I have Kontron LA 32A Logic Analyzer that complains about no boot disk on
startup. It has two drive bays, the first of which has a floppy drive
and the second of which is empty.
Does anybody know what software I'd need to get this running or would be
willing to make copies?
Thanks,
Tom
Applefritter
www.applefritter.com
I have the following items available. Please e-mail me directly at
joel.bradley(a)comcast.net if interested:
Sony PIC-1000 Magic Link with software (PDA circa 1994)
Control Data Corporation Cyber 960 Framed and Matted photograph (approx 24"
x 20")
Control Data Corporation Cyber 960 Matted photograph, No Frame (approx 24" x
20")
Control Data Corporation 3 - Ring Binder (many available)
Control Data Corporation White Coffee Mugs (individual or set available)
Control Data Corporation Legal Pad portfolio, brown leather-like material.
NICE!
Microsoft Excel 2.2 for Macintosh - MINT IN BOX, still shrinkwrapped!
------
Joel
Hi all, perhaps pusing the boundaries of off-topicness here a little, but...
I'm taking suggestions for wordprocessing software to run on an older 486
laptop (1994, so almost within the 10 year limit!) that's running Windows 3.11
...
I still use the machine for a bit of wordprocessing ocassionally (such as it is
with Windows Write), and better software would be nice. The laptop's handy for
taking stuff down on before formatting things 'properly' on a more modern
desktop.
I remember Ami Pro being quite reasonable on a similar spec desktop machine,
but my copy went to tape years ago and around half of the old tapes of mine
that I found recently are no longer readable :-(
Suggestions of alternative software welcome though...
cheers
Jules
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C>Copy con foo.txt<CR>
Foo bar baz<CR>
Testing^Z<CR>
C>
-----Original Message-----
From: Bryan Pope [mailto:bpope@wordstock.com]
Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2003 8:08 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Older wordprocessing software
And thusly Joe spake:
>
> >What about DisplayWrite?? :)
> >
> >*ducking and sprinting for cover*
> >
> >Cheers,
> >
> >Bryan
> >
>
> Geez, why not just use Edlin? :-/
>
> Joe
Hey I forgot about that wonderful creation!
But then there is also:
C:>copy < document.txt
(I think it goes this way...)
Cheers,
Bryan
On Mon, Jul 7, 08:36:00, 2003, Jules Richardson wrote:
>I remember Ami Pro being quite reasonable on a similar spec desktop machine,
>but my copy went to tape years ago and around half of the old tapes of mine
>that I found recently are no longer readable :-(
>
>Suggestions of alternative software welcome though...
XyWrite comes to mind: low resource requirements, yet oodles of formatting
options.
It takes a bit of time and practice to build up some speedy chops, so it
may not be the panacea you're looking for. I do know, however, that
XyWrite's format can be successfully converted into (many of) today's
common word processing formats.
Regards,
Eric
Dunno if everyone has seen this, but there is a fairly new 990 web page
up by David PItts, who has written a simulator and cross-development
tools for Linux and Windows.
It might be interesting to take something like this, or M.E.S.S. or one
of the other simulators, and reimplement the DX10 4A dev tools. Maybe
somebody might even still have them around somewhere. Hmmm.
http://www.cozx.com/~dpitts/ti990.html
later,
jbdigriz
Hi Tim
If someone else doesn't get you anything, I can write something
for you. I think you can easily drive it from the printer port
with an adapter cable( I've not totaled the signals needed ).
Some of the newer boards require sequencing that I don't have
information on but for cards that program things like 1702A's
or 2708's, I have info on the sequences needed.
Dwight
>X-Authentication-Warning: huey.classiccmp.org: mailnull set sender to
cctalk-admin using -f
>From: "Tim Shaw" <T.Shaw(a)corp.amc.edu.au>
>To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>Subject: iUP-201 PC software
>
>Hi Robert
>I found your request for modules for a iUP201 Universal Programmer.
>I have just dusted off a iUP-201 we have had sitting on a shelf for as long
>as anyone here can remember.
>I cant help you with modules but I would be very grateful if you could help
>me with software to drive it from a PC.
>I need to use it to read the contents of a 2732 EPROM from an engine volume
>generator I hope to update.
>
>regards
>
>Tim Shaw T.Shaw(a)corp.amc.edu.au
>Senior Technical Officer (Elect) +61-3-63354805 Ph
>Technical Services +61-3-63266493 Fax
>Australian Maritime College www.amc.edu.au
> I don't think this machine is *quite* 10 years old yet, but it's pretty
> close -- and it's 'different' enough that hopefully I won't get flamed...
I'm not sure, but I think it's just over 10 years old, if not, as you say
it's pretty close.
> I have a DEC 3000 Model 300 AXP which is currently sitting idle -- it has
> Tru64 Unix 5.0 on it currently, and 64Meg of RAM. I was thinking of putting
> Alpha VMS 7.1 instead, for to start learning VMS again (someday... :-O )
> and I recall saying that Alpha VMS is much happier in more than 64M Ram, so
> I was thinking of upgrading it.
You can run it in 64MB, but it isn't fun.
> I do know that it uses 'standard' 72-pin Parity FPM Memory - but what I
> don't know is: how finicky is the machine? Will just any Parity memory
> work, or is it limited to certain manufacturers? I have a supplier that has
> used 32M Parity 72-pin FPM memory for $6/stick -- a decent price
> comparatively - I've seen it at $30+ per stick, which would make a memory
> upgrade cost more than the machine itself...
You're sure that it uses 72-pin? I'm honestly not sure, I know that the
3000/300LX does, but the 3000/x00 (can't remember the exact model) that a
friend has sitting in my Living room till she finds a drive for it, uses
proprietary RAM. Anyway, I've used various 72-pin FPM SIMMs in my Alpha's
and haven't had any problems that I can think of. Which isn't to say that
you won't have problems. The other question is, can it handle 32MB SIMMs,
and how many do you have to add at once?
BTW, 128MB is probably more than enough to just play.
> Should I take the chance and order the memory, or would it be foolhardy to
> do so?
Do you deal with anyone that scraps PC's? I'm using some RAM out of Pentium
Pro's in a couple of my Alpha's.
Zane
Does anyone have an old Digital Channel Server II (DESNB) sitting
around unused? If so, please let me know. I have someone that
needs one and is willing to pay if it works.
--
Eric Dittman
dittman(a)dittman.net
The best way to replace the buttons on a CFX-200 is to buy a used CD-401.
This is an earlier metal databank watch that uses the exact same case,
buttons and band as the CFX-200. The buttons are easily transferrable. You
can buy a CD-401 relatively inexepensively through Ebay. I recently
purchased one for $24.00 (US). You cannot order these parts. When lookin
for one, the key words should be Casio and "calculator" or "data bank."
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