![]() Our systems are encrypted, and we adhere to industry-leading data security protocols. We comply with the General Data Protection Regulation 2016/679 (GDPR) and The Data Protection Act 2018. We know how important it is to protect and respect your personal data. Phlo Digital Pharmacy is registered with the GPhC. Where that may not be possible, we will keep you informed of your options. Your medication arrives in discreet, eco- and letterbox- friendly packaging. You can add, remove, or change any medication at the touch of a button. We make it easy to manage your medication through the app. With Phlo’s handy reminders to re-order, you’ll never have to worry about missing a dose again. Phlo features intuitive push notifications that keep you up to date with important events relating to your medication, the progress of your delivery and Phlo account. We’ll update you on the progress of your prescription every step of the way. You can call, email, or live chat with our Pharmacy team whenever you need to. Our UK-based Pharmacy team is comprised of General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) registered Pharmacists who take real pride in providing the patient care that you deserve. If you’re not in our same day delivery zone, we also provide tracked next-day and free 48-hour delivery options across the UK. If you live in our same-day delivery zones, on average we can deliver to you in 120 minutes or less. Track your prescription delivery on the live map - as it travels to your doorstep. We can deliver anywhere in the UK, so long as you are registered with a GP in England. YOUR MEDICATION DELIVERED IN AN AVERAGE OF 120 MINUTES OR LESS We will then work with your GP to get your medication to your doorstep quickly, and for free! We can handle both acute and repeat prescription requests. Once you’re in, simply start requesting your medication, and schedule a delivery. Look out for the “Continue with NHS login” button. Moreover, as Phlo is integrated with NHS login, you can also register with Phlo using your NHS login details which keeps all your healthcare data safe and secure in one place. Just tell us a bit about yourself, enter your home address and GP surgery, and voila! You’ve switched to Phlo, your new pharmacy. We’ve made it quick and easy to get started. ![]() ![]() Our team goes above and beyond to provide exceptional service. Switching to Phlo takes less than 3 minutes!Īvoid unnecessary trips to the pharmacy and take back control. With Phlo, you can manage, order, and track your NHS or private prescriptions at the touch of a button. Many thanks to Rich Talbot-Watkins for his great work on BeebAsm.Phlo is the pharmacy app that offers same-day delivery of your NHS prescriptions in an average of 120 minutes or less within our real-time delivery zones. You can find me on Twitter where I ramble on about all kinds of retro computer and video game things. I hope to include the required workspace and. This disk image file can be loaded by many different BBC Micro Emulators, including B-em and BeebEm.Īlternatively, you could use 'Visual Studio Code' with the 'Beeb VSC' extension. This will assemble the code and output 'CrazeeRiderBBC.ssd' in the same folder. Run 'make.bat' from a command prompt whilst in the project's root folder. To build the game you first need to install the following tools:. I hope it is useful to people who have an interest in 6502 assembly language programming and to those who wish to know how games were made in the 1980s. I hope to make these available in the future when I get more spare time. I had slightly different code for the Electron and Master 128 versions. The code here is for the BBC Micro version of the game. This now allows Visual Code or other IDEs to be used to build the code in a nice development environment. This involved de-tokenizing all of the BBC BASIC files and adapting the code to use beebasm friendly directives / commands. This required me to re-work the original source code. However, I decided to make the codebase assemble using 'beebasm' on a PC. Originally, the BBC BASIC in-line assembler was used to build the code. Over 30 years have passed and I have decided to preserve this code for the future by making it public. Of which 10K bytes was required for the video memory. The target computers had only 32K bytes of RAM. The game is written entirely in 6502 assembly language. This game was published by Superior Software in 1987 under the name Crazee Rider. In 1986 I began writing a motorcycle racing game for the BBC Micro, Electron and Master 128 home computers.
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