# _The Cricket!_ — ProDOS Clock Driver I acquired a Cricket sound/clock peripheral on eBay. Therefore it is now critical that we have a conforming ProDOS clock driver for it. > STATUS: Works on my machine! ## Background _"The Cricket!"_ by Street Electronics Corporation, released in 1984, is a hardware peripheral for the Apple //c computer. It plugs into the serial port and offers a multi-voice sound synthesizer, a speech synthesizer, and a real-time clock. The disks supplied with the device include: * `/CRICKET/PRODOS.MOD` which can be BRUN to patch ProDOS in memory with a clock driver. * A modified version of ProDOS * A utility to patch ProDOS on disk ## `CRICKET.SYSTEM` Like the `NS.CLOCK.SYSTEM` (by "CAP"), `CRICKET.SYSTEM` has these features: * [x] A ProDOS `.SYSTEM` file * [x] Detects the presence of a Cricket * [x] Installs a driver in memory following the ProDOS clock driver protocol * [x] Chains to the next `.SYSTEM` file (e.g. `BASIC.SYSTEM`) Successfully tested on real hardware. (Laser 128EX, an Apple //c clone — including at 3x speed!) ## Build Requires [cc65](https://github.com/cc65/cc65). The included `Makefile` is very specific to my machine - sorry about that. [CRICKET.SYSTEM](cricket.system.s) is the result of the build. ## Notes I ended up disassembling both [NS.CLOCK.SYSTEM](../ns.clock/ns.clock.system.s) (to understand the SYSTEM chaining - what a pain!) and The Cricket!'s [PRODOS.MOD](prodos.mod.s) and melding them together, adding in the detection routine following the protocol in the manual. ## Other Utilities These `BRUN`able files are also built: * [TEST](test.s) attempts to identify an SSC in Slot 2 and the Cricket via the ID sequence, to test routines. * [SET.DATE](set.date.s) sets the Cricket's current date. * [SET.TIME](set.time.s) sets the Cricket's current time. ## Resources Cricket disks on Asimov: * ftp://ftp.apple.asimov.net/pub/apple_II/images/hardware/sound/cricket_disk1.po * ftp://ftp.apple.asimov.net/pub/apple_II/images/hardware/sound/cricket_disk2.po Cricket Manual on Asimov: * ftp://ftp.apple.asimov.net/pub/apple_II/documentation/hardware/sound/Street%20Electronics%20The%20Cricket.pdf ## FYI... In the Cricket manual there is a short sample BASIC program to set the clock without the use of any assembly routines, using `PR#2` to talk to the serial card followed by `PRINT` statements. This does not appear to work from ProDOS with the clock driver in place - the time ends up temporarily scrambled until the clock sorts itself out again. Assembly language routines do work, however. I believe ProDOS attempts to read the clock during the execution of the basic program, which interferes the device.