BASICODE April 8, 1985 BASICODE is part of a system used by computer enthusiasts in the Netherlands, primarily to Broadcast computer programs. The Netherlands National Broadcasting service has a weekly computer show (HOBBYSCOOP?) that includes data broadcasts on AM radio of BASIC programs. The idea is that you record the broadcast prgrams on a cassette recorder and then load them into your computer. data is broadcast at 1200 bps. BASICODE is a "subset" of BASIC that should allow programs written in the BASICODE subset to be executed on nearly any of the personal computers that have a Microsoft flavoured BASIC on them. This certainly includes things like Apples, Commodores, Ataris and of course CP/M and PC/MSDOS computers, and no doubt many, many others. So BASICODE is also a way of ensuring portability of BASIC programs between widely differing machines. This disk is volume 4 of the Netherland CP/M User Group (CPMNL) collection and has the details of BASICODE-2 for CP/M computers. I'm not how BASICODE-2 differs from BASICODE-1. Unfortunately most of the information on BASICODE is in Dutch, a language I don't speak. I once attended a lecture at one of the local computer education groups on BASICODE, given by one of the orginal developers of it (that's the only reason I can even attempt this introduction). My wife speaks Indonesioan (she taught it at High School) and so can at least recognise some of the Dutch words and that has helped also. It struck me at the time I first heard about it that BASICODE was really an idea whose time had yet to come. So in the hope that this material will motivate someone in the English speaking CP/M community to take a closer look at BASICODE and its implications, I am dressing this up with what little English documentation I can, plus an English catalogue of sorts. If you can provide translations of any of the Dutch language material or other support material on BASICODE (on disk please), I'd appreciate a copy. There is some mention of additional material on CPMNL volume 5 (505). If you have this volume, or know of anyone who does, please send me a copy! Special thanks to Phil Coull in the United Kingdom who brought this material to my attention and sent me CPMNL volume 4! Bill Bolton, Software Tools RCPM, P.O. Box 357, Kenmore, QLD, 4069, AUSTRALIA Phone +61 7 378-9530 CCITT V.21 300 bps