of competition on 25.