Short: Dragon and Tandy CoCo emulator Author: xroar@6809.org.uk (Ciaran Anscomb), MorphOS port by uploader Uploader: polluks+aminet sdf lonestar org (Stefan Haubenthal) Type: misc/emu Version: 0.35.4 Requires: PowerSDL, ROM image Architecture: ppc-morphos URL: http://www.6809.org.uk/xroar/ XRoar - a Dragon/Tandy Coco emulator Copyright 2003-2019 Ciaran Anscomb XRoar is a Dragon emulator that runs on a wide variety of platforms. Due to hardware similarities, XRoar also emulates the Tandy Colour Computer (CoCo) models 1 & 2. Some features are: * Emulates Dragon 32, Dragon 64, Dragon 200-E, Tandy CoCo 1 & 2, and compatibles. * Emulates DragonDOS, Delta and RSDOS disk systems. * Emulates the Orchestra 90-CC stereo sound cartridge. * Supports both raw and translated keyboard modes. * Reads and writes virtual cassettes (compact '.cas' files and audio files). * Reads and writes VDK, JVC and DMK format virtual floppy diskettes. * Saves and loads machine snapshots. * Provides a GDB target for remote debugging. * Games Master Cartridge support, including SN76489 sound chip. * MOOH RAM expansion + SPI support. * Experimental Glenside IDE support. XRoar is easily built from source under Linux, and binary packages are provided for Windows. It should still be possible to build for Mac OS X, but no binary packages are currently being provided. XRoar was originally written to run on Solaris, Linux and the GP32 handheld. Later, it was ported to the Nintendo DS. Support has now been dropped for the GP32 and NDS as emulation accuracy, and thus the CPU requirement, has increased. Builds have not been tested under Solaris for some while. XRoar is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. XRoar is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with XRoar. If not, see . This README contains extracts from the manual. Binary packages contain the full manual as a PDF, which is also available from the XRoar home page (http://www.6809.org.uk/xroar/).