Some one here maintains a collection of boot disks don't they?
Can you help him out?
------- Forwarded message follows -------
From: Boing48(a)cs.com
Hi,
I have a Kaypro II but no docs or software. I would like to get a
boot disk, can you help?
Thanks,
Allan
------- End of forwarded message -------
-----
David Williams - Computer Packrat
dlw(a)trailingedge.com
http://www.trailingedge.com
----------
> From: Charles P. Hobbs (SoCalTip) <transit(a)lerctr.org>
>
> Around 1985 or so, a couple of manufacturers developed "sprite boards"
> for the Apple II series (except the IIc, for obvious reasons)
Picked one from eBay in November for $5. No docs or software, but I think
I have the Byte magazine where Ciarcia presented plans and software for the
original. I have not even plugged it in yet.
Paul R. Santa-Maria
Ann Arbor, Michigan USA
paulrsm(a)ameritech.net
I have a SparcStation 4/330 (sun4 architecture) running OpenBSD 2.6 on a
540mb drive. I have a few questions relating to fleshing out the
original install:
Where do I find descriptions for each package/port?
How do I get PKG_ADD to resolve it's own dependencies? (goes to above
question). I would like to install KDE or Enlightenment or some better
Gui than X11R6.....
I have Solaris 2.4 (sparc) installed on another drive (triple boot
system - netbsd, openbsd, solaris) and so have the libraries the
Compat_sunos manpage says it requires except for LIB5. Do I need a
later version of solaris in order to get the libraries I need to run
solaris dynamicaly linked applications? The mans are not specific
enough for me to get there from here. The goal is to run Netscape for
Solaris 2.4 under OpenBSD 2.6. I've cp'd the libs to the correct dirs
according to the manpage but netscape fails to load with a trap almost
instantly. I have updated my solaris 2.4 for the bind issues relating
to netscape and other apps and those new libs are in place on my obsd
drive in the right place but to no avail.
In particular I would like to know why following the directions in the
manpage results in my solaris 2.4 partition being no longer bootable.
Solaris dies with several errors regarding Lib.so suchandsuch not being
readable and dies. I only mounted the solaris drive for read to copy
the files and each time I do that the solaris partition won't boot
anymore. My guess is permissions being changed because the solaris
partition is mountable under OpenBSD even after it will no longer boot,
all files are there in the right place and OBSD reports the solaris
partition as clean. What is happening here?
Some equipment info:
sd0 is at 0,0 540mb Openbsd
Sd1 is at 1,0 540mb NetBsd 1.4.2 (gotta use 1.4.1`s miniroot to install
on Sun4!
Sd2 is at 3,0 1004mb Solaris 2.4 (can't boot from cd so I use TomsRTBT
on my klone and dd an image then install from the image'd hard
disk..... Hey, it works.
Video is a CG6 daughtercard on my sparc's mainboard. X runs fine.
I do have a cdrom drive that is not bootable but otherwise runs fine for
all three operating systems.
Thanks for your support. Please reply in e-mail as well as to the
group.
--
Jeffrey S. Worley
President
Complete Computer Services Inc.
30 Greenwood Rd.
Asheville, NC 28803
828-277-5959
--- "John R. Keys Jr." <jrkeys(a)concentric.net> wrote:
> ...I see the IIc+ around here and in St. Louis, MO all the time but I
> already have three working units. They sell for around $2 to $10
> without a monitor.
That sounds about right. I only have one IIc+, but it was $15 with an
external 5.25" Laser-brand floppy drive, two Imagewriter Is and a smallish
(9"?) mono monitor and stand, docs but no software. I'd wanted a IIc since
I wrote kiddie-software under the Software Productions/Reader's Digest
label in high school ("Micro Habitats", "Micro Mother Goose" and "Alphabet
Beasts and Company" were our big titles).
That's why I only have DOS 3.3 disks and the odd Infocom title; I haven't
used an Apple on a regular basis since 1984. Now that the hardware is
ultra-cheap, I can make up for all those lost years.
-ethan
=====
Even though my old e-mail address is no longer going to
vanish, please note my new public address: erd(a)iname.com
The original webpage address is still going away. The
permanent home is: http://penguincentral.com/
See http://ohio.voyager.net/ for details.
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I have several Heathkit H19 and Zenith Z19 manuals if various conditions.
Does anyone want them?
Mark Champion
Sony Electronics
206-524-0014
mark.champion(a)am.sony.com
Hey gang,
With some help from Joe Rigdon, I found some really cool stuff this weekend.
Located two complete HP 9000/832 minicomputers. After tinkering around for a
few hours, I found one of them has a bad CPU and 3 of the 8 (total between
two machines) hard drives had failed. So, between them, I managed to build a
complete working system with some spares left over.
What kind of tapes does the built-in drive use?
The find-of-the-day however, was a HP 7980XC 9-track tape drive. Found this
beauty in a dumpster at one of the junk dealers. It's god a few minor
scratches on the front cover but, otherwise is in extremely good condition.
The total asking price 5$. Anyone got spare DOCs for it?
I hooked the tape drive up to one of the 832s but, just can't get it to
work. Whenever I try to cpio or fbackup to the tape, the drive will try to
work but, eventually gives a write error. The same thing happens with my
other tape drive (HP7980) which I know is good. So, I suspect the problem is
with the drivers, or configuration, or possibly me :-)
If anyone can give pointers as to how to make it work, I'd sure appreciate
it.
See Ya,
Steve Robertson <steverob(a)hotoffice.com>
----------
> From: Ethan Dicks <ethan_dicks(a)yahoo.com>
> To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: Re: Networking Apple IIc or IIc+
> Date: Friday, July 07, 2000 04:52 PM
>
> As mentioned previously on this list, I have a version 1.0 ROM in my
IIgs.
> What is the "best" version? Are they for sale or for download to burn my
> own?
There were three versions of the Apple IIgs: ROM 00, ROM 01, and ROM 03.
ROM 00 and ROM 01 have the same hardware with a different ROM. The ROM 03
had different hardware (more memory on the motherboard, for example) and
you cannot convert an earlier version to a ROM 03.
A ROM 03 is considered the best if you are going to run GS/OS, the Apple
IIgs 16-bit native operating system. I am happy with my ROM 01 since I use
it like an 8-bit Apple IIe.
Paul R. Santa-Maria
Ann Arbor, Michigan USA
paulrsm(a)ameritech.net
>You write about this experiment with considerable confidence in your result,
>considering that you haven't any conventional hardware for dealing with this
>stuff. There must be something about your results that gives you the
>confidence to proceed. What might that be? Are you getting verifiable
>results, i.e. data that makes sense like ascii files, etc?
Yes, ASCII (and EBCDIC, remember I'm recovering floppies originally written
in the early 70's) files that make sense.
I think, Dick, that sometimes you make this seem harder than it is. Many
of the data formats are readable (in hardware) with something as simple as
a one-shot and a UART.
>Sampling and recording the analog signal might prove disappointing. The
>data will be much harder to recognize in its analog form, particularly on
>the inner tracks on a noisy diskette or drive.
True, but the analog circuit would also be easy to simulate electronically.
Just a few coupled linear and nonlinear differential equations!
Tim.
>>>>> "Tony" == Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk> writes:
Tony> I'd probably use a 10125 (ECL-TTL translator) to turn the
Tony> signals to TTL, then feed the syncs and video (the latter
Tony> suitably reduced by a potential divider) into a multisync
Tony> monitor and hope it could lock to it. I don't think many
Tony> composite monitors are going to work at the sync rates of
Tony> the D'break, are they?
No, the D'break sync rates are usually out of the multisync
monitor range. Mine can't sync to VSYNC rates below 58Hz or something,
for instance. But I have not yet tried with older multisync monitors
(damn, I sold my Amiga A3000 monitor...)
Tony> Kevin Schoedel (?spell) lent me a Daybreak keyboard for an
Tony> afternoon some months back. During that afternoon, I pulled
Tony> it to bits, figured out most of the hardware details,
Tony> powered it up from my bench supply and grabbed the output
Tony> waveforms. Yes, Kevin did know I was doing this :-)
[...]
That's too great! he he
I'll get busy as as I return home!
And it may be fruitful to visit the junkyard this weekend for
good-old multisync monitors.
Cheers,
--
*** Rodrigo Martins de Matos Ventura <yoda(a)isr.ist.utl.pt>
*** Web page: http://www.isr.ist.utl.pt/~yoda
*** Teaching Assistant and PhD Student at ISR:
*** Instituto de Sistemas e Robotica, Polo de Lisboa
*** Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisboa, PORTUGAL
*** PGP fingerprint = 0119 AD13 9EEE 264A 3F10 31D3 89B3 C6C4 60C6 4585
>> My circuit is much more "hackable", anyone with a TTL databook can figure
>> out what it does and improve on it. Or you can build one yourself from
>> scratch. (Other than the 128K*8 SRAM, all the other parts were literally
>> purchased from the local electronics shop. Heck, most of the chips can
>> be bought at Radio Shack!) Total cost for the chips in my buffer is
>> about $30.00, about half of that in the SRAM chip.
>I sympathize with that, but for those of us who are much better at software
>than hardware, something off-the-shelf is a big plus.
OTOH, something I can put together on a Sunday afternoon with parts I bought
at Radio Shack is an even bigger plus for me :-).
It's not like my buffer uses any complex electronics. It's all perfectly-
standard TTL parts and a SRAM chip, and it's currently residing on a pretty
randomly wired solderless breadboard so you don't need any fancy construction
techniques. Except for the capacity of the SRAM chip, this is all quarter-
century-old technology.
As Chuck pointed out, maybe the fact that this is quarter-century-old
technology put together with quarter-century-old construction and design
techniques makes it less accessible to some of the younger members
of this list. Maybe the way to make it more accessible to them is to put
the circuitry on a CPLD, I dunno, I think it's fine as it is.
I suppose there *are* folks who might be interested in using such a device
who don't know which end of a soldering iron to pick up, but a very valid
point is that I built this without even touching a soldering iron!
And the fact that I built it without even drawing a schematic first would
tend to implicate the design as being on the naively simplistic side, too :-).
(I still gotta draw that schematic up for you guys...)
>Another point to note is that the Catweasel samples at 7 or 14 MHz (software
>selectable). In reading some old 8" MFM disks, I found that there had
>been a lot of bit-shifting over the years (or maybe there was not enough
>write precomp applied to begin with)
I will admit, MFM *does* require at least twice the timing resolution of FM.
I once got in a small argument with some other members of this list about
AC circuit design of MFM vs FM data recovery circuits. IIRC, they were
insisting that MFM did come "for free" if you had the frequency response
necessary for FM at half the data rate. My point was that it
wasn't the max pulse frequency which made life difficult, it was the phase
response (finding where the pulse occured in the window) that was the tough
point.
>, and I had to use an extra heuristic
>to make them readable at all. I'm not sure that 4 MHz would have been
>a high enough sample rate for these.
Yeah, well, with my circuit if you don't like the sample rate, you buy
a different off-the-shelf oscillator in a can and plug in. If you
now need more buffer RAM, you plug in a second RAM chip and wire it up.
That's IMHO the beauty, but maybe a software-only hacker doesn't see that.
Tim.