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KCS was a simple FSK system that recorded zeros as four cycles of a 1200 Hz tone and ones as eight cycles of 2400 Hz. This produces an overall data rate of 300 Hz. Data was recorded in eight-bit bytes, least docHub bit first, with a parity bit added to seven-bit data if needed.
With baud rates varying between 300 to 2400 something between ~200KB to ~1.5MB can be stored on a 90 minute (2x45min) standard cassette tape.
KCS was a simple FSK system that recorded zeros as four cycles of a 1200 Hz tone and ones as eight cycles of 2400 Hz. This produces an overall data rate of 300 Hz. Data was recorded in eight-bit bytes, least docHub bit first, with a parity bit added to seven-bit data if needed.
The Kansas City standard (KCS), or Byte standard, is a data storage protocol for standard cassette tapes at 300 bits per second.
Kansas City Standard or BYTE Standard, was a standard developed by BYTE magazine back in in the late 70s. It was used to store computer data on standard, low-cost, audio cassette tapes. It was designed to allow common people to be able store data at home as there werent many options to do so back around that time.
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Kansas City Standard or BYTE Standard, was a standard developed by BYTE magazine back in in the late 70s. It was used to store computer data on standard, low-cost, audio cassette tapes. It was designed to allow common people to be able store data at home as there werent many options to do so back around that time.
The original standard records data as marks (one) and spaces (zero). A mark bit consists of eight cycles at a frequency of 2400 Hz, and a space bit consists of four cycles at a frequency of 1200 Hz. A word, usually one byte (8 bits) long, is recorded in little endian order, which is least docHub bit first.

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