Ah, so it has, under both the BMC and the OKI names.  I was going to
try it with imgdisk and 22disk eventually, but I was in a KF
experimentation phase.
On Tue, 15 Mar 2016, Chuck Guzis wrote:
A plain old PC with legacy FDC will work just fine.
A little mouse tickling my memory indicates that the IF800 was one of the systems used by Gene Roddenberry. I don't recall if it was BMC or OKI, however.

It might be necessary to go slightly below INT13h. I remember something weird about it, but can't remember what. Maybe it had invalid head numbers on the second side?


In addition to the CP/M, the Oki if800 also existed with a version of Microsoft Stand-Alone BASIC; similar, but not a match for the NEC 8001. Don't know how wide spread that was, the disks that I worked on were some that Lee Felsenstein brought back from Soviet Union. I also once assisted Don Maslin with an NEC 9801 disk with the Stand-Alone BASIC format instead of either CP/M nor MS-DOS. For those not familiar, it has a directory in the middle of the disk. The directory consists of two parts, a linked list of clusters and a table of directory entries. Each directory had filename (some were 6.2 instead of 8.3), file size, and starting cluster number. Radio Shack Coco is one such, and the MS-DOS directory was inspired by it. Supposedly, Tim Paterson's company (Seattle Computer Products) shared a booth with Microsoft at NCC or the West Coast Computer Faire, and he liked the ideas behind the Stand-Alone BASIC directory structure.


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