At 02:31 PM 7/16/98 -0700, you wrote:
>> Believe it or not there are still many people out there with old
>(ancient) rotary dial telephones.
>
>Hey, I still have one, in my computer room (ex-spare bedroom) at home.
Got one next to my bed for my main #. Also got a wall mount around
somewhere, just waiting for a good place to mount it.
(There's a great scene in In & Out involving a rotary phone... makes ya
think about the future of CLI's...)
--------------------------------------------------------------------- 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 10:12 AM 7/15/98 PDT, you wrote:
>A short refresher on human psychology. Most of the time, a clearly
>thinking person does not do anything they consider wrong. Your spammer
>thinks he is doing someone a favor, and your songs are disrespectful
Nah, Spammers just want to get rich, without consideration of the cost to
others.
No different than if I went to Safeway, shoved a bunch of sodas down my
pants, and left to set up a store of my own.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- 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/
Lawrence Walker wrote:
> To clearify, a Model II requires an additional CPU card. This is a MC68000 CPU
> with a daughter card or two that may contain from 128K to 1 Meg of RAM. It
> depends. There were several memory card configurations. I have some from
> the 128K to the 1 Meg varity. The really rare ones are the 4 Meg memory cards.
There was never a Tandy 4 Meg card. Bob Snapp had boards to take a 16
or 6000 up to 8 Meg, but the memory management permitted only a max of
1 Meg "user" RAM -- the rest could be used as RAM disk, permitting a
/dev/swap far larger and faster than Tandy hardware. It was damned
impressive to see his stuff at the Tangent conference in Fort Worth in
1986, 15 terminals (plus console) filePro databases faster than a stock
system could with three users.
> In addtion, You should have a HD controller. This card will have the WD1010
> or WD1020 chipset. It will allow you to attach up to 2 MFM drives. The
> standard MFM cabling has one "Control" cable that is dasiy-chained to all
> drives. Then the smaller "Data" cable is connected directly from the HD to
> the drive controler card. I have not see a controler card that was able
> to use more than two HDs at a time. All the Tandy manufactured card would
> use the WD1010 chipset which allows up to 70Mb HDs. Some after-market
> people upgraded to the WD1020 chipset which increased the HD capacity to
> the 130 ro 150Mb range. I dont remember the exact upper limit although
> they did not make MFM drives much larger that 150 Mb as I recall. All the
> HDs should be free standing. Only a possiable drive select jummper should
> differ the HDs in the external cases.
Actually, except for the 6000HD which would only accept one external
drive after the internal, all hard disk subsystems for the Model
II/12/16/6000 line would permit four external drives, either all 8.4
Meg (the 8" Shugart "original" system) or any combination of 5, 12, 15,
35 or 70 MB (the later 5.25" system). At least that was the case with
official Tandy hard drives.Those latter would also attach in quantities
up to four to any of the Model One/3/4 product line or the Color
Computer. That's what always surprised me when PCs and compatibles
were limited to two drives, at least until SCSI and EIDE.
--
Ward Griffiths <mailto:gram@cnct.com> <http://www.cnct.com/home/gram/>
They say that politics makes strange bedfellows.
Of course, the main reason they cuddle up is to screw somebody else.
Michael Flynn, _Rogue Star_
Hi, I was given this email address as being the "Classic Computer
Collectors List." Not sure if it is a "subscribe to" mailing list or an
individual. I have some antiquated DEC equipment I'd like to see find a
good home and was refered here.
-Wayne Cox
wcox(a)infinet.com, wcox(a)usaeroteam.com
Sorry to continue, but I don't currently have newsgroup access and
I have serached on the newsgroups for my problem via Dejanews.
I decided to attempt to recharge my battery using a PC power supply.
Will this work? The battery is labelled to be 12V, 1.7 Ahr. It's a
NiCd. The power supply is 12V 6Ah. I'm doing it now, but I'm wondering
how long I should leave it, or should I not have done it at all.
Also, can I power the laptop with 6ah directly from the PSU though
the battery is rated at 1.7 without frying it?
No more questions about this from me. Thanks.
P.S. does anyone know why this laptop has three batteries? THe main
one that I was talking about above, a little black 2.7v NiCd like on
a PC, and a round flat one like in a watch, only bigger. What's this
last one for?
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At 03:04 PM 7/20/98 -0500, you wrote:
>2. Fortune 32:16, formerly running ForPro. Unfortunately, the boot drive
crashed. He has tapes,
>floppies, but no HD (I think) - is this worthy to be kept?
The fortune 32:16 was one cool machine; it was way ahead for its time,
so naturally, scarcely anyone bought them :-(
Ok, one more question. This may seem dumb to you electronics experts,
but when charging, should I attach the positive terminal of the AC
adapter to the positive or to the negative terminal of the battery?
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
Okay, I just dug through my bookshelf, and found a 1986 inmos databook.
Chapter 5 is "Transputer Products", and includes the following:
Selection Guide (1 page)
IMS T414 Transputer (16 pages)
IMS T212 Transputer (12 pages)
IMS C001 Link Adaptor (4 pages)
IMS C002 Link Adaptor (4 pages)
IMS B001 Evaluation Board (4 pages)
IMS B002 Evaluation Board (4 pages)
IMS B004 Evaluation Board (4 pages)
IMS D100 Development Station (4 pages)
IMS D600 Development System VAX/VMS (4 pages)
IMS D700 Development System IBM PC (4 pages)
OCCAM (2 pages)
Let me know if you need info from this, and if it is urgent.
Cheers,
Bill.
> Dellett, Anthony wrote:
>
> > Well... I finally found one, I ordered a used Imsai 8080 from an
> > undisclosed place in CA (they had one on consignment) and they're
> > shipping it to me here in Boston.
>
> Not even gonna guess what shipping is cross country for that
> heavy of a
> machine. Does it work did they say?
>
Shipping was only $71, the guy is even foam packing it.
I guess I can confess and say it's coming from Weird Stuff Warehouse in
Sunnyvale.
This is an as-is sale but I'm sure if it doesn't work, I can fix it :)
Tony
A friend of mine has two systems that he needs to find info on.
1. Symbolics 3650 - this system boots into a wierd LISP command prompt, but complains durring boot
about not being able to find the rest of the "world." Any info to help admin the thing would be
groovy.
2. Fortune 32:16, formerly running ForPro. Unfortunately, the boot drive crashed. He has tapes,
floppies, but no HD (I think) - is this worthy to be kept?
Any help will be appreciated. I might end up adding these systems to my collection, right next to my
7 VAX systems.
--
J. Buck Caldwell
Engineer - Technical Support - Webmaster
Polygon, Inc. email:buck_c@polygon.com phone: (314) 432-4142
PO Box 8470 http://www.polygon.com/ fax: (314) 997-9696
St. Louis, MO 63132 ftp://ftp.polygon.com/ bbs: (314) 997-9682