This is part 6 of a series of articles investigating various floppy copy-protection schemes seen on the IBM PC platform. You may wish to read the previous entries in this series:| Adventures in PC Emulation
This is part 5 of a series of articles investigating various floppy copy-protection schemes seen on the IBM PC platform. You may wish to read the previous entries in this series:| Adventures in PC Emulation
This post goes hand-in-hand with my article on Vault Corporation's Prolok copy-protection technology. Perhaps the most important historical legacy of Vault Corporation results from the lawsuit they initiated against Quaid Software, makers of the backup software CopyWrite. | Adventures in PC Emulation
This is Part 4 of a series on PC floppy copy protection methods. You can read the previous parts here: | Adventures in PC Emulation
This is Part 3 of a series on PC floppy copy protection methods. | Adventures in PC Emulation
Here's my little review of the physical boxed edition of Roguecraft for the Commodore Amiga by Badgerpunch Games.| Lyonsden Blog
Last week I had the pleasure of attending the 20th annual iPres conference on Digital Preservation in Ghent, Belgium. I enjoyed hearing from many of my respected colleagues on many aspects of preservation including one of my favorite topics, floppy disks. There was tutorials, lightning talks, and even a workshop, presented by Leontien Talboom, Elizabeth Kata, Chris Knowles, and myself. We titled the workshop “A Guide to Imaging Obscure Floppy Disk Formats“. The workshop was conceived by a...| Obsolete Thor
Here's a look at Zzap! 64 issue 19 and its Coverdisk, The latest edition of the #C64 game review magazine from Fusion Retro Books.| Lyonsden Blog