I've got a number of old UNIX books that I need to get rid of soon.
Books I have:
The Waite Group's UNIX? Primer Plus (Sams Publishing) ISBN
0-672-22729-0
Introduction To UNIX? (QUE Publishing) ISBN
0-88022-745-1
QuickBASIC Programmer's Toolkit (QUE Publishing) ISBN
0-88022-450-9
UNIX? Programmer's Reference (QUE Publishing) ISBN
0-88022-536-X
UNIX? Networking (Hayden Books) ISBN
0-672-48440-4
Exploring the UNIX? System, Second Edition (Hayden Books) ISBN
0-672-48447-1
EXAM CRAM TCP/IP for MCSE (Certification Insider Press)
ISBN 1-57610-476-1
All ISBN codes reported exactly as they appear on the physical books
themselves. Abnormal or non-compliant hyphenation is therefore the fault of
the publisher.
"QuickBASIC Programmer's Toolkit" includes a 5.25" floppy disk. The disk is
in near-perfect condition (visually), with the only noticeable issue is that
the disk label has lost it's adhesiveness. Unknown whether it is 360K or
1.2M. Whoever takes this book, I request that you image this disk for me.
Something mountable using a loopback device, please, no DOS Teledisk format
or whatever.
Please reply either on or off list. Shipping location is Gibsonton, Florida,
United States of America. Zip/Postal is 33534.
I have to get rid of these by Saturday. I don't want to have to garbage them
if someone will take them.
> There was a thread recently on the comp.sys.dec newsgroup which ended up
> with the suggestion from David Riley that he would be prepared to build an
> FPGA-based board with a QBUS interface on one side and an SD interface on
> the other which anyone could then program to emulate any disk/controller
> they like.
I should've known I'd miss something like this if I stopped following
the newsgroups... I've been working on something similar, which would
essentially be an SD and/or ATA-based MSCP adapter. The current design
is based on an ARM microcontroller handling MSCP and physical storage
and an as yet to be selected PLD of some description for the QBus
interface and DMA. It's still in the early stages, but I have a fair
bit of it worked out and have started on a prototype. I'm not a bit
fan of duplicated effort, so depending on how far David's project is
and the common goals, maybe there is room for collaboration or even
combination of projects to some degree.
> I have been in touch with him to see how much interest he has
> had, because he needs a minimum number of about 10 to make it viable, but so
> far there has only been me and one other person showing an interest. David
> reckons they would come to a little over $200 each (possibly less if there
> is more interest).
If it does MSCP and all the stuff I want my own project to do (or can
be easily programmed to do so) I'd want one - would save me a lot of
work ;-) At $200 a pop though, I would be more interested in two or
three unpopulated PCBs than a complete unit.
Cheers,
--
Steve Maddison
http://www.cosam.org/
On Mar 10, 2010, at 4:49 PM, Rob Jarratt wrote:
> There was a thread recently on the comp.sys.dec newsgroup which
> ended up
> with the suggestion from David Riley that he would be prepared to
> build an
> FPGA-based board with a QBUS interface on one side and an SD
> interface on
> the other which anyone could then program to emulate any disk/
> controller
> they like. I have been in touch with him to see how much interest
> he has
> had, because he needs a minimum number of about 10 to make it
> viable, but so
> far there has only been me and one other person showing an
> interest. David
> reckons they would come to a little over $200 each (possibly less
> if there
> is more interest). David is not yet on cctalk so he agreed to let me
> cross-post this to cctalk on his behalf, but I have cc'd him so you
> can
> reply direct.
[raises hand]
--
Dave McGuire
Port Charlotte, FL
There was a thread recently on the comp.sys.dec newsgroup which ended up
with the suggestion from David Riley that he would be prepared to build an
FPGA-based board with a QBUS interface on one side and an SD interface on
the other which anyone could then program to emulate any disk/controller
they like. I have been in touch with him to see how much interest he has
had, because he needs a minimum number of about 10 to make it viable, but so
far there has only been me and one other person showing an interest. David
reckons they would come to a little over $200 each (possibly less if there
is more interest). David is not yet on cctalk so he agreed to let me
cross-post this to cctalk on his behalf, but I have cc'd him so you can
reply direct.
Regards
Rob
I think the rack headers all faded fairly rapidly and especially on the plastic panels, some yellowing went on as well. I think the actual shade on any given sample could be used by industrial archaeologists to deduce the UV and ozone contents of previous decades :(.
I personally don't like faded or yellowed colors so when I want to re-do a paint job, I always choose a hue and shade more vibrant than any of my existing samples. So go pick the most vibrant burgundy and maroon you can find at the paint shop.
Tim.
Dave has added the CP/M Programmer's Notebook to his website? - http://www.tassos-oak.com
Links to the Notebook and Dr.Dobbs Z80?Toolbook are at the bottom center of the page.
If you aren't familiar?with his work, take a look. Highly recommended!
Jack
There is now a new version of the HPCC schemaitcs CD-ROM. This one
contains schematics for around 140 classic computer devices, I'll put a
full list at the end of this message.
As with the older disks, the schemaitcs are hand-drawn (by me). You will
ahce to put up with my writing :-). There;s very little apart from the
schematics, there are no isntruction o ntaking the things apart, no
theory-of-operation information, and so on. In some cases the HP service
manual is avaialble on-line, and will contain some of that information.
All profits go to HPCC (Handheld and Portable Computer Cluh). To order
the disk (I believe it's now 2 CD-ROMs or 1 DVD-ROM), please contact Dave
Colver, sectretary at hpcc.org, who can tell you the price, etc
And now for the machines
chargers/eramco_pp Portable Plus car charger (Eramco)
chargers/hp82028
chargers/hp82054 Car charger
chargers/hp82055 Woodstock car charger
desktops/hp110 `Portable'
desktops/hp120 CP/M machine
desktops/hp120key Notes on making a keyboard for the HP120
desktops/hp50960 SRM server
desktops/hp86b desktop computer, external video monitor
desktops/hp87 HP87 and HP87XM desktop computers
desktops/hp9100b First generation RPN desktop
desktops/hp9810 Second generation RPN desktop
desktops/hp9815 RPN desktop calculator
desktops/hp9816 68000-based computer with internal monitor
desktops/hp9817 68010-based 'shoebox'
desktops/hp9820 First Algebraic desktop
desktops/hp9825 First HPL desktop (also covers 9831 BASIC desktop)
desktops/hp982636 HP9826 and HP9836 68000 computers
desktops/hp9830 First BASIC desktop
desktops/hp9845b Desktop Computer, Opt 200 High speed language processor
desktops/hp9915 Industrial control computer (based on HP85)
desktops/integral Portable unix machine
handhelds/classic/hp35 First handheld scientific
handhelds/classic/hp45 Second handheld scientific
handhelds/classic/hp55 Scientific with timer
handhelds/classic/hp65 First handheld programmable
handhelds/classic/hp67 Handheld programmable
handhelds/classic/hp70 Simple financial handheld
handhelds/classic/hp80 Financial handheld
handhelds/hp48sxKeyboard HP48SX keyboard matrix
handhelds/printing_classic/hp46 Printing 45
handhelds/printing_classic/hp81 Printing 80 (with many more functions)
handhelds/spice/hp32e Non-continuous memory Spice (other 3xE are similar)
handhelds/spice/hp33c Continuous memory Spice (other 3xC are similar)
handhelds/sting/hp10a Printing adding machine
handhelds/sting/hp19c Programming printing calculator
handhelds/topcat/hp91 Printing scientific calculator
handhelds/topcat/hp92 Printing financial calculator
handhelds/topcat/hp95c Never-released printing programmable calculator
handhelds/topcat/hp97sio I/O module part of HP97S
handhelds/voyager/hp16c Programmer's calculator
handhelds/woodstock/hp21 Scientific calculator
handhelds/woodstock/hp22 Financial calculator
handhelds/woodstock/hp25 Programmable calculator
handhelds/woodstock/hp25c Continuous memory programmable calculator
handhelds/woodstock/hp27 Financial and scientific calculator
handhelds/woodstock/hp29c Continuous memory programmable calculator
peripherals/dio/hp50962 DIO SRM Coax interface
peripherals/dio/hp98204a DIO TV-rate video interface
peripherals/dio/hp98204b DIO Video board (including graphics)
peripherals/dio/hp98256 DIO 256K RAM PCB
peripherals/dio/hp98257 DIO 1M RAM PCB
peripherals/dio/hp98259 DIO 128K Bubble memory PCB
peripherals/dio/hp98261 DIO ROM PCB
peripherals/dio/hp98604 ROM HPL PCB for HP9000/200 machines
peripherals/dio/hp98620b DIO DMA controller
peripherals/dio/hp98622 DIO GPIO board
peripherals/dio/hp98624 DIO HPIB Interface
peripherals/dio/hp98626 DIO RS232 Interface
peripherals/dio/hp98628 DIO RS232 Interface (Z80 controlled)
peripherals/dio/hphil DIO HP-HIL/HPIB interface
peripherals/dio/kbd9920 HP9920 keyboard interface/HPIB PCB
peripherals/dio/kgmram KGM 1M DIO RAM board
peripherals/dio/wkbp4a 3rd party 256K DIO RAM board
peripherals/hhp_eprom EPROM box for HP41
peripherals/hp11202 8 bit parallel interface for HP98x0
peripherals/hp11203 BCD interface for HP98x0
peripherals/hp11205 RS232 interface for HP98x0
peripherals/hp11206 Modem interface for HP9830
peripherals/hp11284 Datacomms interface for 9830
peripherals/hp11336 Printer interface (HP9871) for HP98x0
peripherals/hp13264 Data link interface
peripherals/hp13267 First multipoint interface
peripherals/hp2671g HPIB Thermal printer
peripherals/hp27201 HPIB extender
peripherals/hp2748a Optical paper tape reader
peripherals/hp35731 Monochrome monitor for HP9000/200 machines
peripherals/hp46020 First type HP-HIL keyboard
peripherals/hp46021 Second type HP-HIL keyboard
peripherals/hp5055 Digital Recorder (strip printer)
peripherals/hp59301 HPIB parallel interface
peripherals/hp59304 HPIB remote display unit
peripherals/hp59306 HPIB relay actuator
peripherals/hp59308 HPIB timing generator
peripherals/hp59309 HPIB digital clock
peripherals/hp59401 HPIB analyser
peripherals/hp59403 HPIB common carrier interface
peripherals/hp59405 HPIB interface for HP9830
peripherals/hp59500 HPIB interface for HP6940 multiprogrammer
peripherals/hp6940b Multiprogrammer
peripherals/hp7245a Thermal printer/plotter
peripherals/hp7440hpib HPIB ColourPro plotter
peripherals/hp7470opt003 HPIL Plotter
peripherals/hp7475 HPIB Plotter
peripherals/hp7959b HPIB hard disk unit (ESDI drive)
peripherals/hp82104 Card reader for HP41
peripherals/hp82143 Dedicated thermal printer for HP41
peripherals/hp82153 Barcode Wand for HP41
peripherals/hp82162 HPIL thermal printer
peripherals/hp82168 HPIL modem
peripherals/hp82440a IR thermal printer
peripherals/hp82440b IR thermal printer
peripherals/hp82901 Dual 5.25" disk drive
peripherals/hp82905 Dot matrix printer (either HPIB or HPIL)
peripherals/hp82985 Portable Plus video interface
peripherals/hp9114a HPIL disk drivc
peripherals/hp9114b HPIL disk drive
peripherals/hp9121 Single-sided 3.5" HPIB floppy drive
peripherals/hp9122 Double-sided 3.5" disk drive
peripherals/hp9123 HPIB floppy drive for the HP150-II
peripherals/hp9125a Plotter for HP9100
peripherals/hp9133h HPIB hard/floppy disk unit
peripherals/hp9133vxv HP913V, HP9133XV hard/floppy disk units
peripherals/hp9154b HPIB hard disk unit (Nighthawk drive)
peripherals/hp98033 BCD interface for HP9825
peripherals/hp98034 HPIB interface for HP9825
peripherals/hp98035 Real time clock module for HP9825
peripherals/hp98036 RS232 interface for HP9825
peripherals/hp98133 BCD interface for HP9815
peripherals/hp98134 GPIO interface for HP9815
peripherals/hp9862if Plotter interface (only) for HP98x0
peripherals/hp9865 Cassette drive for HP98x0 -- Interface ONLY
peripherals/hp9866 Thermal printer for 9800-series
peripherals/hp9877 External tape drive for HP9825
peripherals/hp9878 Expansion chassis for HP9825
peripherals/hp98780 Enhanced mono monitor for HP9845B
peripherals/ipc/hp82904 Expansion interface for Integral
peripherals/ipc/hp82915 Modem PCB for Integral
peripherals/ipc/hp82916 RAM PCBs for Integral
peripherals/ipc/hp82919 RS232 interface for Integral
peripherals/ipc/hp82971 ROM/EPROM module for Integral
peripherals/mp/hp69321b 12-bit voltage D/A for multiprogrammer
peripherals/mp/hp69330a Relay output for multiprogrammer
peripherals/mp/hp69351 Voltage regulator for multiprogrammer
peripherals/mp/hp69422a High-speed A/D for multiprogrammer
peripherals/mp/hp69431a Digital input for multiprogrammer
peripherals/mp/hp69502a Resistance program for multiprogrammer
peripherals/paintjet Colour inkjet printer
peripherals/rsu Eramco MLDL unit for HP41
peripherals/rsu2 Eramco MLDL for HP41 (card reader case)
peripherals/wand75d Wand for the HP75D
-tony
Well, maybe not so off topic...
I have two things I'd like to ask about. First, I'll be replacing the
display for my main computer shortly. I'd like to get something larger than
20". I'm thinking an LCD wide format thingy. I'm considering getting a
"flat" television instead of a monitor. Most of them have DVI or VGA
connectors on them. But they also include component inputs, HDMI, and maybe
some other things that can ease connection to classic computers. A
composite RCA is a must. Can anyone suggest a TV model that that's
relatively fast (like < 8ms), and has a high enough resolution that would
also be good for the classic stuff? I'm thinking 1080p would be fine for a
windows desktop.
The next question pertains to console televisions. I'd like to find (much
to my wife's dismay) a console television like the one my parents had back
in the late 70s. I'd like to use it to play old video game consoles from
the 70s and 80s. I believe these were all vacuum tube sets though, is that
correct? Is there a good source for these things (the TVs and the tubes)
today? I imagine people threw them away mostly. If these are difficult to
find and/or maintain, I've considered trying to create a replica console
television from a newer set, maybe even something with an LCD in it. I'd
probably prefer an original though. Then i could invite my mother over and
sit too close to the television for her.
brian
Does anyone know if an XXDP program exists to test a DLV11-J? Any
do you also know the name of the program?
Thank you in advance if you can help.
Jerome Fine
> platforms.
>
>
The idea is impressive, but that PCB is huge. Any chance the design
could be made smaller?
Jim
Hi Jim
I was thinking more about your question. The system in the photos is using
a standard PropIO board with a *prototype* CPU adapter "shim socket" which
would *not* be part of the final design. If the tests prove out then the
perfboard and ribbon cable would be replaced with a 2"x1.5" shim socket PCB
that would plug in under the host Z80 CPU. It would export the Z80 pins out
to 40 pin dual row header. The PropIO would connect to the shim socket PCB
via a 40 conductor ribbon cable. So yes, in that sense the system would be
smaller than what is pictured in the N8VEM post. It would be functionally
identical.
I hope that clarifies things.
Thanks and have a nice day!
Andrew Lynch