Byte Magazine sponsored a symposium in November 1975 in Kansas City , Missouri to develop a standard for storage of digital (micro)computer data on inexpensive consumer quality audio cassette drives. (At the time floppy disk drives cost over $1000 each.) This format became known at the Kansas City Standard (abbreviated KCS) or BYTE standard.
The two day meeting was attended by 18 people and they settled on a system based on Don Lancaster's design published in Byte Magazine first issue. After the meeting, Lee Felsenstein (Processor Technology) and Harold Mauch (Percom Data Company) wrote up the standard.
A cassette interface is similar to a modem connected to a serial port. The 1s and 0s from the serial port are converted audio tones, this is known as audio frequency-shift keying (AFSK). A '0' bit is represented as four cycles of a 1200 Hz sine wave, and a '1' bit as eight cycles of 2400 Hz. This gives a data rate of 300 baud.
The February 1976 issue of BYTE had a report on the symposium and the March issue featured two hardware examples by Don Lancaster and Harold Mauch. The 300 baud rate was reliable but slow. The typical 8K BASIC program took 5 minutes to load. Most cassette interface systems would support higher speeds.
Processor Technology developed the popular CUTS (Computer Users
Daniel Meyer and Gary Kay of Southwest Technical Products arranged for Robert Uiterwyk to provide his 4K BASIC interpreter program for the 6800 microprocessor. The idea was to record the program on audio tape in the "Kansas City Standard" format then make a master record from the tape. EVA-TONE made "sound sheets" on thin vinyl that would hold one song. These were inexpensive and could be bound in a magazine.
Bill Turner and Bill Blomgren of MicroComputerSystems Inc. worked with EVA-TONE and developed a successful process. The intermediate stage of recording to tape produced dropouts so a SWTPC AC-30 cassette interface was connected directly to the record cutting equipment.
The May 1977 issue of Interface Age contained the first "Floppy-ROM", a 33 1/3 RPM record with about 6 minutes of "Kansas City Standard" audio.
Early microcomputers (several of them S-100 based):
Home/personal computers:
Standards | Early microcomputers | Computer storage tape media
Kansas City standard | Kansas City standard | Kansas City Standard
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"Kansas City standard".
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