This unfortunate creature has seen ill-storage and a slight mouse
infestation and bears the rusty scars of time and moisture. But with
your kindness and patience, it will have the chance to bound joyfully
through fields of Greenbar once again, bringing joy and the printed
word/ASCII art to all who meet it.
Called LA120 by those that bred it, DECwriter III by those who loved
it, you can call it yours for the mere effort of picking it up from
the Chicago suburbs. Shipping will probably be impractical and,
sadly, its time is short as my shelter needs the space for other lost
souls. The man and his truck from the glue factory are already
hovering along my road.
Heart-rending photos available upon request.
-j
I have an M24 which does not have the bus converter card P1050). There are a
couple of these cards on ebay in the USA, which makes it expensive for me,
and I am not sure which of the two would be best anyway.
There is another bus converter available in the UK, but it is PC1076 (IF
622), which my web searches suggest make it for the M280 (which was a 286
machine).
Does anyone have any idea if this latter card might work in my M24? It
certainly looks to be physically compatible.
Regards
Rob
As my mail to cctech dod'nt came through, here a mail only to the cctalk
list.
sorry if it becomes a double post.
Hi All,
I was contacted via the greenkeys list for my spare parts of the two
T100 telexes, but I think it should be possible to obtain them in the
states. Is there someone willing to part of their broken or otherwise
non/half functional T100 in the usa.
they need the machines for a movie in the New York area.
--
Met vriendelijke Groet,
Simon Claessen
drukknop.nl
Someone on #classiccmp showed pictures of a DDR SDRAM module with
piggybacked TSOP memory chips. I've never heard of doing this with
surface-mounted devices.
http://imgur.com/a/CGk8h
--
David Griffith
dave at 661.org
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
I was checking out the Altair 8800 kit online (really cool). But I am
hoping to one day find a kit or plans to build a Mark-8 replica, since I'm
so deep into Radio Electronics features. I know there was a kit out there
(Obtronix?). Was it any good? Do I need someone to make a new kit or is
the Mark 8 within the realm of the home hobbyist the way the TVT was? Ie.
were there ever foil patterns available for those boards or did the kit
maker reverse engineer from originals? Is there any likelihood of finding
one of the replica kits still out there (I remember seeing one offered for
$2000 on Fleabay once.. )
Brad
Hi Guys
Well my missive on reproductions seems to have generated some interest.
There seems to be a lot of will to keep the old systems going and to
reproduce parts for them
and indeed build complete systems from new parts.
The main areas of interest are front panels (Not just DEC), key switches
and bezels.
Panels I can handle. Who wants to be the focus for switches and who for
bezels?
More than one person for each category can only be a good thing. I'll
call them "The Makers"
Those who want the items I'll call "The Takers" from 'I'll take one /
some if they get made."
Thats my two cents on parts sourcing.
The other topic was less computer centric and can be defined as "They
don't make them any more"
The UK is full of small companies making and repairing all kinds of past
products.
For example the MGB GT (a much loved British sports car). The factory
stopped making them in the early 1980's
However a few guys bought the press tools and have been turning out two
or three body shells a day ever since.
Copy of a Shelby Cobra - no problem build from a kit. GT40 clone oh yes!
Now we are not in that league but with the various tasks taken on by
those with the knowledge and experience
we can make the difficult to parts available.
Rod Smallwood
Don't get me wrong... Emacs isn't a bad OS... Too bad there isn't a decent text editor for it.?
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: Ethan Dicks <ethan.dicks at gmail.com>
Date: 10/23/2015 4:29 PM (GMT-05:00)
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: The Internet & our hobby
On Fri, 23 Oct 2015, Bill Sudbrink wrote:
> Fred Cisin wrote:
>>
>> While I won't try to claim that the FIRST or SECOND
>> emails were flames, I'm inclined to think that they
>> started early.? 'course in our day, we were much more
>> polite in how we flamed
>
>
> Emacs?? You _MUST_ be kidding.
I'd expect wide-eyed stares from a vi user... ;-)
Q: What goes "beep beep beep"?
A: A Little Nash Rambler... and a vi novice.
-ethan
>> http://retrocmp.com/projects/pdp-11-70-panel-on-blinkenbone/243-simulated-p…
That's a work of art, together with the PDP-10 he did. I saw them running on a nice touch screen at VCF Berlin, and I wondered whether all this physical replication stuff makes sense when that's around at zero cost. Then I put my blinkers back on and went ahead anyway :)
>> You hit upon one of the key needs for these projects, a good replica bezel.
>> In my project I had to have a plexiglass bezel laser cut then used white plastic
>> to frame that bezel. It works but I would love to have a replica bezel.
Did you perchance make a CAD design for that, which could be reused? ;) I'm drafting a design at the moment, but far from perfect still.
I think of all the technologies available for making the bezel, vacuum forming seems to make the most sense. Injection molding is much better quality but just too expensive (tens of thousands USD). The other approaches, I think, work fine for small quantities. But I suspect there's a 'need' to make a few hundred.
Probably the best way is to make a very good open-source CAD model. Then make a low-cost vacuum forming mold, whilst anyone could still use the CAD file for higher-quality one-offs on a CNC router or, perhaps, 3D printer. The problem with vacuum forming is that you cannot make much more details other than the outer hull, which will look fine but need a lot of work on the inside to really mount in an original PDP-11.
Regards, Oscar.
> From: Johnny Billquist
> not going to try and contradict what you wrote.
Right, I wasn't meaning to imply what you said was incorrect, just giving a
little more detail on what was a murky and complicated process.
> I suspect it's because people now assume that "Internet" was always
> TCP/IP
Define "the Internet"! :-) If one describes it as 'the large collection of
interoperating networks speaking TCP/IP', then that statement _is_ correct!
If one instead uses a broader definition, something like 'computer networks
in general' (pulling in things like Usenet), then, no, it's not correct.
I'm _not_ trying to say that there is only one, correct, definition of 'the
Internet' - but various statements about 'the Internet' may or may not be
accurate, depending on which definition is used.
Noel
On Fri, 23 Oct 2015, Bill Sudbrink wrote:
> Fred Cisin wrote:
>> While I won't try to claim that the FIRST or SECOND
>> emails were flames, I'm inclined to think that they
>> started early. 'course in our day, we were much more
>> polite in how we flamed
>
> Emacs? You _MUST_ be kidding.
>
WordStar. Non-document mode.
g.
--
Proud owner of F-15C 80-0007
http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of its kind.
http://www.diy-cockpits.org/coll - Go Collimated or Go Home.
Some people collect things for a hobby. Geeks collect hobbies.
ScarletDME - The red hot Data Management Environment
A Multi-Value database for the masses, not the classes.
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