Anyone have an IBM 4245 printer? I came into a box of NOS print bands and have zero use for them. Don't want to hard them, don't want to throw them out. FTGH, pitch in a couple of bucks for shipping and they're yours. I can get part numbers and quantities if there's interest. There's about a dozen of them and I think they're all the same belt, but do not know for sure.
The IBM 1403 printer had interchangeable print chains. I know of only
four 1403 printers still working — two at the Computer History Museum
in Mountain View, CA, one at the IBM Technology Center in Böblingen,
Germany, and one near Endicott, NY.
All four have the 48-character "A" or "Business" chain, and CHM has a
16-character numeric chain that allows the printer to run twice as fast
for numeric-only output. CHM doesn't have an "H" or "Fortran" chain,
and as far as I know, none of the others do. The difference is that
parentheses are % and "lozenge" — a square with indented edges
— apostrophe is @, and = is # on the "A" chain. IBM also had a 64-
character chain that included box and line drawing graphics. BTW,
nobody seems to know what "lozenge" was meant to represent.
Does anybody know of an existing "H" chain or graphics chain for a
1403?
Van Snyder
Hello
I have been doing a several years effort to save (very) old software for posterity, researchers, students. Mostly early 90s UNIXes, SunOS, Solaris, DG-UX, HP-UX, AIX, DEC-UNIX, some VMS software even. I uploaded some things to the Archive, and elsewhere, but I would rather get this off my shoulders, for mortality affects us all. This vanishing would be a loss, with many of these things are nowhere to be found anymore.
I tried contacting the admin(?) bear at typewritten dot org, offering a few things for archiving, without results. Do any of the users here have any means to contact the admin there? I would very much like to access some of the UNIXes software there, and would gladly offer a quid pro quo.
Similarly, if you have any software for Solaris (2.6, earlier) and other UNIXes, regardless of licensing status, I would be very much interested.
Some things probably are lost forever though, such as Proliant PL/I, VisualWorks 2.5, Tibco S-PLUS, Harlequin WebWorks and such.
Thanks in advance, and all the best
Seb.
Was a datasheet ever offered for the DEC 'lemac' series
(de203/de204/de205)? Like the thing with all the registers and
programming information not the installation guide.
Regards,
Kevin
Hi all,
This may be a dumb question but I am a bit stumped. I can't seem to find
any helpful info in the manuals. I have a DEQNA installed in my 11/23+ and
I have run a NETGEN using the QNA driver. When NETINS runs I start seeing
messages like these on the console:
Event type 5.14, Send failed
Occurred 19-DEC-24 09:30:11 on node 10.1 (TYCHO)
Line QNA-0
Failure reason = Collision detect check failed
So obviously the link isn't working, but I find nothing helpful about where
to start looking regarding the failed collision detect check. The line is
on:
NCP>show line qna-0 status
Line status as of 19-DEC-24 09:36:31
Line State
QNA-0 On
I have an Ethernet transceiver (I have 2 and have tried both, they worked
last time I used them) connected to the DEQNA harness, and a cable
connecting it to an old 10Base-T hub. I know that hub works because I have
a couple of other systems (OS/2 laptop and an AS/400) connected to it.
So does anyone have any ideas of where I can start?
Thanks in advance!
Peter
Hey,
Did any of you do NEWP programming on Burroughs/Unisys A Series systems?
I will be attempting to put together some presentation material (for VCF or similar talks) on MCP internals programming. However I haven’t done it since 1989, so am looking for others who have experience in this area to help me remember details.
I took the MCP internals class and still have the class exercises and my notes. Recently a A12/A15 Hardware Operations manual popped up on eBay. I scanned it and submitted the scan to bitsavers. I am hoping to get my hands back on some system architecture documents that I once had.
So, if anyone here worked on this stuff and wants to help out on this, let me know.
alan