Dwight, yes I think so as I am on many lists and some hate the
aol address more than others do
Ed#
In a message dated 7/7/2015 7:29:43 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
dkelvey at hotmail.com writes:
As providers get more crowded, they will have more bounces.
They tend to happen at times when a lot of messages are being
handled.
It seems that the list parameters were set when only a few bounces
happened. Times have changed.
I've only been back on the list for about a week and already it has
determined that my address has too many bounces.
There must be a parameter that can be set to adjust the sensitivity.
Dwight
=
I was contacted by a chap in South Africa (Pretoria area) who has the
following kit available. If interested, please reply to me directly and
I'll put you in touch.
* PDP-11/23, with dual RL02 drives and 9 disks
* 2x VT100, one modified to VT125
* DecPrinter III
* HP 70470A plotter
* RSX11-M 4 with manuals
* RSX11-M 3.2 (I think manuals only)
* Fortran 77 with manuals
* IBM portable (ca. 1982)
--
Steve Maddison
http://www.cosam.org/
Great idea! ? Ed#
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: Christian Gauger-Cosgrove <captainkirk359 at gmail.com>
Date: 07/06/2015 8:17 PM (GMT-07:00)
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: VAX-11/750 registry (Was: Reviving a VAX-11/750)
On 6 July 2015 at 23:03, Alan Perry <aperry at snowmoose.com> wrote:
> Is there any interest in starting a VAX-11/750 registry?? I wouldn't mind
> knowing who else out there has one and where they are now.? If you are
> interested, send me e-mail (vax11-750 at snowmoose.com).
>
Sorry for the scope creep; but perhaps it might be more
useful/interesting to make it a registry of any VAX that has a name of
the form "VAX-11/7xx"? (Which could also include the VAX 8600 and VAX
8650, since were originally to be called the VAX-11/790 and
VAX-11/795.)
Thoughts on that idea?
Regards,
Christian
--
Christian M. Gauger-Cosgrove
STCKON08DS0
Contact information available upon request.
Clearing out some excess stuff here
I have an ISA IBM 5250 Terminal Emulator Card. Comes with the DOS
software on a CD. Make A Fair Offer
IBM AT Clone. 640KB RAM 40MB MFM Hard Drive. Ethernet Card, set up
with mTCP. 1.44 3.5 HD Drive and 5.25 HD Drive. Has ATI VGA/EGA Card as
well Make A Fair Offer
Toshiba Satellite 4010 CDS 32MB RAM 2GB HDD.. Has 3.5 drive, CD-ROM and
Ethernet Card. Make a Fair offer
Dell Dimension M233a. 32MB RAM 8GB HDD. Ethernet. This is running
OpenStep 4.2 with fully supported video, networking and sound. 233Mhz
Pentium MMX Processor. It runs it really nicely. Make a fair offer
Everything here is 15 bucks each shipped in the USA
Microsoft Systems and Development CD-ROM Circa 1994
Windows For Workgroups 3.11 Disk Set
Windows NT For PowerPC, Intel, MIPS 6000, Alpha
MS-DOS 6.22 Disk Set
IBM Cartridge Basic for PCJr
Windows 95 Original Release on CD-ROM and Floppies with Book and Key Code
Thanks.
eBay feedback upon request and I accept PayPal. Or if you are in
Michigan and want to come pick it up you are more than welcome to
come. I am in Central Michigan, North of Mount Pleasant
Hi,
I'm engaged in a Retrochallenge project where I'm recoding my
classic-computers.org.nz site to make it suitable for mobile platforms. I
want to modernise the code as well, making it as close to HTML5 standard as
I can
The RetroChallenge blog site is here.
http://www.classic-computers.org.nz/blog/2015-06-29-recoding-classic-comput…
.
In doing this, I will probably need to say goodbye to old browser
compatibility. As in old I mean Netscape 4 or earlier, and other pre-2000
browsers (and possibly IE 6, as it's not very standard).
The website does have a few articles and resources of interest to vintage
computer hobbyists, which I wouldn't want to make inaccessible. The
question is, how many guys like us, those who dabble with old tech, are
likely to use ancient browsers as their ONLY source of web content. I
suspect not many. Should I worry about it? Any comments welcome.
On a related note, I'd be interested if anyone on the list CAN'T read this
page properly:
http://www.classic-computers.org.nz/blog/temp.html
It's a new blog page template I've developed using HTML5 and is mobile
friendly. If it doesn't show up properly I'll be interested to know what
browser you're using.
Please be kind about the HTML5 and CCS code. I don't do this for a job,
and it's a big learning curve for me.
P.S. Here are some interesting stats. For myself, I've been a Chrome user
for a number of years now.
http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp
Terry (Tez)
OP (about the 68000 box) here ? thanks for all the informative comments!
I did spend some time using the 68010-based Apollo workstations, and as I understood it they were equipped with two processors, one shadowing the other, because not enough information was saved to completely restart an instruction ? particularly a block transfer ? if a memory paging operation was required. Apparently the 68020 somehow fixed this problem. (The 68008, BTW, was just a 68000 with limited address space and an 8-bit data bus. It was primarily targeted at deeply embedded systems, not ?general purpose computing? applications.)
Thanks for the clarification about V7 Unix not requiring demand paging; this makes complete sense, since it was never mentioned in any of the documentation I read. And yes, it it was Unix V7, not ?System 7? (sorry, it was a while ago...).
Thanks for the pointer to the Convergent Technologies boxes. This wasn?t them (the case was different: it was black, and horizontal-profile), but the functionality looks very similar; they could easily have had the same motherboard or other guts. Also, I forgot to mention in my original post that there was a 5-1/4? floppy on this thing, too.
~~
Mark Moulding
In the late 80?s, I bought from a surplus/junk shop a (by then somewhat obsolete) Unix computer, branded UniSys, I think. It had 10 serial ports; one was the primary console, one was intended for a printer, and the other 8 were regular user TTYs. The processor was a 68000 (not 010, 020, or anything else), I don?t remember how much memory, and it had an integral full-height hard drive as well (60 mB, maybe?).
When I say Unix, I mean real System-7 Unix ? not Linux or any other *nix. I thought it was really a pretty neat system ? 8 (or 9) users and a printer, just perfect for a small office ? or my apartment at the time, which had a terminal or two in every room. I learned how to program in Unix on that machine, since it matched exactly the System 7 manuals I had. Sadly, time moved on, I got married, and got rid of a bunch of ?useless junk?, like that computer.
Recently, I?ve been reminiscing and poking around some on the Web to try to find information about it, but it seems to have vanished completely with nary a ripple. Has anyone else stumbled across this unit, or at least have any knowledge of it? It was a black case, about the size of a standard IBM-PC, with ten serial ports on the back and not much else. I?d sure be interested to know where I might locate data about that unit, or (gasp!) possibly even an existing one...
~~
Mark Moulding
So I have a couple of busted KDJ11-A cards (M8192), and it would be nice to
have a FMPS to look at, if I try and get them running. (I know it's not the
DCJ11 chips - I have tried them in a known good board, and they all work
fine.)
Does anyone know the whereabouts of one? Does one even exist? I have not
found any reference to one. The KDJ11-A User's Guide (EK-KDJ1A-UG-001) does
not mention one. (BTW, that UG is more like a Tech Manual - it contains a
lengthy chapter with detailed description of internal circuits.)
Thanks in advance (hopefully :-)!
Noel
Last month I debuted the electronic version of my book, "Abacus to
smartphone: The evolution of mobile and portable computers". Now it's
available on old-fashioned dead trees.
The best place to get it is https://www.createspace.com/5596053. The
second-best place is Amazon.com. Price is the same at both sites
($19.99) but CreateSpace sends me twice the royalty that Amazon does
(even though CS is owned by Amazon... weird.)
The book's web site is http://www.abacustosmartphone.com.