Hi all --
Last December I picked up an AMT DAP 600 (64x64 distributed array
processor) which came with a set of manuals and QIC tapes; the manuals
are on Bitsavers, the tapes were just recently (carefully) recovered by
Bear and I thought I'd make them available in case anyone out there has
a DAP 500 or 600 and is looking for software, since this seems to be
pretty hard to come by.
The archive is at:
http://yahozna.dyndns.org/scratch/dap/
(I'll be forwarding this on to Al as well so that it might someday make
it onto Bitsavers).
Tapes 1 and 2 are the vital ones, these include the Sun-based host
software (SCSI driver, host diagnostics and tools, assemblers and
FORTRAN-PLUS compiler). The rest are additional libraries (Image
Processing, DSP, etc) and a few backup tapes with what look like
interesting demos (I haven't tried them yet).
In other news, thanks to Bear's efforts my DAP 600 is now running
nicely, if you want to see a (crummy cellphone) video of it rendering
the Mandelbrot set, check this out:
http://yahozna.dyndns.org/scratch/dap/mandelbrot.mp4
Thanks,
Josh
Hi folks,
I?ve got an empty BA23 (originally used for a 11/23 system), and a KA640 with the appropriate memory.
I know that the KA640 was more commonly used in the larger BA213 cabinets, but is it reasonable to put it in the BA23?
Is there a cab kit for that combination? What would it include ? just the rear panel, or was there a replacement front panel as well?
If such a kit exists (in either form), does anyone have a spare they might be willing to part with?
Thanks,
Rob
Rod, I received the panel, and thought I'd share with anyone on the fence, it's stunning!? It fit's my 8/m perfectly.? I think the rotary switch is has the smaller angles of the 'B' style panel, and I'm looking forward to checking those out as well.
Since this one doesn't have holes for the keyswitch and selector switch, I'm wondering what the best way is to mark the spot for drilling.? At first I was thinking of making a template, but probably I can just mark and trill at the midpoint between the top and bottom marks of the selector switch; and for the keyswitch, which is not PCB mounted, and therefore a bit more flexible, just drill the center of the middle colored rectangle in the group of 3 on the left.
Not being mechanically giftec, I figure I will make the mark, and do a tiny pilot drill, then cover over with painters tape before drilling the full-size holes.
Any suggestions?
Thanks again for the effort you have put into these beautiful panels!
Dave
> From: Sean Caron
> I think there's a lot of good advice here
Lots of good advice here; any chance we can capture it (and the rest in this
thread) in a Wiki page? (Hint, hint... :-)
Noel
> From: Sean Caron
> Anyone got a spare set of rails?
It turns out the company that built rails for the 11's BITD is still in
business, and still selling rails. I don't think they still make the exact
model used on various -11's, but they have almost identical units.
(Now, whether they have holes in the right places, I'm not sure. I was going
to buy one to see if the coating on the modern ones looks to be the same
thing as the old ones, but they were kind of pricy - $130 or so, IIRC - so
I'm holding off at the moment.)
The company is General Devices, and you can see their slides here:
http://generaldevices.thomasnet.com/category/solid-bearing-slides?plpver=10
I think the model we'd want would be like the CTHS-124 or CTRS-124 or
something.
They don't sell retail, but they gave me the name of a dealer who will:
Newark/element14
North America National Distributor
1-800-4-NEWARK (1800-263-9275)
If you went this route, you'd probably have to replace both sides, but I
think they big issue would be the holes.
Noel
> From: Christian Gauger-Cosgrove
> The other 1ESS/1AESS switch is a complete and functional unit, still in
> service, last I heard. But there are plans to scrap it and put in a
> modern switch in its place. Saving it would be a difficult proposition,
> to say the least.
I'd try to get the Smithsonian involved. This is a _very_ significant machine,
of national importance, and a national institution like the Smithsonian should
have one.
Let me know if I can help, e.g. by getting heavy hitters like Vint Cerf
involved.
Noel
On 2015-07-02 02:36 PM, tony duell <ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>> > I share your favourite(s). In the danish IT-museum-to-be (www.datamuseum.dk) we have two
>> > P857-based systems running. We have lots of spare parts and nearly all documentation, so
>> > if you need something, you are welcome to ask.
> Unfortunately I don't own anything in that series :-(. What I have is :
>
> P850 in the 6U rack box. I have the CPU technical manual and user manuals for it.
>
> P851 in card cage with quite a bit of I/O and twin 8" floppies. I have the user manual, CPU and I/O
> technical manuals and manuals for the floppy drive unit, including the CDC manual for the drives themselves
>
> P854 in cardcage with floppy drives and hard disk controller. Alas the X1215 hard disk was scrapped before
> I got it. I have a preliminary CPU technical manual, and of course I/O boards are the same as the P851 ones.
>
> Quite a few spare boards including complete P851 and P854 CPU board sets, I/O, RAM, extender board,
> prototyping boards (some have been used, I think I even have a brand new one), a single-chip P800 CPU,
> and so on.
>
> The manuals I am looking for (some hope!) are :
>
> The full P854 CPU technical manual (the one I have does not include the microcode source, that is 'to be
> supplied').
>
> Information on the hard disk controller for the X1215 in the P854 chassis. This is one eurocard with
> an 8X305 or something on it. I have some handwritten notes + a block diagram nothing more.
>
> P850 Core memory module technical manual
>
> P850/855 series I/O board technical manuals.
>
> It is possible I could get the manuals I have scanned if there is any serious interest
>
> -tony
There are some manuals online, but those are from the software side:
http://www.theoengel.nl/P800/ and
http://electrickery.xs4all.nl/comp/divcomp/doc/index.html.
>
>
>
> P850 I/O board technical manuals
Fred Jan
the fun think about the old lunx browser is you could run it on a pc
8088 old system!
I have a pc speed little laptop and used the lynx in on the road
applications
we had a free net here in phx and many people used it for ages...
it was fun to use old machine with lynx but if I wanted to really work
though out came IE explorer or netscape get the fastest machine I
could get and a t1 LINE OR EVENTUALLY MY OWN CABLE AND DSL CONNECTION.
Ed#
In a message dated 7/2/2015 5:14:33 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
billdegnan at gmail.com writes:
I have been using Mosaic on my OpenVMS system, almost unusable, but fun.
It's more important in this day and age to keep up with the web publishing
standards than maintain backward compatibility. Google penalizes sites
that are not mobile friendly in their rankings. If you can't be found,
what's the point?
On Thu, Jul 2, 2015 at 7:24 PM, Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com> wrote:
> On 07/02/2015 03:26 PM, Terry Stewart wrote:
>
>> 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).
>>
>
> I've got a couple systems with IE 6.1, but generally I go for Opera 10.64
> or thereabouts. Still very useful and not very demanding on system
> resources.
>
> I'll let you know about your web page later.
>
> --Chuck
>
>
>
wasn't lynx before even Internet explorer 1.0?
Heck if you have retro computer site make it look as old fashioned as
you can
then it is retro... then if people don't like it... well... you know
the rest <grin>
lynx might be too primitive... no screen graphics on page as you
scroll
make the retro site
early graphical
with nasty looking fonts...
lots of 'under Construction signs
some nasty lo res motion gifs
Ed _www.amecc.org_ (http://www.amecc.org)
In a message dated 7/2/2015 5:21:03 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
mouse at Rodents-Montreal.ORG writes:
> Subject: Re: How many use old browsers (e.g. =< Netscape 4 or IE 6) as
their
> ONLY source of web content?
I didn't see the original of this, probably (based on the headers)
because it was sent through gmail. But, assuming the Subject: is an
accurate guide to the content, I may qualify.
My use of the Web falls into four categories:
(1) At work, for work purposes, on work-owned and work-administered
machines. This is minimal and done when the job in question has some
internal tool that desn't provide any saner interface.
(2) Over others' shoulders, as it were; for example, I have had people
hand me palmtop comput...umm, "smart phones", displaying something I
suspect was obtained as a Web page.
(3) Scripted fetching of, eg, webcomic image files. (There are a
handful of webcomics which I find worthwhile enough to bother setting
up such scripted fetches for.)
(4) lynx.
So far, I haven't run into anything that I care enough about to provoke
me to bother finding/building anything more elaborate than lynx for my
own use.
Does lynx count as "=< Netscape 4 or IE 6"? Is my sample size of one
relevant for your purposes? Only you can say. :-)
/~\ The ASCII Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
X Against HTML mouse at rodents-montreal.org
/ \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39 4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B
I'm looking for a copy of Solstice (or Solaris) Disk Suite 4.0 software. A bounty is available...
Cheers,
Lyle
--
73 AF6WS
Bickley Consulting West Inc.
http://bickleywest.com
"Black holes are where God is dividing by zero"