The Sanyo 16LT is a black laptop with two floppies 640K memory it has no ram
no harddisk an LCD display a parallel, RGB and serial ports I believe it
has a 300Kbits modem, however I have no software or satisfactory OS
although I have one floppy with what I believe is part of dos 3.3 and 4
others which is part of an office suite package called SMART. What I
really need is some software which is designed to run with limited memory
>from floppies. Of course a manual would be ideal.
Thanks
Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: Joe <rigdonj(a)intellistar.net>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: 19 January 1999 12:21
Subject: Re: Sanyo 16LT
>At 09:30 PM 1/18/99 -0000, you wrote:
>>I have recently aquired the above notepad computer I wonder if anyone has
>any
>
>
> I used a Sanyo for years and used to keep up with their stuff but I've
>never heard of one. How old is it? Can you post a picture?
>
> Joe
>
>
>
Hi, I got this e-mail address off an Atari Portfolio web site. It didn't
really say much about Dinosaur SIG or what it is, but I thought I'd see if
this address was still valid and if you have any idea where to get memory
cards for an old Atari Portfolio.
Thanks,
Lonny
(619)651-0382
At 04:19 PM 1/18/99 -0800, Sam Ismail wrote:
>
>I guess I'm just an optimist, thinking that 100 years from now we'll be
>living in a society like in Star Trek: The Next Generation, where you just
>ask the computer a question and it (usually) has all the answers.
You mean, like a mailing list?
- John
Marvin <marvin(a)rain.org> said:
>Last night I was given (what I think is) another computer labeled Nicolet
>Model XF44. It has two 5 1/4" floppies on the front along with a few other
>controls/indicators labeled STORE, RECORD, RECALL, UNPROTECT, RECORD SEGMENT
>UP/DOWN, and AUTOCYCLE. The size is about 4" high, 17" wide, and probably
>20" deep. Anyone know what this is? Thanks.
Marvin,
This sounds a lot like one that I have, need two?
Any way, it seem to be diskette storage for a Nicolet
Model 4094 Digital Storage Oscilloscope.
It's listed here: http://www.naptech.com/catLAOS1.htm
=========================================
Doug Coward dcoward(a)pressstart.com
Senior Software Engineer http://www.best.com/~dcoward
Press Start Inc. http://www.pressstart.com
Sunnyvale,CA
Curator
Museum of Personal Computing Machinery
at http://www.best.com/~dcoward/museum
=========================================
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as Outlook replies using the format of the original. I'm not sure if this is
the same for Outlook Express 5, but in version 4.72 go to the Tools menu and
select Options. The options menu should appear. Click on Send and, second
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--
Gareth Knight
Amiga Interactive Guide | ICQ No. 24185856
http://welcome.to/aig | "Shine on your star"
I have recently aquired the above notepad computer I wonder if anyone has any details on the machine and where I might obtain software which will run off floppy etc.
Regards
Rob Gillibrand
>I've been going through some of my manuals, and in looking at the
>Macro-11 manuals it looks as if they're pretty much written with the
>intention of being used with any of the DEC OS's. Is Macro-11 pretty
>much the same across the various platforms or what?
>If so, what makes a program written in Macro-11 a RT-11 program instead
>of a RSX-11M program other, than the way that it is linked?
Let me answer the second question first, since it will be part of the
answer for the first question.
Each of the PDP-11 OSes have programmed requests/system calls/whatever,
which perform the operations for the user which are specific to that
OS.
A pure MACRO-11 program might have nothing in it which ties it to
a given OS.
But generally, programs are written for a specific OS, since you'll
probably want to do I/O or get certain info from the OS itself.
For example, RT-11 has programmed requests. These are EMTs which,
when executed, cause entry to the OS, which expects the arguments
for the function to be structured in a certain way and located in
certain places (for example the stack).
The various calls like .DATE, .READC, .MRKT, etc... are actually
macros which are defined in some sort of system macro definition
file, which is automatically included during the assembly process.
For RT-11, this is the file SYSMAC.SML, located on the system
volume, SY: In later releases of RT, there was also a much more
complete structure definition file, SYSTEM.MLB, which could be used
to reliably define structures used by RT-11.
RSX and RSTS have their own set of macros defined which expand into
code which ultimately execute and EMT, which is processed in a certain
way by those OSes.
Now, given that answer -- MACRO-11 is conditionalized in such a way that
it can be built to issue those calls appropriate for the system you are
building it for. MACRO-11 on RT-11 issues RT-11 programmed requests
to read from the source file and write to the object file. MACRO-11 on
RSX-11 issues RSX-11 system calls, etc...
The heart of MACRO is the same regardless of which system, but the
peripheral routines do what is appropriate for the given OS, and they
are governed by conditionals.
Megan Gentry
Former RT-11 Developer
*Former MACRO-11 maintainer*
+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| Megan Gentry, EMT/B, PP-ASEL | Internet (work): gentry!zk3.dec.com |
| Unix Support Engineering Group | (home): mbg!world.std.com |
| Compaq Computer Corporation | addresses need '@' in place of '!' |
| 110 Spitbrook Rd. ZK03-2/T43 | URL: http://world.std.com/~mbg/ |
| Nashua, NH 03062 | "pdp-11 programmer - some assembler |
| (603) 884 1055 | required." - mbg |
+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
Now that Nathan Mates is no longer maintaining the Apple II FAQ, who is?
I just wanted to update the local copies of some of my FAQs.
Actually, doesn't MIT act as a master archive? Anyone have that URL?
Thanks!
[ Rich Cini/WUGNET
[ ClubWin!/CW7
[ MCP Windows 95/Windows Networking
[ Collector of "classic" computers
[ http://highgate.comm.sfu.ca/~rcini/classiccmp/
[ http://highgate.comm.sfu.ca/~rcini/pdp11/
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