humeur Posted January 3, 2015 Share Posted January 3, 2015 I have a Plato Disk , have you a listing of all Plato Disk also the disk prototype. For backup the Plato is same all disk jean louis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeBo Posted January 8, 2015 Share Posted January 8, 2015 I have a Plato Disk , have you a listing of all Plato Disk also the disk prototype. For backup the Plato is same all disk jean louis HERE is a link to 481 disk images of the Plato series in .dsk format (I believe that's all of them - sorry no index). mainbyte has a listing of the courses HERE You'll need the Plato cartridge to use them with a real machine, or you can use THIS cartridge image with an emulator. (if the link is working). (c'est ce que tu cherches?) 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
humeur Posted January 9, 2015 Author Share Posted January 9, 2015 Thank for help me. I have plato cartridge for test my floppy. I have some floppy that seems to be working disks before the final realization. Write on floppy label "Preliminary" or "enhanced " not for sell prototype or not ?? Bien pour le Français moi pas bien pour l'anglais je suis nul. Jean Louis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+Ksarul Posted January 10, 2015 Share Posted January 10, 2015 It depends, Humeur. You'd have to compare the disk contents with the version that was released (of that disk). There were about 100 Plato cartridges prepared as pre-release test articles (I have one--Mike Dudeck has a lot more of them), so these disks may have gone with them. Just my thoughts. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
humeur Posted January 10, 2015 Author Share Posted January 10, 2015 Update photographies plato floppy It seems to me that the disk plato are difficult to copy ? Thank Jean Louis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+Ksarul Posted January 10, 2015 Share Posted January 10, 2015 You can use any track copier to copy them (Rapid Copy or Copy-C should work fine). They just lack the standard TI Disk Header data, as they put that information somewhere else on the disk using a standard disk header exclusive to the Plato system. From the dates on some of them, these were definitely supposed to be used with the 100 evaluation cartridges I already mentioned. The enhanced disks have a strong likelihood of being different than the commercial releases, so preserving them is a very good idea. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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