I think it's the hardware or server company folks might have an attachment towards. I only saw novell 3.x and up but it was all standard x86 arch. Did they support other platforms?
-------- Original message --------?Not many here seem to be into preserving Novell servers and such.
?? I could be mistaken.
Bill
Help! Looking for rolls of paper tape for teletypes, twx and telex
all widths.
As we have an array of these machines at SMECC and like to demo them
and always need tape to print on and punch!
Size varies between just smaller than 3/6 inch to one inch wide and
several sizes in between.
Please check your closets and storage... you may have some and not
know it!
drop a note off list please to us.
Thanks Ed Sharpe Archivist for SMECC
Van: Guy Sotomayor Jr<mailto:ggs at shiresoft.com>
Verzonden: woensdag 23 november 2016 17:29
Aan: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts<mailto:cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Onderwerp: Re: ISO: PDP-11/40 LTC and Stack Limit options
> On Nov 23, 2016, at 7:11 AM, william degnan <billdegnan at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> 3) I would not mind getting something like Guy's UA11 to test with. Are
> these available?
>
Yes, they are still available (along with KM11s)
TTFN ? Guy
------
I soldered my two KM11?s last Sunday!
I bought them from you at least eight years ago!
Going to put them to good use solving issues in my 11/10 and 11/40 ?
BTW, my 11/35 booted from RL02. But at the moment the 11/35 has issues ?
Regarding an SLU in slot 9: AFAIR, the M7800 does not use nor connect NPR,
So the M7800 will go well in slot 9 regardless of BG and NPR present or not.
The "scrapper" in NC that has the Triad contacted me directly, he had seen
the discussion of the system in the classiccmp archives.
He wasn't sure how to get his contact info out there, so he emailed me with
his name and direct phone number. I don't want to just post it publicly
(although it may already be out there somewhere, I don't know).
If someone is spearheading the effort to save this machine, please contact
me offlist and I'll provide the contact info.
Best,
J
> From: Josh Dersch derschjo at gmail.com
> see if the same is true for other bus grants -- I can run the system
> with no grant continuity card at all in slot 9 and everything works.
Well, the BG4-BG7 grants definitely _are_ run through the SPC slot 9 (see
below) - at least, on a stock system. It's _possible_ that the software
you're loading doesn't use interrupts. (I have this vague memory that, unlike
the -11/34, the /40 doesn't complain if there's a non-continuous grant line.)
Or perhaps someone wired them across on that slot, to avoid knuckle-mashing
trying to put a G727 down there.
Anyway, the wire list in the drawings show all four lines (although they are
listed in two places, under "BGx" and "BUS BGx"). E.g. BG4 is shown on pg. 79
as going from D07E2 (Source - K4-6, pg. 63, top right) to D09S2 (which is the
correct BG4 'in' pin for SPC), and as BUS BG4 on pg. 84 as going from D09T2
(SPC BG4 'out' pin) to B09E2 (correct BG4 UNIBUS 'out' pin).
> I now have the system booting XXDP
Yahh!!
> I did find out why there was that wire missing on the backplane; the
> KW11-L requires a wire (carrying one of the bus grant signals) be
> removed from slot 3.
Right, BG6 is wired through that KW11-L slot because the clock needs
interrupts - the wire list shows that on pg. 79, where the BG6 entry is longer
than the other BGn entries, because of that. If I'm reading the notations
correctly, it shows the jumper installed by default - I guess it was removed
by hand on systems sold with a KW11-L?
There must also be some way to indicate that the jumper should be wired on
top at both ends (so the F03V2 to D09M2 wire wouldn't have to be removed to
pull the F03R2 to F03V2 jumper) - although maybe they just did _all_
multi-pin runs as alternating low on both ends, high on both ends, repeat to
make removal/replacement easier.
Speaking of notation, dunno if you knew this (I didn't), but the wire list
for the 11/40 includes etch also; you can tell etch entries from an 'H' in
the "Q" column and 'P' in the "Remark" column. Don't confuse them with the
'H' in the "A/P" column, which also also has some 'L' entries; not sure what
that is about, unless it tells whether the signal is asserted high or low.
Noel
The following is for sale, or trade possibly. (I've tried to send this
earlier, but it didn't appear in the list, so this is my second try to
post this...)
Most of the listed items I've used together with SGI IRIX and
HP/Compaq/DEC OpenVMS and Digital/Tru64 UNIX systems and served me very
well.
I need to sell this by the end of the month (Nov-2016), else I'll have
to potentially scrap a considerable bunch of it.
I probably forgot to mention a number of things and perhaps I made a few
mistakes here and there. I'll try to update (and if needed, correct)
this list with follow-up posts. For now, this is the list of items:
- SGI systems, e.g. MIPS R5000 and R5200 processor equipped O2s
notably, perhaps also a teal Indigo? with 250-MHz R4400, at least 256
Mbytes (also up to 1 Gbyte available) of RAM, various types of CPUs
available, along with various other options in terms of disks, video
I/O, etc. (ask me) --> suggestion: if you don't care for IRIX, an O2
would still make an excellent X terminal to any e.g. other system, too,
as they don't consume a lot of power and they're wonderfully small;
- SGI parts, like an SGI Tezro dual-processor 700-MHz R16000
system board and an SGI DMediaPro DM10 IEEE-1394a FireWire PCI card plus
cable and manual;
- DEC Multia/UDB VX40B, maximized, with 166-MHz LCA4/21066
processor, the maximum amount of RAM (256 Mbytes), large 73.4-Gbyte 2?"
SCSI HDD (with Tru64 UNIX V5.1B[-5?] optionally pre-installed, OpenVMS
V7.2 also works on it, the original vertical stand and documents are
present, too), Ensoniq AudioPCI (16-bit 48-KHz) audio card, replacement
NVRAM/TOY back-up battery, experimental SRM console, PCI audio card and
custom-shoehorned, etc.;
- various older/non-x86 or compatible computer (besides earlier
mentioned SGI, e.g. DEC, Compaq and HP) bits & parts, think of FireWire
(e.g. IEEE-1394a), audio, etc. cards, cables and such ... included are
things like an AlphaServer DS15-compatible PCI audio card, HP IEEE-1394a
FireWire PCI card (rare, should work in some HP Integrity systems) and
more (ask me for details);
- Exar/Neterion/S2io 10-Gbit fiber-optical (10GBASE-SR) PCI-X
Ethernet NICs including transceivers, besides x86/-64 also OpenVMS and
IRIX compatible (and tried/used in various systems, including HP
rx2600s, rx2620s and a DS15 and also an SGI Tezro), LC FC cables
optionally available, too;
- Mellanox 40-Gbit InfiniBand PCI-E adapters (3 total), optional
copper and fiber-optical cables, in various lengths, are also available;
- various (e.g. HP) HBAs, notably SCSI (e.g. Ultra160 and
Ultra320) and FC (e.g. 2-Gbit and 4-Gbit), for PCI/-X or PCI-E, many
PCI/-X cards also compatible with IRIX and even OpenVMS, some include
the HP-branded "combo" types, providing both dual-channel FC (HBA) and
Ethernet (NIC);
- various optical/tape drives and media (e.g. DVD-RAM, various
data & cleaning tapes, of which many brand new), DDS/DAT of many types
(e.g. DDS-2/DAT12, DDS-3/DAT24, DDS-4/DAT40 and DDS-5/DAT72) Ultrium
(mostly LTO-1 and LTO-3), mostly of brands like HP (notably), Quantum
and Sony... to summarize several:
-- HP Ultrium LTO-3 SCSI half-height tape drives
-- Quantum Ultrium LTO-1 SCSI full-height tape drive
-- various Ultrium LTO-3, -2 and -1 cleaning and data cartridge
tapes (mostly HP-branded)
-- various (HP and Sony-branded) DDS-4/DAT40 tape drives, also
one DDS-5/DAT72 drive, all with
-- various DDS-5/DAT72, DDS-4/DAT40, DDS-3/DAT24, DDS-2/DAT12
and DDS-1/DAT8 tapes;
- various DVD-RAM discs, both with and without the plastic caddies;
- various HP, AXUS and Ciprico brand Ultra320 SCSI/S-ATA-bridged
& 2-Gbit or 4-Gbit FC external enclosures, for HDDs (optionally
including large capacity HDDs, also hardware RAID functionality
depending per enclosure), 5?" devices and more (these can be tricky to
ship, but not impossible), to summarize some of it:
-- AXUS Demon SA-16U4P Ultra320 SCSI<=>S-ATA RAID storage
enclosure, including 16 * 1-Tbyte S-ATA HDDs and spares --> advantages:
relative low power consumption and triple-redundant power
-- Ciprico/Huge Systems MediaVault 4-Gbit FC/FC-AL RAID disk
array, including transceivers, 10 * 250-Gbyte P-ATA HDDs plus one or
more spare HDDs --> advantages: low power consumption and rather silent
-- HP StorageWorks M5313A FC/FC-AL 2-Gbit (JBOD) disk array,
including transceivers and 14 * 146.8-Gbyte FC HDDs and one or two spare
HDDs, too --> note: perhaps not useful for OpenVMS users as-is, as
JBOD and FC-AL are a no-go, but it can be used in a larger SAN setup;
- various types of printed documents/documentation (various
manuals and reference guides, from e.g. SGI and Intel);
- APC Smart-UPS 3000 XLM (heavy-duty, 3000VA capacity) UPS
back-up battery aggregate power system, plus special APC RJ-45 USB cable
(the whole unit is perhaps hard to ship, but not impossible I guess),
this UPS can sustain e.g. several 2U and even some 4U HP Integrity
servers for up to 30~40 minutes (depending on the loads, of course);
- HP OpenVMS Alpha V8.4 SPL (Software Product Library) July
2010, including the original box and 'documents';
- lots of relatively recent 300-Gbyte and 146.8-Gbyte 80-pin
(SCA/-2) and 68-pin 10K and some 15K RPM, hot-swap, SCSI HDDs (most are
HP-branded);
- older <=9-Gbyte SCSI disks, from various vendors, some with
(e.g. DEC) firmware, with 50-, 68- and 80-pin (SCA/-2) connectors (many
DEC and Compaq/HP-branded ones, relevant for OpenVMS and Digital/Tru64
UNIX, too);
- HP StorageWorks 3U external 5?" SCSI expansion enclosure, room
for 4 (68-pin) SCSI devices (including optical drives, tape drives and
including full-height models);
- PCMCIA and PC card items: SanDisk CompactFlash card reader,
SIIG IEEE-1394a adapter, USB 2.0 adapter and an Adaptec Fast SCSI
adapter plus cable;
- Apple ADB and serial items: Griffin iMate adapters (2 total, 1
in original packaging) and Keyspan adapter;
- Chieftec SNT-3141 S-ATA HDD backplane plus sleds and I can
provide 3 * free 250-Gbyte S-ATA HDDs --> suggestion: perhaps useful
for in a system like the HP zx2000 (if it fits, of course; I never tried
it);
- IBM System x central fan tray (P/N: 90P4618, FRU P/N: 26K4761)
and also (e.g.) x346 rack rails (might fit on other devices/systems,
too), SCSI HDD caddies, fans and more (ask me);
- HP KVMIP console (PN 262589-821) 8-port extender hub, no power
supply required for this;
- Gefen 1080p HDMI scaler, professional grade (original box
present), useful for some computers and monitors to correct aspect ratios;
- non-computer items, or indirectly: professional SDI equipment,
like JVC-branded CRT and LCD monitors, Miranda bridges (including for
IEEE-1394a FireWire to SDI) and more, also many cables of various
lengths available and also photo & video equipment (e.g. Nikon D70 plus
Nikon Nikkor AF-S 18-70mm f/1:3.5-4.5G zoom lens, a barely used Sony
HDR-FX1000/E plus accessories and various bits & parts and a Tamron TV
Zoom Lens 12.5-75mm f/1.8 with C mount with constant aperture over the
zoom range).
All the items are located in the Netherlands. I'll provide more
information and pictures on demand.
As far as possible trades go. I'm mostly interested in lenses (mostly
in Nikon F/G, Pentax K, Leica M, Leica M39, M42 and Sony E-Mount
mounts), in particular fast longer telephoto lenses (135mm and above),
also enlarger lenses.
- MG
Hi folks,
Still working on this STC Executel and it looks like the CPU isn't too good
given how hot it gets within a minute or so. The display is the same whether
there's a CPU physically present or not. I built this circuit to test it:
http://saundby.com/electronics/8085/freerun.shtml
Using a 4mhz crystal the address lines are all over the place - I'm using a
logic analyser rather than LEDs.
Has anyone got a spare they'd like to sell me? I'm struggling to think of
something I've got that may have a socketed 8085...
--
Adrian/Witchy
Binary Dinosaurs creator/curator
Www.binarydinosaurs.co.uk - the UK's biggest private home computer
collection?
what is it? looks too new for me,.... do not remember this one....
Ed#
In a message dated 11/21/2016 9:30:06 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
drlegendre at gmail.com writes:
The vintage computing world is in your debt, Steven.. ;-)
On Mon, Nov 21, 2016 at 10:18 PM, Steven Maresca <steve.maresca at gmail.com>
wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 21, 2016 at 10:50 PM, Ian Finder <ian.finder at gmail.com>
wrote:
>
> > Someone go rescue this:
> > http://nwct.craigslist.org/zip/5886266424.html
> >
> > Or palletize it and send it to me.
> >
> >
> > --
> > Ian Finder
> > (206) 395-MIPS
> > ian.finder at gmail.com
> > <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','ian.finder at gmail.com');>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Ian Finder
> > (206) 395-MIPS
> > ian.finder at gmail.com
> >
> I'm in CT close enough to make a rescue..I've reached out to the poster.
>
> Regards,
> Steve
>
Hi Al & list,
Sorry for the delay, but the files should be readable now.
On 18-11-16 19:00, Al Kossow <aek at bitsavers.org> wrote:
> Fred, could you make these files readable, please
Apparently Filezilla in the new configuration needs more configuration.
The URL again: http://fjkraan.home.xs4all.nl/comp/divcomp/NCD/
Greetings,
Fred Jan
On Sun, 20 Nov 2016, Antonio Carlini wrote:
> There is a rogue that runs on VAX/VMS as I definitely played it a little back
> in the day.
>
> I don't think I had the sources, just a .EXE, so that may not work so well
> for Alpha.
Now THAT is interesting! I wonder where it went to?
--
Richard Loken VE6BSV, Systems Programmer - VMS : "...underneath those
Athabasca University : tuques we wear, our
Athabasca, Alberta Canada : heads are naked!"
** rlloken at telus.net ** : - Arthur Black