In a message dated 99-02-06 19:56:01 EST, you write:
<< On Sat, 6 Feb 1999, Ward Donald Griffiths III wrote:
> Francois wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> > This gives a new meaning to the term LOG IN.
> > Ok i'll add the :) just to be sure that nobody ask me how I can Log in
into
> > a wooden laptop (:
> > By the way did you get the docking station with it?
> > Francois
> >
> > >I've found a rare transitional form between the ancient abacus and the
> > >modern laptop: the wooden laptop! OK, it's a pre-prototype mock-up of a
>
> I wouldn't feel any need to log in to a wooden computer. I'd just
> politely axe for permission to enter.
But, only if you saw it first.
- don >>
let's just hope you can login as root.
what the message you're seeing says is that you may have forgotten to
activate the partition, which you must do in all cases where you don't use
the "entire drive" in your primary partition.
try that, and see if it doesn't fix your problem.
Dick
----------
> From: royston hill <rackland(a)intekom.co.za>
> To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
> Subject: no rom basic
> Date: Sunday, February 07, 1999 10:21 AM
>
> Hi ,can you assist .we have a old 386 with a conner 80 meg HD .We needed
> to clean same and used the zero fill from disk manager on boot up. we
> got message NO ROM BASIC >SYSTEM HALTED we cannot find anything on this
> error message.or what we did wrong ?????? regards from africa ROY HILL
>> ObCC: so what did you UKans do to get your funny-looking L on
>> computers, terminals, and printers imported from ASCII-speaking
>> countries?
>
> It's character 0xA3 (decimal 163, octal 243) in ISO Latin 1, and most
> systems that don't have a special key for it map it to the "#" key. On
> older systems, quite often the drivers replace the "#" character with the
> pound symbol, but some replace the "$".
ISO Latin on a classic computer? Pull the other one!
ISTR that the IBM PC had it at decimal 156. I have seen it replace $, #, \
(Commodore VIC) and ` (IIRC FTS Series 88, which loaded the character set
>from disk at boot). Diablo 96-spoke daisywheels used either ESC-Y or ESC-Z
(Not in a position to look it up and I can't remember what the 96th spoke
was for, either)
Philip.
<> The 1002 HOST interface has a different address, register command
<structure > though there are similarities wbeing both from WD.
<
<How do the above relate to the 8-bit IDE interface?
The 8bit IDE looks like the 1002WA ISA 8bit controller. The 1002HDO host
interface however does not. In the 8bit worlds there seems to be three
different schemes.
<> In any case adding a hard disk to kaypro requires utility software, an
<> interface and BIOS.
<
<But if you have the TurboROM, you already have all of that with the
<exception of the interface. How big a chore would it be to adapt the
<WD1002/Host interface to the 8-bit IDE? If one could do that with
<minimum difficulty, it could provide an easy 40mb of HD storage - a huge
<amount on a CP/M machine.
It's not easy. The host interface only allows for a few address lines and
8bit IDE is both scarce ands strange. For practical use and the difficulty
of interface doing a 16bit IDE converter is more practical. The real
problem is you no matter what will be writing a bios for the kaypro.
People with the correct controller and MFM disk are already faced with
things like the drive needs replacing and there is no formatter or partition
utility if the drive is greater than 8mb.
Check out TCJ #80, a 1002WXA or similar is easy as pie to interface to
a 8bit bus (like the host adaptor port). and they are common enough as
they were about the best thing for the XT class. It means using a MFM
drive but, st225s and st251s are common and there are old 3.5" mfms that
work good with those too. The bios problem remains though.
Oh, 40mb would have to be sliced (partitioned) into 5 8Mb logical drives
under cpm. I know as my SB180 and AmproLB both have 20 and 45mb drives.
Under CPM even 5mb is a lot of space and a 1.44mb floppy is very roomy.
The 781k format allows me to have all of my most common utilities and
programming tools on one drive and work space on another. That good
enough.
Allison
Actually, I though ":)" meant that the person typing was smiling when they
when they wrote it.
>> BTW, " :) " is an extremely rude and nasty way to insult somebody by
stating
>> that they are too stupid to know what is or isn't a joke :-)
Seems the bidders are losing interest, not to mention he's changed the
title of it where it doesn't reflect the word Osborne (so a search
doesn't show it). There's less than 8 hrs on it and the high bid is
$12....
The guy that did the high bid last time (Imsai) bought my Kaypro 2X and
I asked him if the seller made a deal with him since it came below the
"reserve" and believe it or not the dummy seller let a $400 bid slide.
It's listed on e-pay right now as
http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=62164945 in case
anyone has any interest.
I am having a little trouble with my TRS Model IV . When I boot off of the
TRSDOS system disk, the system prompts for the time and won't go any
farther. When I enter the time, it clears the field and prompts again.
The computer works just fine with all my other software so, I suspect the
disk is corrupt. If anyone has an extra copy of TRSDOS 6.x laying around,
I'd really appreciate it.
TIA, Steve Robertson
<steverob(a)hotoffice.com>
>Sorry about that. Wasn't paying much attention and rather assumed
>that the advertiser had set the response address to itself. Glad I
>also neglected to attach the images. (If you want to see them,
>they're on my home page and no, I didn't create them).
The guy was a spammer... the only way to stop them is to make them
hurt by NOT giving them any business...
I know I won't... I don't do business with ANYONE who spams, even
if I were otherwise in need of their service...
Megan
At 09:28 PM 2/4/99 +0000, you wrote:
>> are quite adequate. Screens are about 72dpi, my Sony Mavica FD-71 is
>> 640x480 (or a little over 100dpi for a 4x6 photo).
>
>Digital cameras are not cheap enough to be worth buying just to stick
>pictures on the web. For the same cost I could probably get a second-hand
>'classic' camera, and have a lot of fun restoring it, and then take some
>real pictures.
Consider:
Sony Mavica: $660
Take picture, size, and upload.
Scanner (Cheap) $50
Cheap 35mm Camera $50
Film - dollar or two per roll
Developing (Cheap) $4 per roll
ScanTime (I got it down to 4 minutes per pic)
So, for 24 pics:
Sony Scan
$660 $105 Equip/Supplies
$ 0 $ 96 Scan time (at $60/hr)
$ x $ x Size/Upload (same for both)
---- ----
$660 $201
Now for multiple rolls (say 5):
Sony Scan
$660 $125 Equip/Supplies
$ 0 $480 Scan Time
---- ----
$660 $605
The more you take, the more cost effective it becomes. (Mind you, I don't
know how you value your time, but waiting for a scanner hardly seems a good
use of my time).
I know I've taken a lot more than 5 rolls worth of digpics -- Take a look
at <http://www.sinasohn.com/urbadv/phalbum.htm> for example. And I've got
a lot of classic computers to take too.
The Mavica is not the cheapest DigCamera either. If you go for one of the
less expensive models, your costs go way down.
>
>Also those digital cameras are too darn small. I don't fancy having to
>fix the thing...
>
>-tony
>
>
>
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