Title says all :) I had one, dunno why I sold it. I still have the
(original) manual, but I'd love to have one in my IIgs
Also, I'm looking for that small covers that fits on back of IIgs
Thanks
Alexandre
---
Enviado do meu Motorola PT550
Meu site: http://www.tabalabs.com.br
From: Christian Liendo <christian_liendo at yahoo.com>
EDSAC?was Cambridge University?s first computer. Designed in the
early years after the Second World War in 1947, construction of the
machine was completed in 1949. It operated for almost 10 years, and
was the first general purpose computer built for other people to
use, to solve real problems.
The?EDSAC Replica project?aims to rebuild an authentic replica, and
on Wednesday, which was the centenary of the birth of?Sir Maurice
Wilkies, widely regarded as the father of British computing, they
have?unveiled the first working parts?of the restored machine.
http://makezine.com/2013/06/27/edsac-replica/
Arrgh, they misspelled M V Wilkes' name in the first occurrence in
the text.
Jon
>
>OOOPS!! The first line should have included:
>
><ESC>[16;99r
>
>rather than
>
><ESC>[0;99r
>
Hi Jerome,
There are still some errors in the files.
I think the first line of the second file should also be changed
to <ESC>[16;255r rather than <ESC>[0;255r
I also suspect <ESC>[2J should be used instead of <ESC>2J in both cases.
There is a < missing after 2J in the first line of each file.
When I tried displaying the two files (after the above corrections) on a DECterm
created by DECWindows on OpenVMS Alpha V8.2, the scrolling region setting was
not altered unless I reduced boundaries of the scrolling region requested
to fit within the current page size of the DECterm. For example, <ESC>[16;38r
worked on a DECterm set to a page length of 40, but not on a DECterm set to a
page length of 24.
(Over the years I have seen many so-called VT100 emulators on PCs and Macs that
made no attempt whatever to implement scrolling regions.)
Regards,
Peter Coghlan.
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> >Jerome H. Fine wrote:
>
>> I have a simple request for anyone who is has a real DEC VT100
>> or compatible terminal (VT100, VT220, VT320, VT420, VT510)
>> and especially VT100 software emulations, either as standalone
>> software or as part of a PDP-11 emulator such as Ersatz-11.
>>
>> In respect of the latter, I have been using the Ersatz-11 PDP-11
>> emulator to support VT100 emulation with more than 24 lines
>> for a few years. In particular, as part of the implementation,
>> when the Range Escape Sequence is used to begin the Scrolling
>> Region at a line less than 24 for the TOP and a line at the bottom
>> of the screen for the BOTTOM, I use:
>>
>> <ESC>[16;255r
>>
>> to scroll between line 16 and the bottom of the screen. For
>> real DEC VT100 terminals with the AVO option, there is
>> ONLY one size for the number of lines, namely 24 lines.
>>
>> Since I can't ATTACH files to be sent to classiccmp,
>> below are two files which can be used to erase the screen,
>> set the scrolling region to line 16 at the top and line 99 or line 255,
>> respectively, at the bottom of the screen. If the any VT100
>> (compatible) terminal or emulated VT100 terminal set for 24 lines
>> is able to handle setting the scrolling region in this manner, each
>> file with FIFTY lines should begin starting to display "Line 1 of File"
>> of the file on line 12 of the "terminal" and "Line 2 of File" on line 16
>> of the "terminal" the and end up showing approximately six lines of
>> the file at the bottom of the screen as the previous lines of the file
>> scroll off the TOP of the scrolling region (at line 16 of the terminal)
>> with just "Line 1 of File" remaining on line 12 of the "terminal".
>>
>> I would very much appreciate learning the results of sending
>> both files to a DEC (or emulated) VT100 terminal. If they act
>> the same was as Ersatz-11, the results will be identical with using
>> 24 in place of 99 or 255.
>>
>> Jerome Fine
>>
>> P.S. When the file is transferred to the system, replace <ESC>
>> with octal 33!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KED can be used under RT-11.
>> The user eliminates each <ESC> and enters TWO <ESC>
>> characters instead. Alternatively, if you can remember the
>> first line correctly, you can enter the complete file in about
>> 2 minutes by duplicating (cut and paste) the other 49 lines.
>>
>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>> <ESC>2JESC>[12;1HLine 1 of File<ESC>[0;99r<ESC>[16;1H
>> Line 2 of File
>> Line 3 of File
>> Line 4 of File
>> Line 5 of File
>> Line 6 of File
>> Line 7 of File
>> Line 8 of File
>> Line 9 of File
>> Line 10 of File
>> Line 11 of File
>> Line 12 of File
>> Line 13 of File
>> Line 14 of File
>> Line 15 of File
>> Line 16 of File
>> Line 17 of File
>> Line 18 of File
>> Line 19 of File
>> Line 20 of File
>> Line 21 of File
>> Line 22 of File
>> Line 13 of File
>> Line 14 of File
>> Line 15 of File
>> Line 16 of File
>> Line 17 of File
>> Line 18 of File
>> Line 19 of File
>> Line 20 of File
>> Line 21 of File
>> Line 22 of File
>> Line 23 of File
>> Line 24 of File
>> Line 25 of File
>> Line 26 of File
>> Line 27 of File
>> Line 28 of File
>> Line 29 of File
>> Line 30 of File
>> Line 31 of File
>> Line 32 of File
>> Line 33 of File
>> Line 34 of File
>> Line 35 of File
>> Line 36 of File
>> Line 37 of File
>> Line 38 of File
>> Line 39 of File
>> Line 40 of File
>> Line 41 of File
>> Line 42 of File
>> Line 43 of File
>> Line 44 of File
>> Line 45 of File
>> Line 46 of File
>> Line 47 of File
>> Line 48 of File
>> Line 49 of File
>> Line 50 of File
>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>> <ESC>2JESC>[12;1HLine 1 of File<ESC>[0;255r<ESC>[16;1H
>> Line 2 of File
>> Line 3 of File
>> Line 4 of File
>> Line 5 of File
>> Line 6 of File
>> Line 7 of File
>> Line 8 of File
>> Line 9 of File
>> Line 10 of File
>> Line 11 of File
>> Line 12 of File
>> Line 13 of File
>> Line 14 of File
>> Line 15 of File
>> Line 16 of File
>> Line 17 of File
>> Line 18 of File
>> Line 19 of File
>> Line 20 of File
>> Line 21 of File
>> Line 22 of File
>> Line 13 of File
>> Line 14 of File
>> Line 15 of File
>> Line 16 of File
>> Line 17 of File
>> Line 18 of File
>> Line 19 of File
>> Line 20 of File
>> Line 21 of File
>> Line 22 of File
>> Line 23 of File
>> Line 24 of File
>> Line 25 of File
>> Line 26 of File
>> Line 27 of File
>> Line 28 of File
>> Line 29 of File
>> Line 30 of File
>> Line 31 of File
>> Line 32 of File
>> Line 33 of File
>> Line 34 of File
>> Line 35 of File
>> Line 36 of File
>> Line 37 of File
>> Line 38 of File
>> Line 39 of File
>> Line 40 of File
>> Line 41 of File
>> Line 42 of File
>> Line 43 of File
>> Line 44 of File
>> Line 45 of File
>> Line 46 of File
>> Line 47 of File
>> Line 48 of File
>> Line 49 of File
>> Line 50 of File
>>
>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>
>
>--
>Jerome Fine replies:
>
>aaaa
>
>Sincerely yours,
>
>Jerome Fine
>--
>To obtain the original e-mail address, please remove
>the ten characters which immediately follow the 'at'.
>If you attempted to send a reply and the original e-mail
>address has been discontinued due a high volume of junk
>e-mail, then the semi-permanent e-mail address can be
>obtained by replacing the four characters preceding the
>'at' with the four digits of the current year.
>> I've just picked up one these Miniterm portable terminals but it would
>> appear that a couple of the EPROMs have gone bad. Anybody got one they
>> could grab ROM images from?
> There are different models; can you post a picture of the model plate?
Sorry, don't have my camera to hand at the moment but the nameplate says
'Miniterm ASR' and the rear of the machine has the model number as 1205
Cheers,
Dave
All your 1984 desktop computing and telephony needs could be met by the
Telecom Computerphone (aka ICL One Per Desk).
See if you agree. (-:
My next classic collection video at http://youtu.be/hZDVHi3UywM
EDSAC?was Cambridge University?s first computer. Designed in the early years after the Second World War in 1947, construction of the machine was completed in 1949. It operated for almost 10 years, and was the first general purpose computer built for other people to use, to solve real problems.
The?EDSAC Replica project?aims to rebuild an authentic replica, and on Wednesday, which was the centenary of the birth of?Sir Maurice Wilkies, widely regarded as the father of British computing, they have?unveiled the first working parts?of the restored machine.
http://makezine.com/2013/06/27/edsac-replica/
Dear friends,
I need an internal photo of the TRS-80 model 100 suitcase. Mine the foam
has gone bananas (or powder...) and I don't know how is the original one.
I'll have to make its internals again.
Thanks
Alexandre Souza
---
Enviado do meu Motorola PT550
Meu site: http://www.tabalabs.com.br
From: supervinx <supervinx at libero.it>
> Date: Sun, 23 Jun 2013 11:02:10 +0200
> Subject: Re: IBM 5363 (S/36) led codes
> Il giorno dom, 23/06/2013 alle 09.34 +1000, Nigel Williams ha scritto:
> > On Sun, Jun 23, 2013 at 7:21 AM, supervinx <supervinx at libero.it> wrote:
> > > Now the 5363 ends happily its IPL, and seems to work well///
> >
> > Wonderful! always good news to hear about another System/36 becoming
> > fully-functional.
> >
> > Could you take a peak in the libraries and look out for the System/36
> > Assembler or System/36 FORTRAN please.
> >
> > We still have not found either, and they are proving quite elusive. We
> > expected to find the Assembler much faster than this, given how
> > commonly it was used to extend the system. The FORTRAN we expected
> > would be difficult since it was a special order item.
> I can answer right no.
> No, I found only DFU, SDA, RPG, SEU, WSU.
> No ?POPLIB, but I have a backup copy from a 5364.
> It belonged to a Hotel...
>
> But I own a third 5364 to be analyzed, may be I found something else
> there...
> --
> Vincenzo (aka Supervinx)
>
The RICM has a 5363-II, 5363-III, and a 5363-IV, and four 5364.
The 5363-III displays the Sign On screen, but we haven't hacked the admin
password yet.
--
Michael Thompson
Christian Gauger-Cosgrove <captainkirk359 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Try finding a way to move any large object "on the cheap" when you
> can't go get it yourself. That's a problem I -- without a driver's
> license, due to a physical disability -- have encountered, multiple
> times. One's only real options when you can't just up and pick
> something up is:
> 1. Shipping it. ("Well, looks like I'm going to have to sell my
> kidneys to ship it!")
> 2. Paying a friend/acquaintance to get it for you (basically, like
> shipping it with slightly less exorbitant fares, and probably better
> handling... but only if you find someone willing to travel somewhere).
> 3. Passing up the opportunity. (Most probable.)
>
> Cheers,
> Christian
There once was a service called "Von Haus zu Haus", which freely translates to "Door-to-door shipping", offered by the Deutsche Bundesbahn (German Federal Railway). They would pick up an item by truck or other reasonable means, get it onto a train at the next bigger station with goods handling capability, unload it at a similar station close to the destination and truck it the last part again, *for very reasonable rates*. That was shortly after WWII, it's of course long gone now unfortunately.
My father told me that when his parents were building our house, they got a small-batch concrete mixer from their relatives about 100mi away, who had used it while building theirs and no longer needed it, by that means. We will ultimately need something like that again, IMHO.
So Long,
Arno