We will dig around for come images...ok if you have any links to
good large scans let us know thx.... Ed#
In a message dated 1/12/2017 8:35:35 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
sbolton at bfree.on.ca writes:
> Syd! thanks,,.. is the Toaster Flyer a board inside the Amiga? it
> may be
> there...
>
> Did you save any promotional material etc? Thins like that look
> good in
> a display with the gear.
>
> We also need to scrounge a keyboard and a mouse
It was a card inside, yes.....but you didn't typically have a Toaster &
and Flyer in the same machine---you had one of each.
I have lots of material still from the day and there is of course good
examples of it online.
Keyboard & mouse are tougher....we have them at the museum, but not
really any extras. It is one of the most common requests I get from
people - there are adapters to use PC keyboards (and mice) on the Amiga
but of course that's not authentic :)
eBay may be the only route for getting that - at least if you need to
do so quickly.
Also you can try http://www.jppbm.com/ - he carries a lot of hard to
find Commodore stuff.
http://www.pcmuseum.ca
I found what I remember to be a DEC10 memory cable . It looks like a BC10K
in the 1980 cables handbook. It looks to be a 5 footer or so.
Any interest? Please contact me off list.
Thanks, Paul
Syd! thanks,,.. is the Toaster Flyer a board inside the Amiga? it may be
there...
Did you save any promotional material etc? Thins like that look good in
a display with the gear.
We also need to scrounge a keyboard and a mouse
.
thanks Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 1/11/2017 7:38:46 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
sbolton at bfree.on.ca writes:
No, C64's were too limited (8-bit) to do anything video related.
However, video production was actually possible with the Amiga 1000 as
you could get the Amiga 1300 Genlock, and the Amiga itself always
natively produced composite video ....real true non-linear editing with
the computer itself however was really only done with the Toaster Flyer
unit (the Video Toaster itself just produced video effects/titling and
came bundled with LightWave 3D).
I used to be a Commodore dealer, and the NewTek (Video Toaster)
distributor in Canada, so if you need any info hit me up!
Syd Bolton
Personal Computer Museum
http://www.pcmuseum.ca
On Wed, 11 Jan 2017 16:14:19 -0500, COURYHOUSE at aol.com wrote:
> Were C64's used in editing video like the Amigas - also need Amiga
> keyboard?
>
> Were Commodore 64's used in editing video like the Amigas were to
> any
> extent?
>
> Looking to figure if there is an overlap area in yet another
> area of
> our displays we can do between computing and video production.
>
> We have a Amiga, 2000 desk top type, with a video toaster in it that
> needs a keyboard and factory mouse!
> Can anyone help?
> Thanks Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
Were C64's used in editing video like the Amigas - also need Amiga
keyboard?
Were Commodore 64's used in editing video like the Amigas were to any
extent?
Looking to figure if there is an overlap area in yet another area of
our displays we can do between computing and video production.
We have a Amiga, 2000 desk top type, with a video toaster in it that
needs a keyboard and factory mouse!
Can anyone help?
Thanks Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
Hi Guys
I have had a quick word with the girls down at the silk
screen shop.
Banner panels 18 1/2 by 3 5/16 silk screened on 1mm Aluminum look to be
doable
I don't know how many different types there were.
Regardless of if you need a replacement and you have not sent me picture
a head on shot would really help
Rod (Panelman) Smallwood
--
PDP-8/e PDP-8/f PDP-8/m PDP-8/i
Front Panels ex Stock - Order Now
Hey guys,
Does anyone know if any color photos exist of the Sol 'Intelligent Terminal'
that appeared on the cover of Popular Electronics, July 1976? I just
discovered that that Keytronics keyboard I bought on ebay (the one parted
out from a mystery 8080 terminal of some sort) is the same one they used for
the PE cover unit. I found the artwork tonight on sol20.org for the
original PCB. If I could find a color photo it'd at least be possible to
build a replica of that unit someday.
I was curious too if anyone knew the story behind the four optional PROM ICs
that could be installed on the board. The article only says 'Optional,
write in for details'. Can't find any more info than that anywhere. I
understand Processor Technology sort of dodged around PE's reluctance to
publish any more computer articles, and I'm wondering if the terminal could
be turned into a full blown computer with the aid of those PROMs.
To refresh - this is the keyboard I bought.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4pq0-BHd2x6eHNhTWVGZkhxRFk/view?usp=sharin
g
Definitely seems to be the same one - just different colors and legends on
the keys themselves.
Brad
Hi folks,
Any 8085 assembler geeks in the house?
Official Intel docs don't seem to be helping with this one, I have 8085 and
D8741A peripheral controller dumps both containing several opcodes that two
disassemblers aren't recognising and any docs I've been looking through for
either 8085 instructions or the UPI instruction set don't seem to feature
them either.
The codes are 0x08, 0x10, 0x18, 0x28, 0x38,0xD9, 0xDD and 0xED.
0x08 nearly always follows a 0x01 LXI B instruction, the others don't seem
to have an obvious pattern.
I've pondered if 0x10 is INC @R0 because the binary for that is 0001 000x
where x is either 0 or 1.
By the same reasoning 0xD9 could be XRL A,R1 (opcode 11011xxx) and 0xDD
could be XRL A,R5 but can't match the others. Also the surrounding code
doesn't mention those registers.
Example 8085 code fragment:
3440 1792 09 DAD B
3441 1793 01 01 08 LXI B,0801H
3442 1796 08 UNRECOGNIZED
3443 1797 12 STAX D
3444 1798 0D DCR C
3445 1799 54 MOV D,H
3446 179A 65 MOV H,L
3447 179B 6C MOV L,H
3448 179C 65 MOV H,L
3449 179D 70 MOV M,B
3450 179E 68 MOV L,B
3451 179F 6F MOV L,A
3452 17A0 6E MOV L,M
3453 17A1 65 MOV H,L
3454 17A2 20 RIM
3455 17A3 44 MOV B,H
3456 17A4 65 MOV H,L
3457 17A5 74 MOV M,H
3458 17A6 61 MOV H,C
3459 17A7 69 MOV L,C
3460 17A8 6C MOV L,H
3461 17A9 73 MOV M,E
3462 17AA 01 04 05 LXI B,0504H
3463 17AD 08 UNRECOGNIZED
3464 17AE 17 RAL
3465 17AF 53 MOV D,E
3466 17B0 65 MOV H,L
3467 17B1 6C MOV L,H
3468 17B2 65 MOV H,L
3469 17B3 63 MOV H,E
3470 17B4 74 MOV M,H
3471 17B5 20 RIM
Cheers!
--
adrian/witchy
Owner of Binary Dinosaurs, the UK's biggest home computer collection?
www.binarydinosaurs.co.uk
> From: Brad H
> 4) Videobrain Family Computer
So this tickled a question I'd been meaning to ask. Circa 1975, there was an
MIT spinoff which designed and built a 'personal computer' (that's
effectively what it was, although it wasn't called that). The company had
gotten their start building digital (IIRC) capacitance meters (back when
capacitance meters were not common).
So they then decided that their next product would be a small computer. I
don't recall the exact name, but it was something like 'Micro-Brain'
(something with 'Brain' in it, IIRC). The computer was not a success
(technically), and IIRC, it sank the company.
Does this ring any bells for anyone?
Noel