I found compilation VII of Circuit cellar, one from 1986 to 1990 at
the library. Does anyone have "extra" copies of the other ones (though
I don't have all 1986-1990 anyway) that they could give me for less than
the reprints/backissues?
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
My only predicament being that the next day, I will wander into a thrift
store that is selling them for $3 a piece. No, I meant like stuff that
someone would want essentially to throw away to me :)
BTW, are those 64's the brown or the white ones? Do they come with
boxes, manuals, etc?
>
>Max Eskin wrote:
>
>> -A Commodore 64,128,128D (I have all the stuff for the 64 except the
>> actual unit. I even have a PSU)
>>
>> I know most of this stuff isn't much to you people, but I wouldn't
mind
>> them :)
>
>I have C64's with power supplies for $15 a set plus shipping. To Mass
it
>should be roughly $5 to ship USPS. These are near -new machines that
were
>excess to a local school, never used and they've gone to Win95 and
Pentiums
>now.
>
>A also have like new 1541 drives as well, $10 plus shipping. If you
were to
>get a drive, C64 and power supply togehter I'd go $20 for the set plus
>shipping. Of course shipping is a little more since the 1541 is 10 lbs
by
>itself. I clear around $1.50 on a set like this but they are in my way
so
>I'd rather break even than step over the boxes of them for the next
year.
>
>> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Russ Blakeman
> RB Custom Services / Rt. 1 Box 62E / Harned, KY USA 40144
> Phone: (502) 756-1749 / Data/Fax:(502) 756-6991
> Email: rhblake(a)bbtel.com or rhblake(a)bigfoot.com
> Website: http://members.tripod.com/~RHBLAKE/
>
> * Parts/Service/Upgrades and more for MOST Computers*
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
I live in Massachussetts. We have plenty of mediocre PCs, half the time
I don't bother. I see mostly XTs at thrift stores, recently I saw a
Compaq Portable. I didn't bother with a Mac 512K, and missed out on an
SE and LC. If any of you see any machines that are not too big, please
ship them to me. I will pay shipping and a few bucks extra. I am
interested in most non-PC or Mac stuff. On my wanted list are:
-Any model Amiga
-A Commodore 64,128,128D (I have all the stuff for the 64 except the
actual unit. I even have a PSU)
-A SMALL Unix station, including NeXT
-Portables, PC or Z80
-Not sure how big a MicroVAX is, but if it is what the name implies
(wasn't it just a tower?), then by all means
-Maybe a CoCo if it has a disk drive
I know most of this stuff isn't much to you people, but I wouldn't mind
them :)
>so many that I have to pick and choose. I left behind 4 AT&T 3B2s, a
>NeXt, an AT&T 6300, 2 HP Appollos and 2 HP 9000/300s yesterday. All
>of that was at a GSA auction at KSC. I did get a COMPLETE Commodeore
>Pet set and a Vax Station 3100 for Zane.
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
seth:
:If it turns out that this product has been completely discontinued,
:and is no longer being sold, I can easily make a copy of mine for
:anyone who needs one, just for cost of materials.
:Note, however, that I'm not talking about piracy here :) I'd only
erm, isn't the walnut creek cd-rom predominantly stocked with the same
stuff that is on oak? which kind of implies that so long as you aren't
doing it for profit, it's just another kind of distribution. you
probably couldn't duplicate the walnut creek packaging without getting
copyright sorted, but if you just reassemble the content without
duplicating form (or necessarily even providing any) that shouldn't
infringe anyone's copyright.
-- Communa (together) we remember... we'll see you falling
you know soft spoken changes nothing to sing within her...
Net-Tamer V 1.08X - Test Drive
Hello:
Do any of you know if there are any on-line references to the old
80-Micro magazine that was published by Wayne Green back in the 80s
hayday of the TRS-80 computer? Do any of you have any collections of
this magazine for sale?
Thanks,
CORD COSLOR
--
___________________________________________________
| Cord G. Coslor : archive(a)navix.net |\
| Deanna S. Wynn : deannasue(a)navix.net | |
|---------------------------------------------------| |
| http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Vista/4395 | |
|---------------------------------------------------| |
| PO Box 308 - Peru, NE - 68421 - (402) 872- 3272 | |
|___________________________________________________| |
\____________________________________________________\|
Mike Allison wrote:
> SHELL=
> or
> AUTOEXEC.BAT line to execute the program
> or
> REXX script
> or
> A program which bootstraps the other program.
An AUTOEXEC.BAT line to execute the program does not let you omit
COMMAND.COM, which is what was asked for. SHELL= does.
Roger Ivie
ivie(a)cc.usu.edu
> Most of the questions ELKS must now answer, as a UNIX clone, have
> been answered in CPM as a stand alone solution. Plus there's a boat
> load of free programs.
Bear in mind that most of the free programs are written in 8080 or
Z80 assembler; they're not going to move to something else readily, if
at all.
> BTW - Roger,
> Where are you at? I'm in Ogden...
Logan.
> You're not related to Joni are you?
The name doesn't ring a bell. My immediate family is from the Duchesne
area. I have a half-brother living in the Ogden area (Gerry Ivie).
> (Everyone in Utah is related ; - } )
Definitely the case for us bearing the name 'Ivie'. AFAIK, all the 'Ivie's
in the US (including the 'Ivey's; there was some confusion about the spelling
a while ago) are related.
Roger Ivie
ivie(a)cc.usu.edu
> What would be nice is an ELKS-like thing for DOS, so that one could
> stick in a floppy disk, and it would boot into any program that you
> choose, without Command.Com.
You can already do this using SHELL= in CONFIG.SYS. I did this many
years ago (more than 10, OK? (Have I really been puting up with MS-DOS that
long?)) to make a diskette that booted directly into WordStar.
Roger Ivie
ivie(a)cc.usu.edu
> I think Linux is the best choice to enable latter day retrocomputing.
> Check out the ELKS project to put Linux on machines with very limited
> resources:
On the other hand, CP/M-68K is available from http://cdl.uta.edu/cpm/.
A lot of it is written in C; with some work, it can be modernized and
updated. What could be more retro than building the ability to port
CP/M to anything with a C compiler?
Roger Ivie
ivie(a)cc.usu.edu
From: Aaron Christopher Finney <A_Finney(a)wfi-inc.com>
Subject: Re: Mac hi-res monitor
>While I'm here, I am desperately searching for books on 6502 Assembly,
>especially....
[snip]
>"6502 Assembly Language Programming" by Lance Leventhal
>Osborne/McGraw-Hill
You would also want to look for O/MGH's "6502 Assembly Language
Subroutines" by Lance Leventhall as well as Winththrop Saville. The
first section contains an excellent overview of the 6502 command set,
it's quirks (such as not placing indirect reference commands near page
boundries etc. Not to mention the rest with routines for interger and
floating point math, string manipulation, sorting, etc.) The routines
are fairly generic so it would not be hard to implement on any 6502
machine.
I'd consider that and 6502 Assembly Language Programming well worth
the effort to find.
Larry Anderson
--
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
Visit our web page at: http://www.goldrush.com/~foxnhare/
Call our Commodore 64 BBS (Silicon Realms 300-2400 baud) at: (209)
754-1363
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-