I have a package containing five DIGITAL 5 1/4 Floppies as follows
BJ-P598-RV SELECT/V2.30 MASTER BIN RX18 LIC. TO DIGITAL EQUIP. CORP.
DIGITAL TESTED 1981 SELECT INFO. SYS. INC.
RJ-P599B-RV SELECT/V2.30 SUPERSPL BINRX18 LIC. TO DIGITAL EQUIP. CORP.
DIGITAL TESTED 1981 SELECT INFO. SYS. INC.
BJ-P600B-RV SELECT/V2.30 INST/TCH BINRX18 LIC. TO DIGITAL EQUIP. CORP.
DIGITAL TESTED 1981 SELECT INFO. SYS. INC.
Copy Working Installed Select Master
Copy Working Select Install/Teach
If any one is interested E-Mail me and we can discuss them
Bob in Wisconsin
Does anyone here know anything about the ADDS VP90 serial terminal? I'd
like to somehow find a keyboard for it and get rid of it.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
I have a Qume DT-8 8" DS drive here which I'm trying to restore/repair
to dump a number of 8" floppies, but I lack the manual and schematic for
it, and I have no idea what the pinout for the data/power/spindle
drive/etc connectors is. It doesn't use a standard shugart connector for
data at least, its a 50-pin thing, so I'll need to make some sort of
pinout converter once I know the proper pinout. The 2 terminators are
both installed.
I do know the drive needs 5v and 24v to run, and I'm not about to power
it up without checking EVERYTHING first. I'm also missing the funny
3-pin and 6-pin molex-like connectors used to supply power to the pcb
and the spindle motor, if anyone has any spares.
--
Jonathan Gevaryahu
jgevaryahu(@t)hotmail(d0t)com
jzg22(@t)drexel(d0t)edu
It's old post but if you are still looking for a STR-LINK II let me know.
STR LINK IIa
Jack Gershon jgershon at steelindustriesinc.com <mailto:cctech%40classiccmp.org?Subject=STR%20LINK%20IIa&In-Reply-To=>
Fri Aug 8 09:40:42 CDT 2003
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I saw a post of yours from last year.
I have a manual for this item if you still require it.
I am actually looking for a replacement for our STR LINK IIa, or at the very
least, the belt for the tape drive on it.
Jack
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GE Aviation
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Bob Galipeau
Cell Support Leader
Plant IV Maintenance
General Electric Company
1000 Western Ave MD 164M1
Lynn, MA 01910
* Phone: (781) 594-6426 dial comm 263-6426
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* E-mail: robert.galipeau at ge.com
Does anyone have documentation for the later MS780-E, based on the M8375/76 modules? I have the engineering drawings (thanks, Bitsavers!), but I'd like to find documentation similar to what exists online for the earlier subsystems (the 1978 docs). I'm troubleshooting a MS780-E in a VAX-11/785, and I'd like to understand just what I'm supposed to do about that glaring red LED (it's a misconfiguration indicator of some sort). I'm getting SBI errors while trying to run the diagnostics, and the memory subsystem seems the likely culprit. Thanks! -- Ian
I'm always the last one to see this silly things, but in case lightning
struck for once...
A documentary about Arpanet, featuring some key names, including
F.J. Corbato, and various BBN folks.
http://preview.tinyurl.com/6jkh5a
Google video and tinyurl, sure to annoy some, to whom apologies.
De
The CP/M handbook has been claimed.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
The year was somewhere between 1984 and 1989 (I think).
I was working in London, Ontario (Canada) at a place called "The Software Library",
We arranged with DEC (A guy named Arpad Deak) to get a MicroVax, at least, for a while.
I thought it was MicroVax-II or a MicroVax-2000, but it seems not. It would have been an early/late model.
It wasn't a BA-23 chasis, or typical IBM PS2 looking case, it actually looked a lot like a toaster, sort of.
it looked like a big white block, it was approximately 6" to 1' tall, 6" to 1' wide, and 2 feet long.
I think the drive was 146 megs, it could only handle one. It definitely ran VMS.
I vaguely remember I think the front cover came off, and the drive was right there, not sure the technology.
it's been ages. but does anyone have the slightest idea which one I'm referring to?
I tried google, but I can't find any pictures that look remotely like it.
the closest thing is like this - http://images.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http://hampage.hu/vax/kepek/3300_B.JP…
but that's all "wrong". too tall, and the look is wrong.
the unit we had was basically flat white, I don't remember any LED's (perhaps one). too many years gone by.
Dan.
_________________________________________________________________
Would someone here like a copy of the CP/M Handbook by Rodney Zaks?
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
I'm getting ready for the 25h anniversary of the PCjr announcement on
Nov 1st. I plan to have the machine up and running serving as an
'electronic' guestbook for anybody who wants to look at it.
If anybody wants to preview it and help me test it (again), it is
running. Just telnet to 97.86.233.68.
Since the last series of tests I've:
- Added user registration and passwords
- Added a session timeout
- Added a 'leave a comment' feature
- Fixed a major bug in the TCP reset segment handling code
- Added a 'memdump' command so that you and peek at me in realtime
- Recognize ASCII 127 (Rubout) as well as ASCII 8 (DEL) for editing
- And quite a few other miscellaneous changes.
I didn't do much with the telnet option negotiation. It should be
usable by common Linux and Windows clients. It did pretty well with
other telnet clients last time, but I didn't get around to things like
auto-login or anything specific to terminal types.
The code is around 80KB in size, which includes all of the TCP/IP stack.
RAM utilization is a bit higher - most of it is buffer space. It has
sockets and buffers available for 10 simultaneous users; I'm kind of
curious to see how it holds up. (Tracing is at a minimum to speed it
up, but it is still a 4.77Mhz machine.)
Oh, and while you are on, don't forget to leave a comment!
Thanks in advance,
Mike