Looks just like the one on this webpage except the one I saw has "Commodore
2500" on the lower left corner of the face.
http://amiga.emugaming.com/a2500.html
Mike
mmcfadden(a)cmh.edu
Citadel Quarter Inch Cartridge, DC6150, 620ft, 150MB. In plastic case
and looks practically new. I don't know what it's for and I don't want it.
Cost of shipping.
Tom
Applefritter
www.applefritter.com
Chad,
I've already gotten one offer for an EISA SCSI controller, but... if
you'd still be willing to part with one of those Adaptecs, I do have
another machine I could put a SCSI controller. (I really didn't think that
so many people would be willing to part with a controller that I've had so
much trouble finding. <grin> I must be looking in the wrong areas.)
I can send you a money order for S/H + whatever you wanted for the
controller.
Micah Snodgrass
2054 Sisley Grove Rd.
Palo, Ia. 52324
Chad Fernandez <fernande(a)internet1.net>@classiccmp.org on 06/29/2001
12:24:42 PM
Please respond to classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
Sent by: owner-classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org, mjsnodgr(a)rockwellcollins.com
cc:
Subject: Re: Whats a reasonable collection?
What is the brand is it? Is it Wide or narrow?
What do you need in the way of an EISA SCSI board? I have a couple 174x
series from Adaptec that aren't doing anything.
Chad Fernandez
Michigan, USA
mjsnodgr(a)rockwellcollins.com wrote:
>
> I've got a MCA SCSI controller that I'm not using. It came to me in a box
> of MCA and EISA stuff and was working when it was pulled from it's
machine.
> I was hoping to get an EISA SCSI controller.. Hmmm... if anyone in
> interested in a swap....
>
> - Micah S.
Hello everyone,
An acquaintance of mine is having trouble either
compiling and/or using the VMSTPC package under
Alpha OpenVMS 7.1.
Is anyone running VMSTPC under OpenVMA 7.1 on an
Alpha? If so, would you be willing to talk to him?
He's trying to read magtapes that are over 10 years
old, so it's as on-topic as you can get...
Thanks in advance,
-doug quebbeman
In a message dated 6/28/01 7:42:48 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
pechter(a)bg-tc-ppp1667.monmouth.com writes:
<< > Bill Pechter skrev:
>
> >I'd liked a cross between OS/2 and VAX/VMS... maybe with FreeBSD
> >thrown in.
>
> Isn't that Windows NT?
Not if you have to use the GUI to admin it and reboot to change
network addresses.
>
> >Always liked OS/2 and always will. IBM was screwed by M$ who kept
> >changing Win32 and keeping new apps from running on OS/2.
>
> So what? OS/2 is OS/2 and Windows is Windows. You can't just rely on some
> other OS vendor to supply you with the right API and applications.
>
> But M$ promised if you code to Win32S it would be portable to OS/2,
> Win3.1 and Win95/NT and kept changing the DLLs to break it.
.The only problem in OS/2 was if the Workplace Shell threads blocked and
>locked up you'd lose the desktop... but all the server services
>like network kept going.
>Getting a prompt and login from Telnet was possible on OS/2 when it
>wasn't standard in NT.
>The ftp and telnet servers made OS/2 pretty compatible to
>FreeBSD/Linux/Unix in what it could do on a lan. >>
OS/2 v.3 had a single input queue which caused the problem where the desktop
would not respond but the system will still chug along just fine. If you had
a multithreaded foreground app that quit working, sometimes there was no way
to break of it. Supposedly that was fixed in Warp 4 but i've still had it
quit on me. Installing that program called Watchcat has saved me several
times from rebooting.
--
DB Young Team OS/2
old computers, hot rod pinto and more at:
www.nothingtodo.org
Hello!
My coworker and I are looking for an archival server that we can collect the
files we use on and we want something with character, much like a VAX. I
have seen your page and was wondering if you knew of anyone selling a VAX
with SCSI capability. BTW, can we put a 36 gig drive into it?
Nick
Because of the interest, I have decided to hold a sealed bid auction for
the complete set of Micro Cornucopia magazines.
Every issue from #1 (July 1981, 16 pages) to #53 (May 1990, 96 pages) is
here. The subheading started out "Journal of the Big Board Users",
changed with #7 to "The Single Board Systems Journal", and finally changed
with #23 to "The Micro Technical Journal".
Topics covered included software--BASIC, Pascal, C, Forth, Smalltalk,
Prolog, Wordstar, dBase II, CP/M, MS-DOS, and much more--and
hardware--memory upgrades, EPROM erasers, a logic analyzer, video
circuitry, even a complete Nat Semi 32000 chip set computer with circuit
diagrams. The early issues have almost exclusively Big Board, CP/M, and
Z80 content. The final issues have almost exclusively MS-DOS PC content.
In the middle there is an incredible variety of hard-core technical
articles.
Almost all the issues are perfect. The early issues I purchased as back
issues so they do not even have mailing labels on them. Issue 21,
December-January 1985, has "Sample for Microsystems Readers" printed in
red on the front; Micro Cornucopia was trying to pick up subscribers from
Sol Libes' magazine that folded. That was my first issue and every issue
>from #21 on has mailing labels on them. Issue 29 is damaged; it appears
that this one was on the end of a bundle--the cover is scuffed and there
are small tears at the top and bottom from the binding strap.
End of auction is Friday 6 July 2001 at 8pm. Send bids to
paul(a)wccnet.org. Highest bidder wins (duh!). Payment is by check or
money order and must be received within 30 days (6 August) of auction end.
Shipping costs are IN ADDITION to the bid amount. I can ship via US Mail
or UPS. The magazines weigh about 24 pounds and would cost about $9 to
ship USPS Media Mail without insurance. Shipping is from Monroe, Michigan
48161. No shipping charges if you pick it up, of course.
I will repost this notice on Thursday.
Paul R. Santa-Maria
Monroe, Michigan USA
paul(a)wccnet.org
Well, one cabinet of a CM-5. Stripped, too. Basically, it is somewhat like
three standard 19" racks welded together. About 7 feet tall. Heavy as sin.
No skins. Interesting provenence - it was one of the two machines used in
Jurrasic Park. The blinkenlights panels will be removed to populate (and
the extras to pay for) another CM-5.
Located in either Providence, RI (if you pick it up *really* soon), or
Carmel, NY.
William Donzelli
aw288(a)osfn.org
Wednesday of this week I went to a school auction and came away 3 new in
the box Apple II WorkStation cards, apple number A2B2088 dated 1987.
Two are still sealed and the one that had been open had Ramworks III
card by Applied Engineering inside also. I had to watch them pass (for
no bidders) on 100's of Apple II's, apple floppy drive, apple monitors,
some TRS80 model III's, pc stuff. I do not have the room to store all
the stuff that they will be trashing. You could buy a lot for $1
(sometimes the lot would have over 100 items in it), the prices were
right but just too much stuff.