First book in my way after starting to go through things - Using
Pagemaker 4 for the PC by Matthews & Matthews. Paperback in like new
condition. Need $5 plus book rate postage for it if anyone is
interested. Drop me a direct email if interested or more info.
Russ Blakeman
Clarkson, KY USA
<Jerome Fine replies:
<
<Is this the board used to terminate a BA11 backplane
<that usually includes an 11/23? Also boot ROMs
<for the RL02 and RX02? A quad board that is placed
<last in the backplane? Do you have a board number?
<
<If so, yes - actually probably several.
He wants BDV-11 M8012, likely with late roms (there were several revs).
Allison
> From: Mike Ford <mikeford(a)socal.rr.com>
> To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: Boxes of C64/128 software.
> Date: Saturday, March 18, 2000 01:08 AM
>
> I bought two large boxes of C64/128 software today. Most of it looks
pretty
> new in the box, but I couldn't fit all of it into the two moving boxes I
> had, so really bulky items like TimeWorks got the packaging tossed. If
> somebody is looking for something, email me before it lands on eBay.
Got BallBlazer? Any cartridge (not floppy disk) games?
Paul R. Santa-Maria
Ann Arbor, Michigan USA
paulrsm(a)ameritech.net
--- Bruce Lane <kyrrin(a)bluefeathertech.com> wrote:
> At 14:01 18-03-2000 -0500, you wrote:
>
> >Try the linux router project - fits on a floppy or whatever, very similar
> >to sharethenet ... It's free and there are packages for everything!
That's all true. I've been using it for a while and have even put together
packages to turn a crufty old 486SLC into a web cam (it snaps pictures with
a Connectix QuickCam and ftps them to my web page).
> I've looked at it, yes. However, the configuration instructions are not
> that clear to me. There doesn't seem to be a "HowTo" where setting it up is
> concerned, only to add packages.
There are a couple of versions out there. I know the older one, 2.9.3. Write
to me off the list if you want.
-ethan
=====
Even though my old e-mail address is no longer going to
vanish, please note my new public address: erd(a)iname.com
The original webpage address is still going away. The
permanent home is: http://penguincentral.com/
See http://ohio.voyager.net/ for details.
__________________________________________________
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Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger.
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At 14:01 18-03-2000 -0500, you wrote:
>Try the linux router project - fits on a floppy or whatever, very similar
>to sharethenet (which if I remember correctly was a deriverative of
>LRP) at www.linuxrouter.org. It's free and there are packages for
>everything!
I've looked at it, yes. However, the configuration instructions are not
that clear to me. There doesn't seem to be a "HowTo" where setting it up is
concerned, only to add packages.
Thanks, though. I'm still working this...
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Bruce Lane, Owner and head honcho, Blue Feather Technologies
http://www.bluefeathertech.com // E-mail: kyrrin(a)bluefeathertech.com
Amateur Radio: WD6EOS since Dec. '77
"Our science can only describe an object, event, or living thing in our
own human terms. It cannot, in any way, define any of them..."
Not sure what happened last time I sent this. I'll try again...
> The "serial" bus is actually a bastardised implementation of the IEEE-488
> bus, which CBM had used on the PET series. Data is transferred serially (at
> 300 baud) instead of in parallel, other than that I believe it's pretty much
> IEEE.
Are you _sure_ it's 300 baud? I thought it was 2400. We had a 20K byte load
module that took about a minute to load - this corresponds to a little over 300
_bytes_ per second. Same load module from tape took SEVEN minutes! No wonder
speed loaders and things were popular! (Typical disk speed loader used 2 of the
wires in the serial bus for data, doubling the throughput. May have used higher
baud rate as well - I never had problems with 4800 baud in software on a PET.)
Philip.
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Hello ClassicCmp and Port-vax,
I am trying to track down the compatibility of the VS3100/MS SCSI bus with
"modern" SCSI drives. The case in point is that I'm trying to connect a
SeaGate Barracuda (ST32550N) drive (2.54GB SCSI) to the internal bus,
replacing a 426MB Seagate drive. When the drive is installed the system
gets indigestion. I'm currently attempting to disable parity on the drive
in case that is an issue.
Has anyone done something similar? Is there some caveat I've missed?
Obviously the DEC manual isn't much help :-)
--Chuck
40 hrs with only a 20min catnap but I have a rental truck full of
goodies from a midnight run. Latest stuff: PDP04,34,05, many expansion
bus's including a brand new RP11, box's of RT11 on RX floppies, Box's of
microfiche, paper tapes, engineering drawings, half dozen MVAX II's, I's
with VR260's etc. Small handbooks blah blah.
Time for bed...
Brian.