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klaus
Slotless clock info. sought. Mark Unseen   Mar 16 13:10 UTC 1992

I have a Dallas slotless clock device which goes between one of the
ROMs and its socket on an XT.  Can anyone tell me which ROM it goes
between and what software I need to read it?  Can I get this soft-
ware from public domain?
7 responses total.
arthurp
response 1 of 7: Mark Unseen   May 19 01:27 UTC 1996

That is a really neat idea.  I never heard of one.  If I had only known nine
years ago.  ;)
rcurl
response 2 of 7: Mark Unseen   May 21 06:06 UTC 1996

That's about when you could get them.....
n8nxf
response 3 of 7: Mark Unseen   May 21 14:04 UTC 1996

But it still doesn't answer my question.    Hummm, lets see here.... Yep,
I still have the computer!  (Not to long ago it was the ARROW BBS.  In a 
bit less than two weeks it will be at the Chelsea swap.)
rcurl
response 4 of 7: Mark Unseen   May 21 16:20 UTC 1996

Datapoint: the FBE Research "SmartWatch" installed "in ROM Socket on CPU
Board in Zenith computer series Z-100/150/158/160". There was only one
ROM socket. (Info from REMark, April 1987.) Software is another matter.
OK, more data: the FBE SmartWatch uses the Dallas DS1216E module.
FBE Research existed as recently as 1992 (!): PO Box 68234, Seattle WA 98168;
206-246-9815. 
n8nxf
response 5 of 7: Mark Unseen   May 22 13:48 UTC 1996

I'll think about passing that along to whom ever buy it from me come June 2nd.
rtgreen
response 6 of 7: Mark Unseen   Mar 3 05:31 UTC 1998

I remember installing several of those.  I might even have a backup of the
driver disk somewhere.  It was a pretty neat device, using a single serial
output pin.  The first one I bought had a manual which described the protocol
in all its technical glory.  If I remember correctly, the disk also had
drivers for the Apple ][. 
  To answer your original question: it doesn't matter.  The PC driver supplied
searched the entire ROM address space until it found an address that responded
like a clock chip.  You could stuff it into any ROM socket that was the right
size.  I've run them under the BIOS rom, the BASIC ROM, and even the BIOS
extension rom on a disk controller.  By now, though, I suspect the 10-year
lithium battery in most of them is getting a bit stale...
n8nxf
response 7 of 7: Mark Unseen   Mar 3 12:17 UTC 1998

Yea, and I don't even have the computer any more ;-)
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