I have a couple of HP 9000/300 series computers with HP 7953 drives
and Intel processor cards in the computers. These have both HPUX
and Windows on the same drive. It looks like the Windows
file system shares the HPUX file system on these ?? What I want to do
is backup the drives. Just want to make sure I get it all. If I do a "ls" under
HPUX it shows both the HPUX and Windows files and directories.
Along the same lines,does anyone have early HPUX tapes. I would like
to come up with 9.x and earlier. I have backups of drives but no way to
get the backup on to a drive that has failed.
Thanks, Jerry
Hi! Jeff Jonas here
I'm selling some vintage parts on ebay.
This url lists all my current auctions:
http://shop.ebay.com/mejeep_demeep_ferret/m.htmlhttp://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=320444928233
Item number:320444928233
Intel 8080A CPU in IMASI S100 CPU card: MPU-A rev-4
Here's a ceramic Intel C8080A 2975A 2 MHz CPU
socketed in an IMSAI CPU CARD, S-100 bus: 1975 IMS ASSOC MPU-A REV 4
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=320444923473
Item number:320444923473
NOS large Beckman neon panaplex display 8 digit nixie
This is a new unused Panaplex-style neon display panel
Beckman Kr85 PP450 019
8 digits, each with 7 segments, decimal point and comma.
The flying leads are firmly attached to the edge.
NO SPECIAL SOCKET OR CONNECTORS NEEDED!
Digits are .7 inch tall, the 8 digits are 5 inches wide!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=320443614849
Item number:320443614849
new unused ISE DG8F eightron single digit VFD
Here's a new unused ISE DG8F eightron VFD (vacuum fluorescent display)
with flying leads, originally sold as Radio Shack #276-065.
It's called the "eightron" for the teeny little segment
to the right so the '4' crosses nicer than a 7 segment display.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=320443610650
Item number:320443610650
FNA 30 Archer 276-060 9 digit 7 segment LED module
So old, it's now retro! Here's a new, unused FNA 30 Archer Radio Shack
#276-060 teeny 9 digit 7 segment LED display module
like those used in the early handheld calculators.
Yes, those are magnifiers built into the top of the display!
No, I'm not giving up on vintage tech.
Quite the opposite, I'm focusing on interesting and fun projects
and selling things I don't foresee using.
Thank you.
Message: 2
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 20:10:34 +0000 (GMT)
From: ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell)
Subject: Re: A few classic computer photos
To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
Message-ID: <m1N5mBh-000J3lC at p850ug1>
Content-Type: text/plain
>
>
> >
> > I haev quite a collection of sub-miniature Minoltas already :-). And I
> > have one Minox, which is a beautiful piece of engineering. Alas a ?
> > Tessina
> > is way out of my price range...
>
> Pentax 110's and Exakta's are my favorites.
I wouldnm't call the former a 'favourite', although I have 3 or 4 of them
with an assortment of lenses, flash, motordrive, etc. It's certainly an
interesting camera, although too much electronics (and no manual
override) for my taste.
But Exaktas I love. I generally describe them as the 'Citroen DS of 35mm
cameras' (if I ever learn to drive, a DS is top of my list of desirable
vehicles...). The Exakta is totally unconentional. Every control is where
you don't expect it. But then it has shutter speeds from 1/500 (or 1/1000
on later models) to 12 _seconds_. A film cutting knife (and you can run
cassette-to-cassette) so you can cut off an process part of the film.
Interchangeable viewfinders (I must repair the metering prism I have for
mine -- alas the meter coil itself is open-circuit). And so on.
Among the 35mm Exactas around me at the moment is a VP exacta taking 127
roll film (6*4,5 cm frame). Yes, I like them...
-tony
------------------------------
Tony,
You might like looking at? http://captjack.exaktaphile.com/ ?.
My second camera was an Exakta VXIIa, and I have owned and used several Exaktas. I now have a very early Olympus OM1 (made shortly after Leitz forced Olympus to change the name from M1 to OM1).
-----------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 20:32:05 +0000 (GMT)
From: ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell)
Subject: Re: A few classic computer photos
To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
Message-ID: <m1N5mWW-000J3rC at p850ug1>
Content-Type: text/plain
<snip>
> >> Too true. There are a lot of Olympus OM4s that are starting to suffer
> >> from ciruitry failure (read: metering and shutter times go badly out of
> >
> > I seem to remeebr you should stick to odd-numbered OM's ?as they're
> > mechanical.
>
> So that'll be the OM-1 series then, but they weren't pure-mechanical.The
OM1 and OM3 IIRC.
> aperture priority metering still needs 2x SR44 coin cells to run.
> Also, the motor drive (if you have one) needs 4x AAs.
True. But those functions aren't _essential_ to take photographs (unlike
shutter timing).
>
> Full-mechanical? A Minox maybe? Or probably a Stereo Realist (which has
> been mentioned elsethread).
<snip>
well not include any active devices).
-tony
-----------------------------
?As I wrote to Zane off-list, the OM1 takes one?PX625. You can't get these now, but you can use a Zinc-Air 675. You just need to put a fat o-ring around it to get the correct diameter to fit the battery compartment.
Bob
All,
Catching up on my old magazine stack yesterday, I came across
what looked like a good article in Physics Today (Nov. 1998, Vol. 51
No. 11) entitled "The World Wide Web and High-Energy Physics". It
described the steps leading to the evolution of HTTP, HTML, and the
adoption of those protocols at CERN and elsewhere. Nice photos of Tim
Berners-Lee sitting in front of a NeXTStep screen, and *the* Cube
that ran the original server.
The article appears to be on-line at:
http://www.physicstoday.org/archive.html
(click on 1998, select the Nov. issue with the icebreaker on
the cover, look in "articles". I have to admit though, my Safari
4.0.3 and Firefox 3.5.1, both on Mac OS 10.4.11, fail to display the
article .pdf they think they are serving.
Did anyone else note this article, and can comment on its accuracy?
Does anyone want/need more info?
--
- Mark 210-379-4635
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Asteroids headed toward planets
inhabited by beings that don't have
technology adequate to stop them:
Think of it as Evolution in Fast-Forward.
I saw some Cray debris in my latest electronics junkyard - the three
section power supply seat for an X-MP/24. Yes, X-MP. They came in with
a load from Canada, and the odd thing was they clearly had been junked
recently, as the conductive schmutz on the busbars was still sticky,
yet not full of an accumulation of crap from being exposed for year.
I am sicking the owner on the rest of the machine, but it is very
likely to have been cut up by now.
Still, any Cray owners need a few spare power units?
--
Will
Just found an amber VT420 in my storage. Powers up fine, excellent
condition, MMJ cable. Needs a home. Metro west Boston, happy to hold
for a while.
-Jim, jtp at chinalake.com
Hello,
due to my playing around with the LED display from a busted HP34C
(see my projects page, from my .sig) I got contacted by someone with a
HP33E that needed a new LED display - his was faulty, so I agreed to
send him my display - in fact I sent him the entire HP34C, given that
there might be more bits useful to his restoration efforts.
Long story short, due to my naivet?, the calculator got lost in the
mail, so it appears. I _never_ lost anything in the mail, it wasn't a
get-there-or-else kind of package, so I figured I save a few bucks and
send it as regular small parcel - no tracking number. Well, live and
learn, as they say. I guess with international shipments, bad things
can still happen.
So, is there anyone on the list who has a display for that type of
HP calculator (I think they got used in several of the 3x series)? It
should look like this:
http://www.ece.mcgill.ca/~jthiem/project-files/HPLED/HP%20LED%20display%20u…
I'm hoping _someone_ has one hidden away somewhere that wont power up
due to failure other than the display...
Joe.
--
Joachim Thiemann :: http://www.tsp.ece.mcgill.ca/~jthiem
At 18:04 -0600 11/3/09, Keith M wrote:
>
>How about here?
>
>http://www.slac.stanford.edu/pubs/slacpubs/7750/slac-pub-7815.pdf
>
>This looks to be the same one.
>
>Forget the $23.
>
>Keith
>
That is essentially the same article. Minor editorial/wording
changes and the final page was split off into a "box" in the
magazine, but same content and same illustrations.
Yeah, for $23, Physics Today can keep the editorial
modifications :-). Thanks, Kevin! Now that I know everyone has access
to it, I can recycle my paper copy.
At 18:04 -0600 11/3/09, Rich Alderson wrote:
>So not the origins of the Internet, most likely, but rather of the World
>Wide Waste^H^H^H^Heb?
Rich is right, I misphrased the subject line.
--
- Mark 210-379-4635
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Asteroids headed toward planets
inhabited by beings that don't have
technology adequate to stop them:
Think of it as Evolution in Fast-Forward.