Have anybody some Sord M5 related files ? ( manuals etc.). I have all
this in paper version and electronic kind of this is practical.
I need Sord m5 FD drive files- floppy disk with system utilities and
docs about this all. Donor of this things will be first where I send
SW emulator of this comp. for PC.
Thank you ...
--
S pozdravem
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Jiri Cechmeister - TOPCAD, Electronic and Software Development
Demlova 4, 58601 JIHLAVA, CZ, phone /fax : +420 66 31051
http://www.topcad.anet.cz , e-mail: cechy(a)jitel.cz
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At 11:50 PM 3/16/98 -0600, you wrote:
>For those in Silicon Valley who haven't been to the new Fry's in
>Sunnyvale: go check out CHAC's Apple 1 on display. Unlike the gaudy Mayan
>and Aztec themes of some other recent Fry's, this one has sort of an art
>deco theme with large posters of HP35s, Xerox Altos, and other machines
>worthy of worship.
Nah, don't need to. Had it in my living room for a night a couple of years
ago. 8^)
(Well, actually, it was all packaged for transport and I didn't dare open
it up, so maybe I will...)
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.sinasohn.com/
>"We are a lot closer to being able to create an artificial human than we
>are to being able to comprehend the consequences of creating an
>artificial human."
>
>I realise that this is not *directly* about +10 year old computer systems,
>but it does directly relate to the them and their role in the history of
>this field (which is what I originally asked the list about). Does anyone
>on the list want to take it outside to a temporary list to discuss the
>moral/ethical/probability issues of artificial life? Let me know by
>email and I'll set one up.
If you choose to set one up, this is what my thesis is all about - the
moral status of such AI systems should they ever be created. :)
Adam.
At 06:23 PM 3/15/98 -0500, you wrote:
>need for a company to have a fancy letterhead, nor a mass mailer to have
>colored brochures, nor ladies to have flowered and/or scented stationery,
>yet we do have all these things, and more. Consider how boring text-only,
Note that for most of these, there is no difference to the recipient. It
doesn't take any longer to open a color brochure than one in black and
white, logos don't take up any more space than the text, etc. In terms of
e-mail, it's completely different. Those logos do take up space, color
stuff does take longer to download. (And btw, there are a lot of people
who are very allergic to the scented ads included with Macy's bills, and
even a fair number of us who just get nauseated.)
>not trivial point. Nevertheless, technology marches on, and as cable modems
>(or whatever) become the norm rather than the exception, "waste" of
Really? As of last fall, 80% of americans accessed the net at 14.4Kbps or
less. (According to a speaker at the Bay Area Internet Users Group.) Add
in the rest of the world and that goes way down. Damn yanks, always
thinking nobody else matters!
>public at large. If my wife wants to embed scanned newspaper clippings or a
>kid's picture in an email to her cousin across country, who am I (or anyone)
>to object?
That's a different matter. If I send an e-mail to a potential client
touting my services, that's one thing. To send a message selling used golf
balls to every e-mail address I can find, that's spam.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.sinasohn.com/
At 03:20 PM 3/15/98 +0000, you wrote:
>All too often, formatting, multiple fonts, embedded pictures, colour, etc
>are used as a replacement for content. I've got plenty of monospaced
>documents with ascii-art diagrams that provide useful information, and an
>equal number of nicely formatted documents with pictures that contain no
>information at all.
Substitute "web pages" for "documents" and it would be just as true.
If you can't communicate your meaning with plain text, you better go back
and rethink what you're trying to say. Mind you, I don't expect everyone
to be a Robert Frost or William Shakespeare, but you should be able to
convey an idea in your native tongue.
Email is meant for communicating.
Me, I use Eudora. It dumps that sort of thing into a disk file in my
download directory; periodically I go and clean it up.
Mind you, I love the web, I think it's the best thing since sliced bread.
It's simple, powerful, and really lets you do a lot without a lot of
resources. (I've developed web pages on my portfolio, and view them
regularly under DOS with Arachne.) But it's not intended for e-mail.
Putting HTML in an e-mail message is like sending a video tape of yourself
instead of a letter. It works, some people might prefer it, even need it,
but for most people, what you've got to say isn't worth setting up a VCR/TV
and sitting around to listen to you.
If you really need e-mail in color with different size/font text, get
yourself a subscription to penthouse. You'll be much happier in the long run.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.sinasohn.com/
At 08:46 AM 3/14/98 -0800, you wrote:
>> PS: NONE of this is trash! They actually USE all this stuff to test
>> equipment!
>
>I am always amazed when you express amazement that computers that aren't
>brand new are being used to do useful stuff :-). Ten, twenty, and
>thirty-year old computers are used to run everything from gas chromotagraphy
>units to MRI's, subway systems, factories, and cyclotrons, and some of us
>make at least a part of our living ensuring that they continue to do the job.
I'm currently working with Long's Drugs, a chain of pharmacies (up to 352
this week!) in the western US. About 15 years ago or so, they put an
HP3000 in each store to manage the pharmacy systems. They're still there.
Most of the stores are micro3000's (mid 80's?) but there are still some
series 42 and 40 machines out there. (I used to have a list of what was at
each store somehwere.)
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.sinasohn.com/
At 23:50 3/16/98 -0600, you wrote:
>For those in Silicon Valley who haven't been to the new Fry's in
>Sunnyvale: go check out CHAC's Apple 1 on display....
It's a lot prettier in that armorglass pyramid in the Books section than it
was in a brown cardboard box in my bedroom closet ;-)
__________________________________________
Kip Crosby engine(a)chac.org
http://www.chac.org/index.html
Computer History Association of California
Hi all,
If anyone's interested, I put a great 3/50 up on Ebay today. I ran out of
room for it (19" mono monitor). No disk, since I was using it as an X
terminal, 12M ram upgrade,flat-top (not the dimple monitor-mount style).
If you want, I'll give you a dimple top model with bad video in the
package. I forgot to get the item number and all that, but there can't be
too many 3/50's up for auction right now, eh?
Regards,
Aaron
<Anybody got info on a Nat. Semi. 57109 "Number Oriented Processor"?
<I've got one on a "calculator interface" board, that I suspect was
<a primitive math coprocessor. I'd love to get specs on it, and/or
It was a calculator chip I believed based on the 4bit cop series. It's
been a long time. Anyhow the board used a calculator chip despite it's
slowness to avoid higher math (to 8 digits) in software. It was however
not a coprocessor, it is a limited slave at best.
<replacement chips in case this one dies.
You might get lucky...
Allison
What's wrong with COBOL?
>
>Well, according to the Jargon File (aka The Hacker's Dictionary), IBM
>minis and mainframes were not liked by hackers (who prefered DEC, etc),
>not only because they were generally programmed in things like Cobol,
but
>also because technical info was next-to-impossible to obtain. It was
>difficult to do neat things with them.
>
>I don't know if that counts as IBM bashing or not.
>
>-tony
>
>
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