Getting stuff off tapes
My father had some audio cassetes he wanted to
digitalise, and he asked me to research it.
I asked around on IRC and Discord, and I was told
to use a tape recorder connected to the audio input
of a PC. I only have two PCs with audio input, my
desktop, with Haiku, Linux, Windows XP, and FreeDOS,
and my headless laptop, with Windows 98,
Windows 2000, and BeOS.
BeOS being "The Media OS", I decided to go with
that.
Then I had to procure a tape recorder, not having one at home. I eventually got one from my grandmother, but I didn't have any tapes to test it with!
Well, Sunday night, I got a tape, I connected the headphone jack of the tape recorder to the microphone port of the laptop, opened up SoundRecorder, pressed the record button, and pressed play.
An hour and a half later, I stopped the recording
and tried to play it back. No good, the recording
was incomprehensible.
I then tried lowering the
volume on the tape recorder, and it started
sounding much clearer.
Monday morning, I made a new recording, and it
worked.
Mission accomplished.
My DOS menu system
On Thursday and Friday,
I wrote a DOS menu system in QBASIC, (compiled with QuickBASIC), for my family to launch DOS games without having to *gasp* learn to use the DOS command line. This menu system is fairly simple, it reads MENU.CSV in the current working directory, for example:
Play Music,C:\APPS\MPXPLAY\,MPXPLAY.EXE D:\MEDIA\MUSIC\*.MP3
Microsoft Word 5.5,C:\DOC\,C:\APPS\WORD\WORD.EXE
FreeDOS EDIT,C:\DOC\,C:\FREEDOS\BIN\EDIT.EXE
QBASIC,C:\SRC\,C:\DEVEL\QB11\QBASIC.EXE
It has the name, working directory, and command to run. This is flexible enough that I implemented submenus without any change to the code.
It draw the menu border using line drawing characters, and uses double line characters for the selected item. Navigation is with the up and down arrow keys, and items are selected using the enter key.
Screenshots
Submenu (Other)
On my CRT
Download
I found a CRT!
On Wednsday, (2024-04-17)
I found a CRT monitor (around 15.5") on the side of the road, it was sitting there with a printer, a photocopier, a washing machine and a PS/2 keyboard (but no computer). I brought it home and wiped it down, and connected it to power and my BeOS laptop. I powered on the computer, and then I see the BIOS POST screen from the laptop, on the CRT. I didn’t use it much with my BeOS machine, as I didn’t really have enough space in my room to have both out at once. At the moment, I have it plugged in to my 32-bit desktop, running FreeDOS off a USB, although naturally, I tried out Haiku on it as well.
Now for some pictures:
DOS, with my custom menu system Haiku, with an IRC client This thing is pretty deep!