It's not great as far as hauling large items, but I have a '66 Mustang that has proven excellent for hauling incredibly vast quantities of smaller stuff. Even a rackmount SUN 3/280 on the from seat. An On Topic to boot...
--
Love of the Goddess makes the poet go mad
he goes to his death and in death is made wise.
Robert Graves
> From: Hans Franke <Hans.Franke(a)mch20.sbs.de>
> If you got some 2016s laying around, I'd be more than willing
> to frre you of this burden.
I would send a few of them to you, but wouldn't it be cheaper for you to
buy them locally?
> You realy think I'd dump any computer stuff ?
Hey, if you would steal the RAM from a ZX81, who knows what you might do
;>)
Glen
0/0
I seem to recall that a couple years ago someone converted the "Field
Guide" to something that could be read on a Palm Pilot. Am I remembering
correctly, and does anyone have a copy? I just got a Sony T615C, and one
of the must have items for it is going to be the Field Guide!
Zane
--
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Administrator |
| healyzh(a)aracnet.com (primary) | OpenVMS Enthusiast |
| | Classic Computer Collector |
+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
| Empire of the Petal Throne and Traveller Role Playing, |
| PDP-10 Emulation and Zane's Computer Museum. |
| http://www.aracnet.com/~healyzh/ |
In a project I'm thinking about starting this summer, I want to try and
re-create a PDP-11 (or maybe a -8 or something) using either SSI logic
and/or PAL/GALs. I would like to do the entire thing in SSI, but I fear
that I'd quickly eat up a lot of money on the project, so where necessary
I'd replace sections with PALs. Anyone have any good ideas?
About what I'm doing: Trying to replicate an 'old-computer feel' for a
mock airport that a friend of mine is thinking about making. I'll have a
good amount of time to work on designing it before I start laying down
copper on a circuit board. I'd like to make something that 1) looks
authentically old and 2) has a design I can (semi-legally, not for resale)
copy so I don't have to do all the re-design work myself.
I've considered just using a plain-old Apple //e that I have, but that
wouldn't be 'old enough' looking I was thinking. It'll need to have a
good amount of I/O, and be easy enough that I can actually build it and
understand how to program it without much effort. By that way, I don't
care about using 'standard OS's' or 'standard hardware' too much, I just
want to put together a system with a CPU, serial port, and some sort of
floppy drive interface (I prefer 5-1/4 disks at some PC readable format)
it can boot off of - or perhaps an IDE interface as that would be easy to
program a 'driver' for (or so I'm told).
Does anyone have any suggestions for what I should try to build? Eg. what
model PDP-11 cpu card, what prints I should get to try and assemble a
basic working system, etc. Should I try something else? I would like to
go a bit overboard, the look is a part of the thing, but I don't want to
screw with finding things like QBUS drivers, and don't think I'll want to
bother with a 'traditional mini-computer bus' if I don't need to.
This is what I have so far:
1) CPU card
2) Memory - SRAM
3) Front-panel switches
4) Console serial port
5) A few digital I/O ports
6) Floppy interface (anyone suggest an easy to interface controller?)
7) IDE controller
-- Pat
Still got a pile of FREE STUFF in Austin, TX. People have emailed saying
they're interested, then drop off the face of the earth. Please dont
contact me unless you are serious about picking any of these up.
See pictures at http://www.mrbill.net/~mrbill/freestuff
The GRiD laptops are taken, the DELNI and Sun VME boards are
still available.
List of the boards:
501 1767 - 4/6x0 memory board
501 1855 - IPI controller (x4)
501 1221 - Comm Processor II
501 1203 - ALM-2
501 1217 - SCSI controller (3row DB50) (x2)
And these non-Sun-branded boards;
ED5P182-30/G1 - FDDI
ED5P182-32/G1 SUN DKHS - FDDI (x2)
pics at http://www.mrbill.net/~mrbill/fddi/
Bill
--
Bill Bradford
mrbill(a)mrbill.net
Austin, TX
Just dusted off an ADM3a, and it's intact except for a key centered
between the arrow keys on the right-hand side, which is missing the
top. I'm also not certain that all of the other keys are in the right
positions. Can someone take a couple of close-up digital photos of
the keyboard and e-mail them to me? Or maybe scan a manual page that
shows the keyboard layout? I may try to modify a spare PC keyboard
keytop to replace the missing one, if the colors are close (or I can
paint it to match). Thanks!
-Bill Richman (bill_r(a)inetnebr.com)
Web Page: http://incolor.inetnebr.com/bill_r
Home of the COSMAC Elf Microcomputer Simulator, Fun with
Molten Metal, Orphaned Robots, and Technological Oddities.
Well,
A few weeks ago, I mentioned I'd archived the 8051 stuff
>from the SIMTEL archive. As it turns out, the QIC-80 tape
they're on must have stretched, and I only wrote one set
of that stuff.
I thought I had it on the hard drive, but all that was
left was:
ML-ASM51 Metalink 8051 Macro Assembler
BASIC-52 BASIC-52 source
BASIC31 (BASIC52 adapted for 8031)
DIS8051F 8051 disassembler
DISASM51 another one
8051-FAQ.TXT what it says
00FILES yada
00README yada
8051STUF.LOG FTP directory of what was there
CLOCK.ASM clock program
I may have floppies with the stuff, so I'll keep looking...
-dq
-Douglas Hurst Quebbeman (DougQ at ixnayamspayIgLou.com) [Call me "Doug"]
Surgically excise the pig-latin from my e-mail address in order to reply
"The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away." -Tom Waits
the answer is yes, the question is how or why? :) I picked one up out of a
stack of indigo 2's thinking that someone was just being funny sticking
r10k badges on the teal box, but it actually is! I was under the
impression that this machine wasnt made. Let me know if you know
otherwise, I'll have more info whenever I boot it up and hook it up to a
monitor. It has a floptical drive too! ;) I still have that chrp prototype
machine from motorola if anyone is interested.
Thanks,
jon
From: Fred Cisin (XenoSoft) <cisin(a)xenosoft.com>
>On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, Tony Duell wrote:
>> I've never seen really fine ACME threads, but I guess they could
exist.
>
>How about in the focusing mechanism in some lens mounts?
Leadscrews used for floppies.
Transverse drives as in the ARC-5 tuning assembly.
Feed screws used for linear positioners.
just a few I've used...
Allison
>Thanks to the assistance of a fellow lister
>(hi Mark!) I finally have one now, which I will keep forever.
>
> -Dave
Hi Dave! Putting people together with computers they love just
(snif!) makes me feel all gushy inside ... but I in turn have to pass the
thanks in this case on to William Fulmor, without whom I'd know nothing
about UnixPC's, and who is responsible for my having access to any at all.
And more generally to many other listmembers (Hi Tony, Jeff, Zane, Claude,
William W, Eric, MrBill, Doc, Don, Megan, Terry, and others I've
reprehensibly left out ....) who have given me invaluable assistance in the
past.
This is a truly great community to be part of.
BTW, for those with whom I've dropped conversations right in the
middle concerning my Stylewriter, apologies. Work has gotten unusually
time-consuming for a while and the Stylewriter is still sitting right where
it was, waiting for me to get back to it. I'll get there eventually, but
it'll be a while more.
- Mark