Spiradisc
Appearance
Spiradisc (often misspelled as "Spiradisk") was a copy protection scheme used by Sierra On-Line on their floppy disk releases for the Apple II.
The technique, developed by Mark Duchaineau, involved writing the data on spiralling paths on the disk rather than in concentric circles. Initially, no commercial copying software or bit nibbler could successfully copy the disks it was applied to.[1][2][3]
Games which used Spiradisc copy protection include Lunar Leepers,[4] Frogger,[3] Ultima II,[1] Star Maze,[5] Jawbreaker,[6] and Maze Craze Construction Set.
References
- ^ a b Levy, Steven (2010). "Chapter 19: Applefest". Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution (25th Anniversary Edition). O'Reilly Media. pp. 326–332. ISBN 978-1449388393.
- ^ McFadden, M. M. (1987). "Antique Softkey for Frogger". Computist (41). SoftKey Publishing: 28–29.
- ^ a b Jones, Bruce W. (1985). "Spiradisk Info". Hardcore Computist (25). SoftKey Publishing: 4.
- ^ Etarip, Rich (1990). "Softkey for Lunar Leepers". Computist (83). SoftKey Publishing: 10–11.
- ^ Etarip, Rich (1990). "Softkey for Star Maze". Computist (84). SoftKey Publishing: 15–16.
- ^ Etarip, Rich (1990). "Softkey for Jawbreaker". Computist (82). SoftKey Publishing: 16.
External links
- COMPUTIST Magazine Articles by Andy McFadden