Kansas City Standard data cassette

From Just Solve the File Format Problem
Revision as of 16:23, 27 December 2012 by Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search
File Format
Name Kansas City Standard data cassette
Ontology
Released 1975


The Kansas City Standard is a system for storing data on cassettes. It was devised at a symposium in Kansas City in November, 1975, convened by Byte magazine, which published the resulting standard in its February 1976 issue. This format was used by a number of systems, especially S-100 bus systems (the same sorts of systems that generally used CP/M when they acquired disk drives).

Sometimes software was distributed on cassettes with Kansas City Standard data on one side, and another format of the time, CUTS, on the other side.

Unified Emulator Format (UEF) has been used to preserve the pattern of signals in such a cassette in a modern computer file.

Some systems using this cassette standard:

  • Acorn
  • Casio (calculators, keyboards)
  • Exidy Sorcerer
  • Ohio Scientific
  • Processor Technology (SOL-20)

Documentation

Software

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox