Hi,
I want to use my daisy wheel printer to create letters and memos and
similar (rather simple) texts.
What can I use to write the text?
I think "special effects" with daisy wheel printers are "bold" and
"underline" parts. And "double stroke" (if that's the correct word, I
mean a space char between each char).
groff (or any *roff) comes to my mind. Are there other options?
regards,
chris
I'm interested in getting one of these, but browsing the manuals it
appears there is software that is installed on the VAX to use them with VMS.
Is the software required to attach terminals and login to various
Vax's?? Or is it for management of the Dec Server 300?
If the software is required, where do I find it?? Is it in the hobbyist
distribution?? Is there a VAX and ALPHA version?
Doug
Hi all --
Picked up a non-functional but otherwise nice looking DEC VR260 (19" b&w
monitor) on the cheap, hoping to use it with my VAXstation 2000. From what
I've read, these were never the most reliable displays. Curious if anyone
has any information on common failure modes, or has service docs squirreled
away somewhere. I've at least found schematics, so I have something to go
on, but it's not exactly the most straightforward design I've poked at.
Right now when powered up I hear a repeated low hum from the transformer
followed by a soft ticking noise so I'm guessing I've got power supply
issues at the very least. Unsure what I should expect the monitor to do if
it's not being fed a valid video signal (I haven't yet tried to hook the
VS2000 up to it) -- whether it'll go into free-running mode or do mostly
nothing until it has something to sync to...
Thanks as always,
Josh
Hi List
I have here a Acer-Altos System 4500. It is a 486/33 EISA System with an
Altos Basic SCSI Bsc(e) Controller.
It has an Altos Multidrop/2 EISA Controller (to controll TCU Boxes that
handle RS232 Ports) and a VGA1024i EISA Graphics controller.
My mision is to bring that System back to life respectively get access
to the Discs. The built in SCSI Disk are running and i have created
Images of this Disks in a Linux PC.
But i can not boot the System by one of this Disks. I remember that on
this disk is some sort of Altos SCO Unix System V installed.
Did sombody here on the list have documentation or the original
Installationmedia (QIC-525) for that system?
Marco
>
> Mike Stein writes:
> > I remember there was another L9000 rescued in California years ago,
> but maybe that's the one you have now.
>
My consulting company was in Redwood City, CA. Our nextdoor neighbor had a
company leasing new cars. They ran the company on a Burroughs L9000.
About August of 2000, they were at the point where they could no longer
obtain ledger cards (roughly 8x11 with a magnetic stripe down the side for
computer data), for the L9000, so they were going to move to a PC-based
system.
The owner knew I was a computer collector, so he offered to give me the
L9000.
I was tempted...but it was a large machine, so I arranged for it to be
given to the Computer History Museum (where I was, or became (timeline
hazy) a senior docent).
I remember the owner saying that only the cleverness of their independent
maintenance guy had kept the machine running ... to the point where he'd
machined some replacement parts himself.
I talked to the elderly lady who ran the machine (i.e., did the data
entry). She compared it to the PC, and lamented the loss of the L9000.
The L9000 was so much faster and easier to use! She could probably enter
data four or five times faster on the L9000. It wasn't just a matter of
familiarity ... much of the slowdown was due to the GUI nature of the PC
program they switched to, and they no longer had the luxury of having
relatively purpose-related hardware on the L9000.
Stan
almost finished with this
http://bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/magazines/RSTS_Professional
I'd like to gap-fill the rare RSTS Professional issues if anyone still has them. They are staple-bound so they can be scanned without
removing a binding.
There is a B800 at the RICM, but nothing larger.
> On Aug 5, 2020, at 1:00 PM, cctech-request at classiccmp.org wrote:
>
> Burroughs L-series paper tapes
Al Kossow <aek at bitsavers.org> wrote:
> On 8/3/20 7:25 PM, Mike Stein via cctalk wrote:
>
>> And what about your L9000 (or was it an 8000?) ? Did it also go to the LCM?
>>
>> Not many left, alas...
>
> we have an L-9000
> https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/X1742.2001
Here is another one:
In 2006, Nelson Nameplate Company (now Nelson-Miller) gave their
L9000 to Sellam Ismail at Vintagetech.com. He already had an
L7000 and was anxious to add the L9000 to his collection. Nelson
had wanted to donate it to a 501(c)(3) institution, but nobody
was interested.
They bought it in 1975, and it was in daily use in their billing
department until November 2005. They certainly got their money's
worth out of it!
Amusing side note: The repair guy who kept it running for many
years had the unfortunate name of Slobodan Milosevic. He preferred
to go by simply "Dan". :-)
Alan Frisbie
I've bought a small number of L-series tapes over the years that I finally read yesterday,
mostly pass 1 and 2 of the assembler.
Part numbers look like this. Oddly, they all seem to be wound backwards. The person-readable
label is at the end, which will make it annoying to scan.
1-2101-049-01
1-2101-052-07
1-1001-008-07
1-1001-009-07
Anyone have any others?
Are there any companies or entities left out there that are still doing
hardware support on the older HP A900 / A990 systems? Looking for
Worldwide people or companies. I get requests form time to time and
don't know where to send them.
Thanks
Jesse
Cypress Technology Inc
jesse(at)cypress-tech.com