Gang,
I went to the Tektronix surplus sale today for the first time. Wow! welcome to Beaverton!
I Picked up a 7004A and half a dozen plug ins for $90; 2006 cal tags on everything and it works fine.
I also got a Dell P4 1.76 Ghz 40G hard drive PC for $35, boots up fine too.
I plan to go on this by-monthly visit so if you need a good scope or parts let me know.
I want a Ardent or Stellar or Stardent if any body finds one being dumped.
Randy Dawson
_________________________________________________________________
Want to read Hotmail messages in Outlook? The Wordsmiths show you how.
http://windowslive.com/connect/post/wedowindowslive.spaces.live.com-Blog-cn…
I am a volunteer at the Oakland Aviation Museum. We are trying to
restore a 1980 vintage cockpit training system. It contains a Multibus
board by National Semiconductor, model BLC 80/05 (along with dual CA
Naked Minis, and several other 8085 boards). Evidently this is a
knockoff of the Intel SBC 80/05. We are trying to locate documentation
for this board so that we can repair it. We are in desperate need of a
schematic. Even an SBC 80/05 schematic may help. Any help or pointers
would be greatly appreciated.
--jon
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There is an NEC "supercomputer" currently with no bids ($100 starting) on Ebay (140272067125). I would hate to see it get scrapped, but I am not in a position to buy it. There are not many hits on the auction page, so I thought I would spread the word here. Only a few hours left.
Jon
Not too long ago I scored a DEC VSXXX-AB graphics tablet on eBay, but after I'd put in the bid I realized I'd forgotten to verify that it came with the stylus and/or puck. Needless to say, it didn't. <sigh> So now I'm looking for one, the other, or preferably both, preferably not too costly (I want to hook this up to my own DECstation 5000 at home). Anyone have such a thing rattling about in a drawer? Thanks - Ian
UNIX is user friendly. It's just selective about who its friends are.
Ian S. King, Vintage Systems Engineer
Vulcan, Inc.
http://www.pdpplanet.org
I'm making plans to be in the Florida panhandle on May 2nd next year. (a
relative's college graduation). I will be staying in Fort Walton Beach,
although I can get a rental car. Anything to do there for a vintage
computer geek like me? Or, anyone have a big collection there and just want
to hang out?
$5 Items (plus actual ship, or you pick up in Sharon or Cambridge, MA)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
APEX Outlook EL-84DT (with the DT crossed out and SP handwritten)
- 8 port serial concentrator
Indigo 2 audio module
- 2 available
4 x 8M 72 pin SIMMS for SGI with gold fingers
- 2 sets available
DEC Turbo Channel PMAG A card
HP Printer PAL (turns LJ III, III/D/P, 4, 4P/L/PLUS, 5P) into laser fax
machine
- new sealed in box
2G SCA SCSI drive
- multiple available
4G SCA SCSI drive
- multiple available
Maxtor MXT1240S 50 pin 1.2 G SCSI drive (3.5" HH)
- these drives somtimes don't spin up on first power on
SGI PM3 Indigo 2 CPU (200MHz 1M cache)
$10 Items (plus actual ship, or you pick up in Sharon or Cambridge, MA)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
9G SCA SCSI drive
- multiple available
SPARCClassic, no HD, 6 x 501-1991 SIMMs
Ultra 10 with 333MHz 2M cache CPU, no ram, no HD
Mouse Systems PC Jr Mouse (optical, no pad (could use pad from Sun))
3Com 3C597TX Fast Ethernet EISA (use on Indigo 2 for 100baseTX !)
Let me know if there is anything here you want.... before I scrap
some of it, ebay other bits, etc...
-- Curt
pick any two items and they are just $5 + actual shipping costs.
let me know ASAP if you want anything here, as this stuff will be
going to the trash by Sunday.
If you are local to me, you can pick up anything on this list for
free.... but let me know ASAP so I can put it aside for you.
PCI RAID card, SCSI HVD (differential), for Alpha (so I'm told)
Sun 501-1720 SLC mainboard w/o NVRAM
Sun 501-1720 SLC mainboard (w (dead?) NVRAM)
501-1840 Sbus expansion sbus card
Coleco ADAM setup manual
Artecon SmartBox adapter board (Artecon's version of sbus expansion)
Global Villiage teleport Platinum Fax Modem model A812 (for Mac)
Maxtor RXT-800S Magneto Optical drive (not tested (no media))
Syquest SparQ 1.0GB internal drive (not tested (no media))
Corporate Systems Center PCI DIFF SCSI card (HVD), for sparc ?
Compaq drive 'sled' for Pentium II (and III ?) generation
-- has the two purple tabs/levers on the left/right ediges
LaCie FM radio tuner for Macs (ADB)
Performance Technology PT-PCI450 SCSI 3 Ultra Wide Fast Diff (HVD) (Sun?)
2 PCI FDDI cards
Olicom OC-3161 16 serial port ISA card (just ISA card)
2 x 5G + 1 x 4G laptop hard drives (password locked?)
SyQuest EZ Drive 135M EZ135EXT,P/PORT parallel port drive untested
SyQuest SQ555 40M drive
Sun 501-1861 ELC board untested
Apple QuickTake Battery Charger KB-39PA (4xAA charger)
Sparcstation 20 hard drive 'carrier'
1G SCA scsi drives
HP Deskjet 600Cse (needs new ink cartridge)
Compaq PS4000 Power supply compaq part number 270371-001
HP C2490A 2G differential SCSI drives 3.5" HH (6 available)
Compaq LCD front panel for Proliant 6000 and others
Sealed Copy of PC Anywhere 9.0
Sealed copy of McAfee VirusScan Security Suite (from the 90s)
-- Curt
>
> <snip>
> >
> Ok, Jeff, I am wondering what you might be referring to. I think you
> might be thinking of PL/M-86, which I'm not that familiar with.
No, it's definitely PLM80 I am currently using.
>
>
> Intel, generally, would issue two manuals for PL/M-80 (and ASM-80 as
> well). One manual is the PL/M-80 Programming Manual and one is the
> ISIS-II PL/M-80 Compiler Operator's Manual. I have in front of me the
> "PL/M-80 Programming Manual", no. 9800268B, which is dated 1977, and the
> DATA construct is in it. It is used at load time to set initial values
> of variables. I believe that this manual applies to several versions of
> PL/M-80, including V4 and earlier ones. It is basically a syntax manual.
Well...if you are going to let facts get in the way....
Your actual manual wins out over my rusty brain cells. It is the manual
above, the Programmers Manual, that I lust after.
The one thing that seems to have changed from V3 to V4 is the following
statement:
In V3: DECLARE HELLO DATA ('Hello world.');
in V4: DECLARE HELLO (*) BYTE DATA ('Hello world.');
There are other subtle changes I have found. I discovered these as I was
using older PLM source code for CPM as a programming example, and certain
constructs were being rejected by the V4 compiler.
I could also just be screwing something up. I always reserve the right to
do that...
>
> I have the "ISIS-II PL/M-80 Compiler Operator's Manual", no. 9800300-04,
> dated 3/82. It is the manual that was issued specifically for V4.0 of
> the compiler. There are several "$" commands listed. All those "$"
> commands are also listed in the V3.0/V3.1 version of that manual
> (9800300C).
I have this for V3, I figured out the V4 compiler commands by going through
the PLM80 executable. V3 used the $P=1 construct, V4 used the $CODE/$NOCODE
constructs which were a lot clearer. The $P=1 model does not work with the
V4 compiler I have, the one with the overlays.
>
>
> The Programming Manual did not change from V3.0 to V4.0. The language
> was really the same. I programmed a lot in those days and I never had
> to change anything moving from V3 to V4.
It would be interesting to look up the DATA syntax above in V3 and V4 and
see what is confusing me.
>
>
> I think the main changes from 3 to 4 had to do with newer operating
> system environments. Newer versions of ISIS-II could have more than the
> four or six or seven disk drives by allowing networked drive assignments
> up through :F9:. File names could be longer, as well. I think those
> were some of the differences from V3.x to V4.0. But the language syntax
> was the same.
>
> >
> >>> Specifically, I am in need of:
> >>>
> >>> 98-00268B plm 80 programming manual, V4
> >>>
> >>> Thanks.
> >>>
> >>> Jeff Erwin
> >>>
> >>> By the way, I am running the ISIS-II emulator in a DOS box under
> windows,
> >>> itself an emulator. Windows is running under Parallels on my Mac Pro
> >>>
> > which
> >
> >>> is running OSx. Is it possible to get further from reality here??
> >>>
> >>>
> >
>
Can I offer to pay you for a copy of the two manuals you refer to above?
Jeff Erwin
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 27
> Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2008 17:50:44 -0500
> From: wgungfu at uwm.edu
> Subject: RE: article ref to 50th birthday of video games
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic Posts Only" <cctech at classiccmp.org>
> Message-ID: <1224111044.48f673c4a3527 at panthermail.uwm.edu>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> Except both are computer games, not video games, despite the PR move by
> some
> companies to push them as otherwise. This was already all hashed out in
> the
> courts.
>
> Marty
>
> Quoting Paul_Koning at Dell.com:
>
> > Neat. That predates the PDP-1 "spacewar" game, which I had thought of as
> the
> > oldest. And it may still be the oldest video game on a digital computer.
> >
> > paul
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org [mailto:
> cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org] On
> > Behalf Of Brent Hilpert
> > Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 4:17 PM
> > To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
> > Subject: article ref to 50th birthday of video games
> >
> > Old news for many here perhaps, but here's a writeup about physicist
> William
> > Higinbotham's creation of "Tennis-for-two" at Brookhaven Labs in 1958:
> >
> > http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2008/10/15/tech-games.html
> >
> > Mentions how the initial inspiration came from reading the manual for an
> > analog
> > computer and how it could be used for ballistic trajectory calculations.
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 28
> Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2008 18:51:08 -0400 (EDT)
> From: Alexandre Lag?e-Jacques <alexandre.laguejacques at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: Symbolics Genera (was "NEC SX-4B on Ebay")
> To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
> Message-ID: <alpine.LFD.1.10.0810151845510.2697 at localhost.localdomain>
> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; format=flowed; charset=US-ASCII
>
> >>> It's a UNIX box, man. The most (programmer-)friendly OS in
> >>> existence. At least for even moderately technical people.
> >> There are UNIX-compatible people and non-UNIX-compatible people (cf
> >> Unix Hater's Handbook).
> >
> >Even aside from that, I'm not convinced. I think Symbolics Genera is
> >arguably more programmer-friendly, though that could just be because I
> >find Lisp a much nicer language than C. (There may be even better
> >OSes; that's just what I have personal experience with.)
>
> This message pertains to der Mouse's comment... Out of idle curiosity I
> looked up Symbolics Genera and the story of the Lisp machines...
> Fascinating! Any idea of how to get one's hands on such a machine? eBay is
> not forthcoming although they have been mentioned in some old messages on
> cctalk.
>
> - Alex
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 29
> Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2008 01:02:08 +0200
> From: "Stephane Tsacas" <stephane.tsacas at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: Symbolics Genera (was "NEC SX-4B on Ebay")
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
> Message-ID:
> <ebdb53760810151602u51d44595o5939528172f405b7 at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> 2008/10/16 Alexandre Lag?e-Jacques <alexandre.laguejacques at gmail.com>
>
> > It's a UNIX box, man. The most (programmer-)friendly OS in
> >>>> existence. At least for even moderately technical people.
> >>>>
> >>> There are UNIX-compatible people and non-UNIX-compatible people (cf
> >>> Unix Hater's Handbook).
> >>>
> >>
> >> Even aside from that, I'm not convinced. I think Symbolics Genera is
> >> arguably more programmer-friendly, though that could just be because I
> >> find Lisp a much nicer language than C. (There may be even better
> >> OSes; that's just what I have personal experience with.)
> >>
> >
> > This message pertains to der Mouse's comment... Out of idle curiosity I
> > looked up Symbolics Genera and the story of the Lisp machines...
> > Fascinating! Any idea of how to get one's hands on such a machine?
>
>
> Check :
> http://www.unlambda.com/cadr/index.html
> Nice CADR emulator, works.
>
> St?phane
> (Looking for a Nova switch key).
>
>
> End of cctech Digest, Vol 62, Issue 34
> **************************************
>
I have:
Tektronix Phaser 350 Model 2350 Options FX
has PhaserShare Ethernet Card installed
got it to spit out one page... was messy... might just need new
ink and a good cleaning.
I will part this out ... or free for local pickup (Sharon, MA or
Cambridge, MA)
Xerox DocuPrint P12 laser printer
had paper feed issue... feeds ok with printer at 45 degree angle
but not resting flat on desk. Did not investigate why... should be
a simple fix (maybe even just clean paper feed roller?)
free for local pickup (Sharon, MA or Cambridge, MA)
HP Deskjet 660Cse inkjet printer
will need new ink cartridge(s)
free for local pickup (Sharon, MA or Cambridge MA) or $5 + actual ship
Laserjet 98A toner cartridge, 2 (1 new in box, 1 new not in box)
(for LJ4s and LJ5s)
(would trade for LJ6 carts)
Brother TN-5000PF toner
for IntelliFAX FAX2750/3550/3650/3750
MFC-4450/4550/4550PLUS/4660
6550MC/6680MC/7550MC/7650MC/7750MC
Digital LN03 toner kits
Digital LN03 maintenance kits
Digital LN03 Programmer Reference Manual
Apple Service Technical Procedures for Laser Printers
this covers the original Apple LaserWriter
p/n 072-0163
TI Microlaser Personal Laser Printer Maintenance Manual
p/n 2559877-0001
Canon SX engine laser printer parts (LaserWriter II/IINT/IINTX/IIF/IIG,
Laserjet II, III, QMS PS810/PS815) including fans, power supplies,
gears, logic boards (LaserWriter IINT, QMS PS810), etc.
Anything not labelled free is make an offer. Some of this stuff will
hit the dumpster by mid next week if not sooner.
-- Curt