fido news when he became editor and they are lamenting the Internet
taking away from fido net....
https://gopherproxy.meulie.net/gopher.meulie.net/0/fidonews/2002/fido1902.nw
s
In a message dated 4/30/2016 7:43:59 P.M. Mountain Standard Time,
geneb at deltasoft.com writes:
On Sun, 1 May 2016, Tomasz Rola wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 10:07:34AM -0700, geneb wrote:
>> On Wed, 27 Apr 2016, Sean Conner wrote:
>>
> [...]
>>> Just look into the political machinations of what was known as FidoNet
to
>>> see how this could end up.
>>>
>> What IS known as FidoNet (1:138/142 here. :) ) and it's still a
>> political shit-show, mostly due to people from Zone 2. *sigh*
>
> Pardon my ignorant question but is there a place on the net where I
> could read some more about it? Or maybe it is short enough to explain
> here?
>
Books could be written about it unfortunately, One of the more annoying
aspects is Bjorn Felten, the current editor of FidoNews - he's refused
repeated requests to pass on his editor duties for various reasons and
he's refused - for at least the last 10 years. Find a telnetable BBS
that's a member of FidoNet and start reading the FidoNews echo for a taste
of the insanity. The Fido Sysop (FNSYSOP) is also a pretty deranged
place.
g.
--
Proud owner of F-15C 80-0007
http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of its kind.
http://www.diy-cockpits.org/coll - Go Collimated or Go Home.
Some people collect things for a hobby. Geeks collect hobbies.
ScarletDME - The red hot Data Management Environment
A Multi-Value database for the masses, not the classes.
http://scarlet.deltasoft.com - Get it _today_!
Are there any archived issues of _Processor_ from the 80's or early 90's, online anywhere?
I seem to recall it went through at least one major printing format change (from newsprint to cheap bound magazine or the other way around).
It sometimes had articles but was mostly ads from second-hand minicomputer vendors. Most of what I remember was DEC-aftermarket of course, but there was also overlap with DG, IBM aftermarket, various office machines, and later PC-clones and Sun stuff.
I just received from S&H a PDF copy of the TSX 6.50 Release Notes - and
Jay has posted it to the http://tsxplus.classiccmp.org website.
Lots of interesting/helpful information for all you TSX-Plus buffs...
Cheers,
Lyle
--
73 AF6WS
Bickley Consulting West Inc.
http://bickleywest.com
"Black holes are where God is dividing by zero"
> From: Erik Baigar
> very interesting reading
If you want to see a great example of why it was important, check out the
so-called 'Berlin Tunnel':
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Goldhttp://www.fas.org/irp/cia/product/tunnel-200702.pdf
Some of the traffic that was intercepted was teletype traffic - which had
been encrypted. However, the equipment that connected the gear to the line
allowed a tiny electronic whisper of the original plain-text onto the line,
along with the encrypted form, and it was possible to read the plaintext off
the line with suitable gear.
Noel
> From: Erik Baigar
>> as was coming up with something that could be both EMP-survivable and
>> TEMPEST-worthy.
> TEMPEST?
A set of standards for allowed levels of emissions (in particular,
electro-magnetic radiation) from communication/computing gear, intended to
prevent listening to the activity of that gear:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tempest_(codename)
Noel
At 11:24 PM 5/4/2016, Andy Holt wrote:
>Could someone with access to the OED please check up the first use of the term "minicomputer"
I am not the OED, but when I first saw the TX-0 and the PDP-1 at MIT in late 1964 or early 1965 I believe that I heard the term minicomputer applied to them. Certainly when I next saw them in the summer of 1967 both were being called minicomputers by the staff there.
Dale H. Cook, Roanoke/Lynchburg, VA
Osborne 1 / Kaypro 4-84 / Kaypro 1 / Amstrad PPC-640
http://plymouthcolony.net/starcity/radios/index.html
> From: Erik Baigar
> I wanted to have a computer using core memory and so I bought a black
> box from the Tornado aircraft which contained core. This started a 10
> year yourney of analyzing it, decyphering the command set and building
> tools to program it. ... I have a project page on this:
> http://www.baigar.de/TornadoComputerUnit/index.html
I am absolutely, completely, blown away. This has got to be one of the most
amazing projects I have ever come across. I'm utterly awed by the work you
did to reverse engineer this thing.
Everyone should check out this site - especially the detailed time-line
Noel
On Tue, May 3, 2016 at 10:14 AM, Mike Stein <mhs.stein at gmail.com> wrote:
> What's the best commonly available solvent for cleaning the rubber goo that used to be pressure
> rollers, belts, feet etc.?
On a similar note, does any have a solution to firm up rubber that is
just starting to gooify?
I have some joystick feet that are just starting to get sticky.
--
--
tim lindner
"Proper User Policy apparently means Simon Says."
I was skimming the Wikipedia article for tsx-plus, some of it seemed off to
me. Anyone know the facts for sure?
1) They suggest tsxplus generally didn't support more than 8 users
well. At my high school, we had 16 users on it constantly and it seemed to
perform very well. Anyone have experience along those lines?
2) They say LEX-11 (wordprocessing) was included. I don't believe so.
3) They say a spreadsheet program from Saturn Software was included. I
don't think so. Saturn had a wordprocessor, but it was a chargeable product
and I don't think S&H distributed it.
4) They say the latest version of TSX-Plus has TCP/IP support. That's
not true, at least not built in. There was a TCP/IP stack done by a 3rd
party (actually, think it was a person that ported one and put it in a
public contributed library) but that wasn't "included" by S&H.
Do I have those things wrong?
J
Reminds me of a challenge I had in the early 80's The place I worked
made IC test and evaluation systems, starting price in 1980 was around
$300K and many where close to $1.5 million. This one was for IBM. They
were designing a 288K bit ram and one thing they wanted was to be able
to 'see' failed bits as parameters such as supply voltage were
changed. If you looked at the die it was 9 'squares' of i think 128 x
256 ( i think that was the size) cell or bits. The 9 th was for
parity. The memory was read by the system and a 0 or 1 was stored in a
buffer in the system. The system was run by a PDP11/44 the display was
a Tektronix GMA125 with option 42/43. The GMA 125 was the OEM display
used in the 4116, a 25" DVST terminal. Option 42/43 was feed from a
DR11. The 42/43 could be driven in Tek 401x format (that's the same
you still see today when you put your X11 display into Tek mode) which
had a point plotting set of commands.
So one had to read in a loop this external memory which came back in
some long forgotten 16 bits per something mode, calculate the position
of the 'bit' which was in memory block x and position x and y in each
block and either display a dot or plus or something at the respective
location on the CRT. Doing it all in some time IBM wanted it done in
.. loops within loops within loops and finally a test for 1 or 0 and
out the DR11W.
The only way I could get the code to meet IBM speed requirement was to
do the unthinkable. Upon start the inner most work that was test for
'display if zero' or display if one' was modified to be branch of true
or branch if false.
Sometimes you just have to violate all the rules. Other fun things
were using shifting bits and using indexing for some of the coordinate
translations.
oh well when every instruction time made a difference.
it was challenging but fun
-pete
On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 9:56 AM, Bill Sudbrink <wh.sudbrink at verizon.net> wrote:
> I took a peek at the access logs for the Cromemco Dazzler
> files that I recently put up on my web server. I'm
> gratified to see that a lot of people are taking advantage
> of the availability of these documents, that have not
> recently (if ever) been easily available on the web. I
> also see that a lot of people took the Dazzlemation HEX
> file and the Magenta Martini paper tape image, presumably
> to run on Udo Monk's great Windows Cromemco Z1 simulator.
>
> Also, thanks to everyone that generated pdf files for me!
>
> One thing I noticed is that not many people looked at the
> disassembly of Dazzlemation. If you are an 8080 or Z80
> programmer (or any 8-bitter for that matter) I really
> recommend that you take a look, it's a real treat. I'm
> reliably informed that Mr. Dompier hand wrote that program
> LITERALLY (hand, pencil, paper), no editor, no assembler.
> He then toggled it in (or maybe raw keyed it in with a
> primitive ROM monitor) and went through a few iterations of:
>
> 1) store to paper tape
> 2) modify in memory
> 3) test
> 4) go to 1
>
> It's neat to see some of the "tricks" he used and also the
> level of sophistication of the code. It does a lot of
> stuff in not a lot of bytes. Also, here and there, in
> "dead" areas, you can also see the debris of ideas that he
> started and then abandoned.
>
> Bill S.
>
>
>