<I have acquired the manuals, S100 controller, and cartridge tape
<drive, but not the software, for an Alloy Engineering cartridge tape
Alloy is still in business I believe.
<This system came from a multi-user Concurrent CP/M 80286 system in the
<early 80's. The system disk was pulled from the S-100 box when it was
MID80s... the 286 on s100 was about 84-86ish. the earliest data I have
>from intel is late 83 for the 286.
good luck finding the software as it was never PD and alloy controllers
where never that common that I've seen.
Allison
<Hugh Henderson <hendronicus(a)hotmail.com>
<saginaw, MI USA - Friday, June 12, 1998 at 18:07:56
<
<I rescued a Digital WT/78 word terminal with a Digital RX02 computer
<attached.
Ok, the WT78 is one of DECs early compact word processing systems. The
CPU is the intersil 6100 (PDP-8 reduced to a chip). The RX02 is nto
acomputer but a disk box and controller for 256k/512k 8" floppies.
(others in that family are the DECmate, DECmateII and DECmateIII)
< It does try to boot, but I don't have the system disk. I'd sure love
<to see the beast run.
The images for the disks(both WPS and OS/78) are on the net and you would
need a system that can create 8" disks. Alternately someone that has
a system with RX02 disks (they were used on PDP-8, PDP-11 systems).
< What does it run? What kind of processors does it use? It has network
<and modem connections.
The primary processor that runs the OS is a varient of the PDP-8 family
reduced to a single chip. The disk system has it's own processor but
that is not user programmable.
It _does_not_ have network connections. The idea of a network at that
time was unrealistic for such a low end machine. The modem connection
however is eaxactly that and could be used to connect the machine to a
host for file transfers.
<How do you use those, and what were they originally for?
It was originally used for word processing running WPS78, it also runs
OS/78 an older PDP-8 operating system that looks a tiny bit like DOS.
Allison
<That's why my LCD panel sits in the box. :-(
<
<> There are (were?) a few vendors that made very nice single chip solutio
<> for converting base VGA into something an LCD could use.
<>
<> Hitachi?
<
<Ooh! Does anyone have a relevant Hitachi data book?
My assessment is that for the display I have to convert serial video (VGA)
to two 4 bit parallel streams for a partitioned display is unrealistic.
The next simpler option if to generate video directly in the form required
for the display and that is also somewhat ponderous. I didn't see
anyhting suitable on the Hitachi site.
Allisom
Password protection? There wasn't any as part of CP/M.
<The CP/M 3+ manual says the syntax is drive:12345678.123;password.
<Maybe it's a weird DR thing. They tended to add weird stuff...
You didn't say CPM3! If you say CPM it is assumed the more common v2.x
version. V2.x did not have passwords, V3.0 did. Obviously if this apple
cpm card has V3 disks it it was a very late one or someone went to some
trouble to port v3 to it. FYI: v3 was not widely popular.
Allison
> Auction services have their place, but I think that we on the list
>should be given the "right of first refusal". If one of the list members has
>something to sell, give the others a first crack, with some time limit (like
>a week), before listing it on eBay or Haggle.
Perhaps list subscribers who wish to list their items on an auction
service could offer a discount to other subscribers (e.g. "Mention you
saw this add on the Classic Computers mailing list and get 10% off.").
This way the seller gets the higher prices of the auction services while
at the same time offering an advantage to list subscribers.
Tom Owad
I have acquired the manuals, S100 controller, and cartridge tape
drive, but not the software, for an Alloy Engineering cartridge tape
drive. I have two manuals, the Interface Guide For the IDXS-100, and
TIP (Tape Interchange Package) Operator's Guide, both dated 1981. The
tape drive is an early 3M cartridge tape, capacity of about 14MB
formatted. I also have a big box of backup tape cartridges.
This system came from a multi-user Concurrent CP/M 80286 system in the
early 80's. The system disk was pulled from the S-100 box when it was
retired, and the original floppies are long gone. I figure if I can
find either a Z80 or 8086 version of the TIP program I can get the
system directory off the backup tapes.
Does anyone know more about these tape drives? A binary of the TIP
program?
Jack Peacock
>There are (were?) a few vendors that made very nice single chip
solutions
>for converting base VGA into something an LCD could use.
>
>Hitachi?
>
Cirrus Logic made LCD controllers that would drive an LCD and also an
external monitor. I have an older Compal TS-38 laptop with the chip,
driving a dual scan color LCD, but with a switch to go to an external
monitor.
I've seen Him/Them Beign flamed about it on some newsgroup (pretty funny
too), other than that Have no idea.
Francois
-------------------------------------------------------------
Visit the Sanctuary at: http://www.pclink.com/fauradon
-----Original Message-----
From: Doug Yowza <yowza(a)yowza.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Thursday, June 11, 1998 11:56 PM
Subject: Re: IIRC
>On Thu, 11 Jun 1998, Francois wrote:
>
>> Well, "If I Recall Corectly" that's what it means.
>
>BTW, whatever happened to lisard/communa? The consistency with which
>"they" used pronouns was impressive: IIRC -> iwrc.
>
>-- Doug
>
Looking for the keyboard adapter, internal 2400 MNP modem w/jacks, the
optional stand, just about anything that was available for it.
-
- john higginbotham ____________________________
- webmaster www.pntprinting.com -
- limbo limbo.netpath.net -
At 11:13 PM 6/11/98 -0500, you wrote:
>I just picked up an IBM type 9075 laptop. The label on the inside (where the
>keyboard is) says it's an Aptek Personal Service Communicator II. It's got a
The PC Radio. Take a look at
<http://www.sinasohn.com/clascomp/pcradio.htm>; is yours the same? If so,
do you have a power supply? I think I've got the info I have on the web
page...
It was designed for service people to communicate with the home office.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- 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/