I think someone gave PayPal the wrong e-mail address for payment.
alan
Bruce Lane wrote:
What the...?
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 14-Jan-03 at 21:40 rick(a)jelcoventures.com wrote:
>Richard Crandall cancelled the following payment to you:
>
>Amount: $29.95
Why do I get the feeling this should have been in private E-mail?
Whodaheck is Richard Crandall, anyway?
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Bruce Lane, Owner & Head Hardware Heavy,
Blue Feather Technologies -- http://www.bluefeathertech.com
ARS KC7GR (Formerly WD6EOS) since 12-77 -- kyrrin(a)bluefeathertech.com
"I'll get a life when someone demonstrates that it would be superior
to what I have now..." (Taki Kogoma, aka Gym Z. Quirk)
ROTFLMA
> rick-at-jelcoventures.com |CC| <aj85h8qq6k0t(a)sneakemail.com> wrote:
>
> You've got cash!
>
> Richard Crandall just sent you money with PayPal.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chad Fernandez [mailto:fernande@internet1.net]
> Sent: dinsdag 14 januari 2003 7:53
> To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: Re: PDP-12 on eBay
>
> Look where Unisys is today :-( They mostly sell intel based
> stuff. I know a few years ago they still marketed some
> A Series machines, but I think it existed as a carry over
> from an earlier time.
I worked with SPERRY and later UNISYS 1100 machines. Big main frames.
They have a 36-bit architecture and the nice part of if is that you
can always read the octal dump, because a 36-bit word was always the
complete instruction. With "multi-byte" instructions in a dump it is
a bit more difficult to find the start of an instruction.
SPERRY had a character set called FIELDATA. It is 6-bit (uppercase
only), so you fit put 6 characters in one (36-bit) word.
Later, somewhere around 1989, they introduced the 2200, the smaller
version of the 1100, but runs the same instruction set.
I vagely remember that the 2200 line was called the "A-series", as
there was also a "B-series" as a result of the merger of SPERRY and
BURROUGHS to the new UNISYS.
But, I am not sure. I left that company (and fine 1100) in 1990 ...
- Henk.
I'm guessing the original poster is referring to a fairly modern Palm PDA.
If so, I'd recommend leaving in the custom keys. There are only four main buttons plus up/down and they can be reassigned using software so the icons are, on the whole, unimportant.
Chris J.
> In this context, what is an M100. In my company, the designation
> refers to
> a Radiant branded touch-screen cash register with a NetPC (smal box,
> baby-ATX form factor) driven by WINNT 3.51. I'm sure tis isn't the
> same...
>
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> >
> > I have a mint condition M100 that I would like to sell.
> > One problem: the original keys were replaced with custom screened
> keys for
> > an OEM application.
> > Does anyone know where I can get replacement keys?
Someone has claimed this.. thanks for all that were interested - it's nice
to know that stuff I get emotionally attached to (ie: anything I touch), can
go to a good home :)
----------------------------------------------
PLEASE NOTE: This e-mail server
will be in the process of transitioning
>from one IP address to another on
01/25/2003. If you experience un-
deliverable email, bounced email, or
other stangenesses, it is probably due
to the move. Please try back in a couple
of days if your mail to me gets messed up.
---------------------------------------------------
Title on unopened box: "IBM Personal Computer XENIX Software Development
System" - its on 51/4 floppies. Includes the Xenix Operating System and
documentation, etc. This a new package, e.g. still shrink wrapped. Min.
config. requirements on PC is 512K Ram & 20Mb HD
Anyone interested?
>1. Black Macintosh TV no mouse, KB, or remote with it. Will test it on
>Wednesday.
If you happen to ever come across any of the mouse, kb, remotes... I
could use a set. I have a Mac TV (finally... thanks John!!!), but it
lacks its extras as well (and currently is supposed to be DOA, but I hope
to finally have a look at it this weekend).
I only run this by you because you seem to have the magical ability to
find the most awesome stuff at little to no cost... where DO you do you
hunting?!?
Oh, and FYI: the MacTV will work with a universal remote. Sony TV code.
At least that is true with my PowerMac, which came with a remote that is
also compatible with the MacTV, so I draw the conclusion that the MacTV
should also be compatible with a universal remote, sony code set.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
It'd be real nice if he'd specify... eh?
Cheers...
Ed Tillman
Store Automation Tech Support Specialist
Valero Energy Corporation
San Antonio, TX; USA
Phone (210) 592-3110, Fax (210) 592-2048
edward.tillman(a)valero.com <mailto:edward.tillman@valero.com>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk-admin@classiccmp.org@PEUSA On Behalf Of "No Junk
> Mail" <3sdiarftt02(a)sneakemail.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 9:34 PM
> To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: Re: RE: M100 Keys Sought
>
>
> I'm guessing the original poster is referring to a fairly modern Palm PDA.
>
> If so, I'd recommend leaving in the custom keys. There are only four main
> buttons plus up/down and they can be reassigned using software so the
> icons are, on the whole, unimportant.
>
> Chris J.
>
> > In this context, what is an M100. In my company, the designation
> > refers to
> > a Radiant branded touch-screen cash register with a NetPC (smal box,
> > baby-ATX form factor) driven by WINNT 3.51. I'm sure tis isn't the
> > same...
> >
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > >
> > > I have a mint condition M100 that I would like to sell.
> > > One problem: the original keys were replaced with custom screened
> > keys for
> > > an OEM application.
> > > Does anyone know where I can get replacement keys?
In this context, what is an M100. In my company, the designation refers to
a Radiant branded touch-screen cash register with a NetPC (smal box,
baby-ATX form factor) driven by WINNT 3.51. I'm sure tis isn't the same...
Cheers!
Ed Tillman
Store Automation Tech Support Specialist
Valero Energy Corporation
San Antonio, TX; USA
Phone (210) 592-3110, Fax (210) 592-2048
edward.tillman(a)valero.com <mailto:edward.tillman@valero.com>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk-admin@classiccmp.org@PEUSA On Behalf Of ED CHIODO
> <Ed_Chiodo(a)compuserve.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, January 14, 2003 8:47 PM
> To: CCTALK
> Subject: M100 Keys Sought
>
> I have a mint condition M100 that I would like to sell.
> One problem: the original keys were replaced with custom screened keys for
> an OEM application.
> Does anyone know where I can get replacement keys?
>
> Thanks,
> Ed
I love this logic, the price on ebay a place where all the traditional
requirements of willing buyer, willing seller, and open market are met,
isn't valid because its too high. No the acceptable price is the price you
once saw in a scrapyard after years of digging through the place 3 times a
week and have never seen since.