On 25 June 2013 02:08, Zane H. Healy <healyzh at aracnet.com> wrote:
> At 1:19 PM -0500 6/24/13, Jim Brain wrote:
>
>> Since I support the CBM crowd, I've had more than a few people send me
>> comments over the past few years, asking when I might consider offering a
>> replacement power supply for the home computing machines (VIC-20, 64, 128,
>> +4)
>>
>
> What about Amiga's as well (obviously not ones like the 2000, 3000, and
> 4000).
>
>
Amigas want 12VDC on the 9VAC pins. Don't use a C128 supply on an Amiga.
Won't blow it (typically) but it won't work either.
Joe.
Woo Hoo! Check out the new article on the N8VEM on Circuit Cellar!
http://circuitcellar.com/featured/diy-single-board-computers/
Oscar has put together the N8VEM articles and has done all the work for the
publication.
Congratulations Oscar! This is wonderful!
Thank you very much! Have a nice day!
Andrew Lynch
From: Oscar Vermeulen [mailto:o.vermeulen at altis.ch]
Sent: Friday, June 14, 2013 4:05 PM
To: Andrew Lynch
Subject: Circuit Cellar site...
Andrew,
Wow! The N8VEM article is on their web site!
Cheers,
Oscar.
--
Oscar Vermeulen <o.vermeulen at altis.ch>
Altis Investment Management AG
Poststrasse 18, 6300 Zug, Switzerland
T: +41-415601311
www.altis.ch
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Hello everyone,
I am conducting research on early oscilloscopes and their usage and
availability. I am looking for the manual to the original Sistron Donner
Model 30 scope. I know there are manuals for later models of the scope, but
I am looking for one from the original model.
In addition, I was hoping there was any pricing and sales information on
oscilloscopes from the 1958 to 1964 period, particularly the Sistron
series. I'm trying to get a sense of the price range for oscilloscopes
during this period (doesn't have to be just Sistron) and about how many
might have been around.
Thank you for any help!
-Devin Monnens
--
Devin Monnens
www.deserthat.com
The sleep of Reason produces monsters.
Here is a partial list of unit I don't need. Extra memory, drives, etc
may be available. If you have questions or want to make offers, please
contact me off list. Shipping from 61853, Illinois or pick-up.
Thanks, Paul
1 INFOSERVER 150
5 DECMUX 2 DFMZA-BA
3 DECMUX 300 DM308-A
1 DEC 3000 400
1 DEC 3000 400S
1 DEC 3000 600S
1 DECSTATION 3100 PM20A-CB
1 DV-31AAB-A
1 DV-31DYA-A
1 MICROVAX 3100 DV-31BTB-A
1 MICROVAX 3100 DV-31BT2-A
2 STORAGE EXPANSION SZ12V
1 DEC 433 WORK STATION
1 5000/25 PERSONAL DEC STATION
4 5000/125 DEC STATION
1 5000/133 DECSTATION
3 5000/200 DECSTATION
Hello.
I found your description of GneRad FutureData.
The ICE and development unites were separate. The development units contained a Z80 processor, not the target processor. We had a preparatory operating system. It had a command language similar to CPM. It also provided overlapping I/O. We supported Intel 8086 processors. Maybe a typo nut I do not remember it having a target of a 6802. We did have 6502 and 6800 ICE units. I do not remember having BASIC. We had a PASCAL compiler. Bill Author wrote the front end of the PASCAL compiler. I started with Future Data about the time GenRad bought them. I initially worked on the code generation for the 8086 processors. While there we developed code generation for the 68000, Z8000, 6800, 6502. I worked for them until they moved operations to the Bay area.
Abdy
More Shameless classic computer trafficking
Stuff goes up at 5pm Az or PDT
VT102
ADM3a
VC404
HP-85 with lots of accessories
Sparc20 w dual hypersparcs.
Other stuff will be posted this week, so keep looking!!
http://www.ebay.com/sch/tcp1022/m.html?item=251295139687&ssPageName=STRK%3A…
as always let me know your a ccmp lister in your bid or after sale for
goodies.
Cheers
Tom P
Hello all,
The only person someone I know that seems to have worked with Xyples gear
has forgotten the solution to this, so...does anyone here know?
There are physically 16 ports, the self tests seems to test all of the
ports. In the OS only 8 are enabled!
Xyplex>> show ports all
Port Access Status Services Offered 01 Jan 1970
07:17:30
1 Remote Available
2 Remote Available
3 Remote Available
4 Remote Available
5 Remote Available
6 Remote Available
7 Remote Available
8 Remote Available
Anyone have any ideas what's up with this?
(also! Apparently my home network has a time server! It has the wrong
time...but I have a time server!)
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
Quoting Jim Carpenter <jim at deitygraveyard.com>:
> The data in xpcs00s.sys is almost certainly compressed. That's why you
> can only find a couple strings in the whole thing. You'll have to
> decompress it somehow first. Then you can disassemble it.
Just a shot in the dark, but the cheapest copy protection is to flip some
bits on the data bus. If you read a PROM on a programmer, all you see is
garbage, until you figure out how the data bus was connected.
Usually, nobody wasted the money to copy the ROM into an expensive SRAM
to run it ...
Cheers
Hi all,
I am currently developing an emulator for the HHC (http://pockemul.free.fr).
I have the main unit running quite correctly (thanks to Tony Duell
schematics).
The main goal is to emulate all extensions. I have made the RL-p1004A Rom
dump with snapBASIC, but it is the only extension I own.
I you have other extensions (plotter, RLP-1005 printer, video, serial ..)
and snapBASIC, I'm interested in those ROM.
I read all information about the HHC on this mailing list. If you have any
other technical stuff .
Regards
Remy
Let's see...
We've had the discussion about the Raspberry Pi, and how it doesn't have
enough pins...
We talked about the i386and how no modern UNIX supports it anymore and
clearly this is a vast conspiracy by Microsoft...
We've had the discussion about how awful / lazy / stupid modern
developers and the kids on my lawn are...
And the discussion about how great / awful functional programming is
(oh, and Object Orientedprogramming). Outcome: C is the best, as usual...
Oh, and the discussion about how teachers are useless...
And a new one: discussion about eBooks vs. real paper books. Exciting
and new!
We also talked about how modern "PeeCee" (see, if you spell it funny
that emphasizes your point) hardware is all terrible and falls apart if
you look at it...
Don't forget the discussion about "tablets" and how they will never
catch on...
We've done the discussion about USPS and how anything you send via it
will be destroyed by monkeys in costumes or get lost...
We've come full circle around to X and how useful it is/ how people
don't need it...
I *think* that based on prior history (and correct me if I'm wrong) that
the next subject should be about how USB is not, infact, a "bus" and is
stupid and awful and can't be interfaced to a ZX Spectrum and therefore
is a failure oh God make it stop make it stop make it stop.
- Josh