ISEPIC

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One switch to rule them all.
ISEPIC
Designed by Chip Gracey

ISEPIC (say "ice-pick") is an extraordinary hardware and software combination that is capable of copying virtually all memory-resident software regardless of the original protection scheme or storage medium are the first few words on the manual.

And for once you can believe in what that sentence stated in 1985. Freezing programs is the sole purpose ISEPIC was created for and it does it pretty well.

ISEPIC Screenshots
ISEPIC Screenshots
Technical Info
RAM 2 kbyte
Hardware features 1 Switch
Manual PDF: 14 pages - average insight provided
CRT ID NONE
Control Registers $DE00 - $DE07 for RAM banking

Commercially distributed by Starpoint Software in likely June 1985 it vanished very quickly again by the end of 1985. The manual has the name of the hard- and software designer written all over it and nowadays the website of Parallax Inc. has an article on their origins explaining how Ken 'Chip' Gracey started that company and what he did before:

These experiences quickly led to dismantling video game source code and household electronic hardware, and trying to use these devices for purposes other than originally intended. Hobby transformed into a business, and by the time he was a senior in high school Chip was running a small business called Innovative Software Engineering (ISE) from his bedroom. ISE made a software duplication hardware for the Commodore 64 computer called the ISEPIC (no relation to PICmicros). Within a year Chip sold 20,000 ISEPICs around the world, largely by word of mouth at local computer clubs and niche magazines.

Starpoint Software sold ISEPIC for just about six months and we are not sure how many units entered the world but it was enough to worry some people. The RAM-only cartridge came with monitor software (really worth a look!) and easened many tasks on a very basic level. Before actually breaking the currently frozen program it can be run again to see wether the saved snapshot would actually work. Since all operations are done on a disc ISEPICking is a very lengthy process and the common cycle of freeze, monitor inspect the memory, restart established with later cartridges was a real no-go.

Many real crackers regarded the use of a freezing cartridge as being lame but interestingly only one demo so far by FAIF (Federation against ISEPIC & Freeze Frame) was found. On the other hand several Anti-Isepic tools can be found which actually hide the fact that ISEPIC was used.

Tech

The following is shamelessly ripped from isepic.c from the VICE emulator. The text is likely written by Marco van den Heuvel:

 Isepic is a ram based freeze cart.

 It has 2KB of ram which is banked into a 256 byte page in the $DF00-$DFFF area.

 The page is selected by any kind of access to the I/O-1 area, as follows:

 PAGE   ACCESS ADDRESS
 ----   --------------
  0         $DE00
  1         $DE04
  2         $DE02
  3         $DE06
  4         $DE01
  5         $DE05
  6         $DE03
  7         $DE07

 Because of the incomplete decoding this 8 byte area is mirrored throughout $DE08-$DEFF.

 The isepic cart has a switch which controls if the registers and ram is mapped in.

 When the switch is switched away from the computer the cart is put in 'hidden' mode,
 where the registers, window and ram is not accessable.

 When the switch is switched towards the computer the cart is put in ultimax mode,
 with the registers mapped, and the current page being mapped into any unmapped ultimax
 memory space, it will also generate an NMI. Which activates the freezer.

The system software offers to the option to prepare storage disk. The disk in the drive will be soft formatted and an ISEPICked version of the system software is written to it. Choosing copy program will put the actual freeze routines to cartridge RAM, fill the C64 memory with a pattern and reset the computer. The program to be copied can be loaded now.

(TODO: Outline the memory fill routine. IseMON is detecting free bytes and shows them inverted by some obscure algorithm.)

Flipping the switch (a few times you will be told) snapshots the memory and starts saving it to the storage disk. The frozen memory is saved to disk in four chunks of 16kb each (named PGM.1 to PGM.4). Color ram is saved to "PGM.C" and the register contents can be found inside "PGM.X". These 6 files are required to use operations such as run, edit and break program with the system software.


ISEPIC Adverts
ISEPIC Advert v1
'To crack or to back up. That IS the question these two adverts cover.
ISEPIC Advert v2


Notes

  • The review on Ahoy! Magazine Issue 22 (October 1985) and Ahoy! Magazine Issue 27 (March 1986) are warning the readers and users of cartridges such as the ISEPIC to utilise them for making illigitimate backups.
  • RUN Magazine Issues 18 to 24 contained adverts for the ISEPIC cartridge. At Issue 22 the advert slightly changed by replacing the words "copies" and "cracked" by "back up". In 1986 no advert was seen anymore.


Missing

  • ISEPIC Schematics

Binaries

Isepic_binaries_2010-03_rr.c64.org.rar contains just the c64 binaries:


Isepic_all_2010-03_rr.c64.org.rar contains:


Trivia

  • Interesting effects can be caused by failed freezes:

No cart is perfect

  • Trilogic advertised operating system software on disk as cheaper to upgrade. ISEPIC took the lead and provided a single program which nobody ever seem to have touched, modified or anything:

ISEPIC System Software was coming on a disk


Weblinks