>At 06:45 PM 4/28/00 -0500, you wrote:
>>Does any body happen to know the pin specifications for a Z-80
microprocessor?
>>
>>Thanks,
>>Owen
>
>Here's the place to be for all things Z-80:
>
> http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Peaks/3938/z80_home.htm
Check the sites mentioned for details. If you need further details we are
here
to provide additional detail.
Allison
I have some DecTape TU56 front panel controls, so if someone has a TU56
with a bad switch or something, let me know and maybe we can make a trade.
Also, I might be able to get a set of motors, or even possibly a read/write
head, if that is needed. It would take me a couple hours to go back with
some tools and extract these parts, so unless someone wants to trade me
something for it, i probably wont bother. Someone else has already extracted
one of the motors (there are normally 4 total, one behind each of the
wheels on the front on the unit).
-Lawrence LeMay
lemay(a)cs.umn.edu
>How was VMS distributed? I've got a blue box that says "OpenVMS" and
>contained a "wallet" of CD-ROMS with VMS for Alpha and VMS for VAX. There
>is one VAX-VMS Binraries CD and one that is labelled "Layered Products 1 of
>1" and the VMS FreeWare 2.0 CD. I'm looking for the C, Fortran, and PASCAL
>compilers. But they don't appear to be on either of these disks. Was there
>another CD with even more layered products on it?
A complete condist (consolidated distribution) for VMS 7.0 is, I believe,
12 disks.
If you get the hobbyist CD's through the OpenVMS hobbyist program
( http://www.montagar.com/ ) the "layered product" CD that comes with it
is a "best of" from all the condist CD's, carrying what someone thought
a hobbyist would be most likely to want. Many of the compilers are there.
--
Tim Shoppa Email: shoppa(a)trailing-edge.com
Trailing Edge Technology WWW: http://www.trailing-edge.com/
7328 Bradley Blvd Voice: 301-767-5917
Bethesda, MD, USA 20817 Fax: 301-767-5927
This is the other half, several packages with Disk or CD and docs, are
available for $5/each post paid in the USA.
Sytos Plus File Backup Manager for DOS (by Sytron)
386/MAX Version 6 by Qualitas (an EMM386 type clone?)
Shrink wrapped "Microsoft Online" box. (would make a nice addition to
your collectible AOL disk :-)
--Chuck
I've got a _pile_ of Novell Network developer CD-ROMs. Some claim to be
time limited, some are docs, all are from the Novell Developer program and
came on a load of stuff that was otherwise unrelated. This is what they say:
Novell Directory Service - Developer Jumpstart CD
Novell LAN DDK/SDK
Novell Software Connection Library 10
" " 11
etc, etc for about 40+ CD ROMs (I suspect some duplicates.)
It looks like most of the developer connection series and some IHV beta stuff.
Definitely should be archived rather than go to the dumpster or be made
into coasters.
I'd prefer to trade a couple of Q-bus boards or a PCI SCSI controller
(preferably one of the Adaptec ones), if there is any interest at all let
me know before next friday.
--Chuck
How was VMS distributed? I've got a blue box that says "OpenVMS" and
contained a "wallet" of CD-ROMS with VMS for Alpha and VMS for VAX. There
is one VAX-VMS Binraries CD and one that is labelled "Layered Products 1 of
1" and the VMS FreeWare 2.0 CD. I'm looking for the C, Fortran, and PASCAL
compilers. But they don't appear to be on either of these disks. Was there
another CD with even more layered products on it?
--Chuck
>Where to start? (I entered the label that the disk says it has on it (its
>printed on the CD as OPENVMSS070LP, but that is rejected as being incorrect)
If you think the label printed on the CD is wrong, you can do a
MOUNT/OVERRIDE=IDENTIFICATION to figure out what the real disk label is.
If you still get an error, show us exactly what command you tried and
exactly the error message you got back. Unlike many modern software
products, the error messages from VMS *are* actually helpful to figure
out what's going wrong!
Tim.
I know, I know. It must be written down somewhere, but the DOC is on a CD
and I don't know how to access it!
I have VMS 7.0 installed, and I installed DECWindows. I also told it to be
a cluster node and that caused some problems initially. On boot it
complained about INCLUDES. For the uninitiated the NO_SHARE option on the
hobbiest VMS license means you need one license per CPU, and for that to
work you have to type:
LICENSE MODIFY/INCLUDE=TNYVAX VAX-VMS
before it will work. (TNYVAX was my node name, yours will vary)
So its installed, but I would really like to install TCP/IP so that I can
open a DECWindow on my remote X server. I think it is on the VMS Layered
products disk but when I try to mount it it complains I've gor the wrong label.
Where to start? (I entered the label that the disk says it has on it (its
printed on the CD as OPENVMSS070LP, but that is rejected as being incorrect)
--Chuck
> I was wondering if anyone had an idea about an 11/23+ I picked up recently.
>It's a normal looking 11/23+, but the UART closest to the console connecters
>is replaced by a 40 pin socket. The socket has a ribbon cable attached which
>goes to a small board (2x3.5 inches) that contains a UART and a couple of
>other chips (notebly a dallas ds2010).
A DS2010 is a 1024*9 FIFO.
> Looking at the socket, it's not a
>rework, I believe the board came this way from DEC. The small board has a
>part number 010-01135-00 rev b etched on it.
I don't see that part number in my indices, but it certainly sounds like
it may be a DEC part number. With the FIFO and the UART, it obviously has
something to do with buffering either input or output through the serial
port. Interesting find! If you look on the board handles, are there any
suffixes on the M8189? (Something like "YA" or "YB"?)
--
Tim Shoppa Email: shoppa(a)trailing-edge.com
Trailing Edge Technology WWW: http://www.trailing-edge.com/
7328 Bradley Blvd Voice: 301-767-5917
Bethesda, MD, USA 20817 Fax: 301-767-5927