looking to run one of my computers on 98se and am looking to find the
updates for 98se the archived updates and not the unofficial service
pack but the updates all the way up to july 2006 if anyone knows where
to get them let me know
The slowly-growing document archive at Chicago Classic Computing now
has an RSS feed! Now you can receive notice of newly-posted scans on
your desktop, in your pocket or on whatever device you've hacked
TCP/IP and RSS onto. The address is:
http://chiclassiccomp.org/docs/content/rss.xml
Thanks much legalize for his script and AEK and others for their help
getting it going on our site.
-- jht
Hi,
Just to announce the second Vintagebytes.ch retrocomputer meeting in
Lucerne, Switzerland:
We meet on February 12th again with a presentation on replica's (KIM-I,
Apple I, PDP-8 ) and subsequently, we will host a KIM-I repair fest. Well,
two of us bring our sickly KIMs along, and there will be a third working
one too. Three KIMs in a room - that's a KIM party. Feel free to bring any
other vintage machine along too of course.
More details are on our web site http://vintagebytes.ch/ .
We look forward to meeting up with any of you living in the area!
Cheers,
Oscar.
Hello everyone,
FYI as of today I am no longer associated with the Living Computer Museum.
Cheers -- Ian
--
Ian S. King, MSCS ('06, Washington)
Ph.D. Student
The Information School
University of Washington
Madness takes its toll - please have exact change.
I'm trying to get TME[1], a Sun emulator, compiled and I'm running into
trouble. First, the Makefile is set to interpret all warnings as errors,
so I can't get past the complaint about libtme/module.c assigning a value
to a variable but not doing anything with it. I disabled this in
configure.in, but when I rebuild the configure script with
aclocal && automake -a -c -f && autoconf, I get a complaint like this:
thoth:/usr/local/src/tme-0.8$ make
cd . && /bin/bash /usr/local/src/tme-0.8/missing --run automake-1.11 --gnu
Makefile.am:7: `pkglibdir' is not a legitimate directory for `DATA'
make: *** [Makefile.in] Error 1
Any ideas?
[1] http://people.csail.mit.edu/fredette/tme/
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
At 02:19 PM 1/30/2014, Ethan Dicks wrote:
>I'd also like to find a supply of inexpensive MicroSD cards smaller
>than 4GB. The best I found from a few minutes of trolling eBay was
>lots of 10 and 25 for around $2-3 each for 128MB or 256MB. I'd rather
>find a lot of 25-50 for $1-$2 each. I certainly don't need to go out
>and get a stack of 4GB MicroSD for $5-$6 retail if I'm not going to
>use 90% of the capacity.
How hard would be be for these SCSI to SD adapters to behave as if
they were several drives, thereby giving you a chance to use all
of that capacity?
At those prices, though, it's hard to quibble.
At 12:31 PM 1/30/2014, Zane Healy wrote:
>I wonder how well it would work in a PDP-11, VAX, or Amiga 3000.
SCSI is SCSI, right? I kid, I kid.
- John
Hi folks,
I'm trying to transfer some files from my PC to an AT&T UNIX PC. I've
got Kermit up and running at 19200 Baud (after applying a kernel patch
to increase the serial port poll rate) but the UNIX PC seems to be
having trouble creating the directories from the tarball.
On my Linux box I use this command inside kermit:
CSEND {tar cf - file1 file2 ...}
And on the UNIX PC:
CRECEIVE {tar xf -}
This works fine if I send files, but not directories: the UNIX PC's
terminal is covered in messages like "CORE/diag/sys: cannot create".
Does anyone know what I need to do to make GNU tar 1.26 produce a tar
file the UNIX PC (some variant of SysV as I recall) can unpack?
Thanks,
--
Phil.
classiccmp at philpem.me.uk
http://www.philpem.me.uk/