Bart writes ... > > >c:\a2\adt\adt 2 19200 > > > >Which I guess is just telling ADT to use serial port 2 on the PC > > -Did that. Actually, I did it manually instead of a .bat file but > it is the same.. Here is the main symptom if anyone can figgure it out: > Everything seems loaded OK, ADT gives the Line1 Line2 Line3 screen on the PC > side./ On the Apple side it is the standard ADT screen that looks like a > modified speradsheet. Now, whenever I issue "D" as in dir, the Apple's > screen goes blank. An esc brings it back. .... One thing to check is that your ADT file is okay-- i.e. that it was correctly transferred. Here is a short Applesoft BASIC program you can type in and save on your ADT disk-- SAVE ADTCHECK-- which calculates a check sum. 10 TEXT : HOME 20 PRINT CHR$ (4)"BLOAD ADT,A$4000" 40 FOR I = 0 TO 2579 50 Z = Z + PEEK (16384 + I) 55 IF I / 500 = INT (I / 500) THEN PRINT "CURRENT SUM= ";Z 60 NEXT I 70 PRINT "CHECKSUM= ";Z The results for ADT versions 1.21 and 1.22 are ... ADT (v1.21) ADT(v1.22) 76 76 53958 53958 101079 101079 158919 158919 224503 224504 307268 307117 313020 312869 <-- final value If you don't care about intermediate checks, leave out Line 55. The result should be 313020 for v1.21; 312869 for v1.22. The check is not an absolute guarantee that ADT is not corrupted; but, if the sum is 'correct', the odds are pretty good that ADT is okay. Other things to check are ... o- ADT on the PC is started under DOS, _not_ Windows or a DOS window in Windows-- i.e., if you normally start your PC under Win95/98, do a 'Restart in MS-DOS mode' and run ADT under DOS o- ADT on the PC is set to the correct COM port o- Your baudrates on the A2 and PC match You may need to experiment with a lower baudrate. Like, you may need to go to 9600 or 2400. Rubywand