                    PROMOS 2.0 SOFTWARE BOOKLET
                               for
              JASON-RANHEIM PROMENADE C1 EPROM BURNER 

NOTE: Text changes in this document differ from the original booklet!    
     
     In converting this operators manual to straight ASCII text files, 
a few modifications to the text on some pages were necessary. This is
because of two characters that exist on the Commodore keyboard but
are not found on standard IBM type keyboards and are not part of the 
standard USA character set. They are the British Pound symbol and the 
pi symbol. The UK Pound symbol appears on the Commodore keyboard between 
the minus (-) and the CLR/HOME keys and is CBM ASCII 92. This symbol 
looks a bit like a handwritten (in cursive) uppercase letter L with a 
dash through the center. The pi symbol is the standard greek letter. It 
is seen on the front face of the up-arrow key on the Commodore keyboard 
as a graphics character and is CBM ASCII 126. 
     In the "Promos 2.0" program written for the Jason-Ranheim 
Promenade C1 EPROM burner, these two keys are used for specific commands 
in the software. I elected to use double brackets {} to substitute for 
the British Pound symbol as that key combination is not likely to be seen 
anywhere else. The pi symbol likewise has no ASCII equivalent, but I 
simply used (pi symbol) in the text wherever that symbol appeared. 
     The following is a listing of where these changes were made:
Table of Contents page: both symbols replaced one time each.
Page 7: Pound symbol replaced four times.
Page 12: pi symbol replaced twice.
Page 14: Pound and pi symbols replaced one time each.
Page 15: Pound symbol replaced once.
Page 18: Pound and pi symbols replaced one time each.

     Pages of this booklet were scanned and saved to disk as .PCX
graphics files, then converted to ASCII text with OCR. As anyone 
who has used Optical Recognition software realizes, the quality of 
the original image is of utmost importance. The quality of the type 
in this booklet was marginal, so quite a bit of manual correction 
was necessary to the resulting text. In many places, the software 
could not determine the difference between 0 and O, - and =, S and $,
I and 1, etc. I therefore went over each page three times to check 
for and correct errors, and I'm reasonably sure there are none at 
this point. It's the best I can do.     

     The first page of information (inside front cover) in this 
booklet is not a numbered page. It is a statement of the copyrights 
and warranty information for the burner and software. The text file 
is saved as FORWARD.TXT. It is not listed in the table of contents.
     The Table of Contents is not a numbered page. The file is     
saved as TOC.TXT.
     The image on page 5 was called out as "Figure 1" in the text. 
That file is saved as a graphics file named FIGURE1.PCX. It is a 
pinout diagram of some of the various EPROMs that can be read and 
programmed in this burner. 
     The "inside back cover" mentioned in the text is not a numbered 
page. It is saved as EPROMS.TXT and has a page header as follows: 
Table of Control and Program Method Words. It is not listed in the
table of contents. 
     The blank page after page 24 is not numbered. It contains only
the header NOTES and no information.
     Other than the above pages, all numbered pages in this book 
are saved with file names of their respective pages ie PAGE1.TXT,
PAGE2.TXT, etc. The last numbered page is 24. 

     This scanned document is not intended to defraud the orginal
author or infringe on any copyrights. It was only done to support
an otherwise unsupported Commodore accessory. Since the manufacturer
no longer builds, sells or in any way profits from this hardware or
software, it is up to the users themselves to help each other with 
whatever it takes to keep a useable product alive as long as 
possible. It is in that spirit of co-operation that this document 
is made available to end users at no charge.
