>>
>> Yes that us true. The T801 had several additional "features" compared to
>> the T805, but instruction wise, it didn't have any of the debugging
>> instructions
>> (plus some additional operators). The T801 was an experimental piece as
far
>
>Were they ever shipped? I know _I've_ got a couple somewhere, but then I
>have some odd Transputer stuff....
Yes they were shipped and ran very well.
They were an updated version of the basic T800 with as you say an
optimised for static ram memory interface ie demultiplexed.
>
>>
>> as I am concerned. The T805 is the top-of-the-line "classic" transputer.
>> And
>> I dont consider the T801 as classic.
>
>Oh, come on. It's closely related to the T800 - the main difference is
>the memory interface. Same link spec, same-ish instruction set, etc.
Is it not identical software wise ?
Mine are....or seem to be ;-)
>
>I can understand not calling the T9000 a 'classic Transputer' -- it's
>very different to the T2/T4/T8 range. But the T801? No, I have to group
>that one with the other T8's
>
>-tony
The T9 is maybe not a classic Transputer but the ones that work run
ok !
Using a little board (size 2) on a B008 you can get em to talk to
"classic" Trannies
Kenny
>
>
What irritates me is that I, who have practiced in this industry for many
years as an outgrowth of my hobby, which this was until about twenty years
ago, since most of my earnings were in a different engineering discipline up
to that time, recognize the skinflint syndrome among hobbyists more than I
ever did before.
Those same individuals who lament that vendors won't "document" their
products enough to allow their repair (long after their projected economic
life, measured in seconds, not years, has ended twice over) because they
(these hobbyists) have no respect for the intellectual property rights of
equipment and software vendors, to wit, they use software they "borrowed"
and never buy even their most frequently used software tools claiming that
"better" stuff is "free" by which they mean it didn't cost THEM anything.
They make excuse after excuse for not parting with a dime, yet see it
perfectly satisfactory to spend a man-year avoiding an expenditure not much
larger than the price of a common lunch on hardware or software. While it's
their choice about how they spend their time, if they valued their time
because it was of economic value, they'd better understand the situation.
The fact is, not everyone wishes to run old and obsolete hardware/software
exclusively, and not everyone is, therefore, in the position that they have
to fix something because they can't buy one. That's what thrift stores are
for, or even used computer gadget stores.
There's no benefit in delaying one's use, for enjoyment or exploitation, of
a given piece of equipment just because it costs half a dollar to buy what
might take only a year to fix.
In cases where my objective is to use something, I don't spend a year fixing
a part if a half hour's wages will buy a replacement.
Just to let you know my heart's in the right place, though, I've spent
dozens, if not hundreds of hours fixing those 8" floppy drives I'm
essentially giving away for the cost of freight.
Nevertheless, I believe that more often than not, penny-wise is
pound-foolish.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Glenatacme(a)aol.com <Glenatacme(a)aol.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 10:22 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>In a message dated 7/20/99 9:58:39 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
edick(a)idcomm.com
>writes:
>
>> What the computer industry is about is MAKING MONEY. It's good that
there
>> are some people working in the industry who realize that it's about
GETTING
>> PAID, and not so much about having fun.
>
>For those of us who are both computer professionals and hobbyists the trick
>is making enough money to be able to have fun with our hobby ;>)
>
>Glen Goodwin
>0/0
I have some of the data/notes on this card but no s/ware as yet.
My first experiences with transputers was designing and building
a T222 board with 64K (wow) and a Z80 interface.
Hmmm I seem to remember I got it working but did not do a
fantastic amount with it.
Got a few T414's then started to play with designing for them
and Z80's, bit sad really.
I finally got a B430 to try and devlop a SCSI/Floppy/IDE interface
board. It sort of got sidelined.
Now I've got some T9's (working) some B108's and a T9 to "classic"
transputer interface board based on a C100. This should be fun.
Ram tells me that you have a B020 board, I also have one
unfortunately I don't have any data/drawings etc for it but you
do ;-) Is it possible for you to let me have a look at it ??
Kenny
>>
>> It is the GPIB library.
>> I have a B419 that I want to test as I don't know what
>
>As do I....
>
>> state it is in.
>> If/when I get a copy you will get one too.
>> Who is Tony ?
>
>'Tony' is almost certainly me. I've worked with transputers, have a
>number of TRAMs/motherboards, ISA cards, an ITEM, etc here.
>
>I spent 5 years at Bristol University working on homebrew (wirewrapped,
>by me) transputer systems. For this I get a piece of paper saying that
>I'm a particle physicsist :-). Since I worked mostly with bare chips, I
>must admit that I've not done that much with the standard TRAMs.
>
>-tony
>
>
Hey! I've got one of those old Burroughs Adding machines, but it's the type
with the printer. I bought it at a flea market for $1. Does anyone know
where to get a crank for one? Mine needs a crank (although right now a
vice-grip is working...)
ThAnX,
///--->>>
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
-----Original Message-----
From: Max Eskin <max82(a)surfree.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Sunday, July 18, 1999 2:05 PM
Subject: anyone want a Burroughs adding machine?
>Hi,
>I've got a Burroughs Class 5 adding machine here, which I am almost
>finished repairing. It has 10 drums of numbers, and 9 rows of buttons
>numbered from 1 to 9. One presses these buttons in order to add, and the
>result is shown on the drums. There is a picture at:
>
> http://www.teleport.com/~dgh/adddir.htm
>
>If anyone wants this thing, please tell me. It's not very heavy. Maybe you
>can show it off at your VCF, Sellam?
>
>--Max Eskin (max82(a)surfree.com)
> http://scivault.hypermart.net: Ignorance is Impotence - Knowledge is
Power
>
>
It actually depends...
I have a computer cooked up (with a $45 video card) to a 25" color TV. It
works pretty good (from about 5-10 feet away.
///--->>>
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 3:21 PM
Subject: Computers using a TV as the display
>I happened to notice an advert in a UK newspaper today.
>
>Apparently some company (related to Tiny Computers I believe) is offering
>a free PC if you use them as your telephone company and make a certain
>value of calls in each of the first 12 months (the details are not
>important).
>
>However, in the small print it says something like (from memory)
>
>'The PC is not supplied with a monitor. However the necessary
>cables/connections to use your TV as a display are included'
>
>So it appears that using a TV as a computer display is alive and well in
>the UK. Mind you, IMHO trying to view Windows (and I am sure that's the
>OS that came with this machine) on the average TV screen would make it
>even more unpleasant than usual.
>
>-tony
>
>
Hi,
I decided to get rid of 90% of the 'classic' crud lying around my room,
since I never touch it anymore. Here is the first installment of stuff
which I will ship out to people for the price plus shipping.
Mac Portable w/backlit display and manuals; perfect condition -$10
1200 bps Hayes external modem for use with Macintosh (docs included)- just
shipping
Apple //c in working condition w/power brick and "Owner's Manual"- $5
Tandon 386 laptop in working condition but power supply is a bit flaky.
This is the first laptop to have suspend/resume function; has 1200 bps
modem; I also have another one which is dead, you can use it for
spare parts - $15
Data General serving tray from 1983 (has a timeline of DG's history with
some photos) - $3
Kensington System Saver for Apple ][ (the little fan that hooks on the
side) - $3
C-64 Koala Pad, with software (if I can find it) $3
Epson "APL Board" printer controller for Apple ][ - just shipping
Apple "I/O Controller" for Apple ][ - just shipping
Digital Research CP/M card w/manuals and disks for Apple ][ - $3
Apple "Language Card" - just shipping
Videx video card for Apple ][ - just shipping
QuadRam QuadBoard for PC/XT - just shipping
Hayes 1200 bps modem for ISA - just shipping
IBM CGA card for ISA - just shipping
ESDI Hard Disk Controller for MCA - just shipping
If nobody wants these, they will meet a fate crueller than death (think
desoldering tool :)
--Max Eskin (max82(a)surfree.com)
http://scivault.hypermart.net: Ignorance is Impotence - Knowledge is Power
It is the GPIB library.
I have a B419 that I want to test as I don't know what
state it is in.
If/when I get a copy you will get one too.
Who is Tony ?
What are you using to run/compile/edit the B020 CVC stuff ?
K
At 03:33 PM 7/21/99 -0400, you wrote:
>Kenny Innes wrote:
>
>> Transputer Software.
>>
>> Does anyone out there have a copy of the IMS F001B and/or
>> the IMS F003A libraries for the Transputer ??
>
>Hi Kenny,
>
>The IMS F003A will not work on the B020 (so I am told).
>It was never ported to the B020. The best thing to do is to use the
>CVC kit I gave you. What is the IMS F001 used for (is it the GPIB
>libraries or the ethernet libraries)? Well, anyway, shoot over a
>copy to me if you do find these as I know Tony would be anxious
>about these.
>
>Ram
>
>
>--
>
> ,,,,
> /'^'\
> ( o o )
> -oOOO--(_)--OOOo-------------------------------------
>| Ram Meenakshisundaram
>| Senior Software Engineer
>| OpenLink Financial Inc
>| .oooO Phone: (516) 227-6600 x267
>| ( ) Oooo. Email: rmeenaks(a)olf.com
> ---\ (----( )--------------------------------------
> \_) ) /
> (_/
>
>
>
>
<If I were you, I would buy one B008 motherboard, it holds 10 size 1
<TRAMS (transputer modules). Then, I would buy the IMSB426 size 1 trams
<which contains 4Megs per processor. The T805 is the top-of-the-line
<"classic" transputer (forget about the ST20450 and the T9000
<transputers,
<they were failures). This would give you plenty of space to play with.
<Of
<course you can fill up the whole motherboard with 10 size-1 trams
<(giving you 10 processors) or use size-2 trams which take up two slots
<in the motherboard. The T800 is an older fabrication of the T805 and
After much snippage...
Huh?
I'm not familiar with Transputers at all. for my interests one or two are
likely enough and even then.
Allison
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 2:00 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>>
>> What irritates me is that I, who have practiced in this industry for many
>> years as an outgrowth of my hobby, which this was until about twenty
years
>> ago, since most of my earnings were in a different engineering discipline
up
>> to that time, recognize the skinflint syndrome among hobbyists more than
I
>> ever did before.
>
>I am trying to work out what the heck you're doing on classiccmp, since
>your views seem so different to the general idea of the group.
>
>FWIW, yes I am frugal. I'll admit to that. This doesn't make me dishonest
>or a criminal. It doesn't mean I'm an idiot. It just means that for some
>strange reason I prefer using properly made devices (rather than the crap
>down the local PC shop), and that I prefer to keep things running rather
>than to further polute this planet. You can do what you like...
>
>>
>> Those same individuals who lament that vendors won't "document" their
>> products enough to allow their repair (long after their projected
economic
>
>Maybe you're happy with sending a perfectly good device to the landfill
>for want of a few pence in parts. I am not. For that reason I certainly
>moan when manufacturers won't provide proper repair documentation/parts
>(and so far, all you've provided is bogus reasons why they don't).
>
>> life, measured in seconds, not years, has ended twice over) because they
>> (these hobbyists) have no respect for the intellectual property rights of
>> equipment and software vendors, to wit, they use software they "borrowed"
>
>You are lucky I am generally a 'nice guy', or I'd have you in court
>under whichever of libel or slander applies to mailing lists. FWIW I am
>using a totally free OS/tools on this PC. Covered by the GNU license. I
>haven't ripped it off from anywhere. I have a SCO license for PDP11 unix.
>I've got originals of OS-9, TRS-DOS, Apple DOS 3.3, etc, etc, etc. I
>don't make a habit of stealing things.
>
PLEASE! I didn't mean to imply that you are dishonest, or any other
negative thing. I was thinking about someone completely different when I
made the remarks to which I think you are reacting. He does say many of the
same things as you, but for entirely different reasons. I meant no personal
reference to you except in the sense that you do often point to the expense
of a given item. We're all concerned about that to some extent.
You've made your position abundantly clear many times, and, while I don't
share your views in all cases, I understand what you are saying. The only
point of disagreement, in this case, is that the fellow who wants to USE the
SONY monitor he already has, apparently in working condition, has not
indicated he wants to use it in a restoration project, nor does he
apparently want to make any other sort of project of it. Instead he wants
to use it because he already owns it. I wanted to offer a simple and QUICK
way to get there, starting with how to determine whether he can get there at
all with what he's got.
It pains me too to have to toss something because it's taking up valuable
space and I haven't time to fix it before the space is needed. I would
never have ended up in this discussion if I didn't feel it important to
continue to use resources rather than to discard them the moment they become
unfashionable. The way I got here was by trying to give away a bunch of
aging computer hardware which has gotten too space-consuming to warrant my
keeping it. My own evenings and weekends are spent on trying to take a
dozen or so 8" floppy drives and ship them out to people in condition
suitable for their use, since most of them don't have the equipment or the
experience to adjust them to nominal specifications. If I didn't care about
preserving the usefulness of this old hardware, I'd just take off the
boards, unscrew the steel, and collect about $8 per drive as scrap aluminum.
That's certainly more than I get by fixing them and shipping them.
I had no intention of giving any offense with the remarks I made. They were
certainly not directed at you. There are people who will pinch software or
other easily appropriated intellectual property, and they've always been
among us, and probably always will be. I don't believe in making things any
easier than necessary for them.
>
>> and never buy even their most frequently used software tools claiming
that
>> "better" stuff is "free" by which they mean it didn't cost THEM anything.
>
>You're dead right it didn't cost me anything. Now read the GNU Public
>License to find out why.
>
I have read that document and certainly hope they're able to uphold it under
the current commercial trend in the LINUX community.
>
>>
>> They make excuse after excuse for not parting with a dime, yet see it
>> perfectly satisfactory to spend a man-year avoiding an expenditure not
much
>
>Perhaps you could explain what's wrong with learning to do things
>youself. Particularly as few other people seem to be able to do them. In
>general when I've had dealing with other people to do computing tasks,
>the result has been a mess that has taken longer than it would have taken
>me to do it in the first place.
>
There's nothing wrong with pursuing a project for self-education. It's just
not what I perceived the goal in this instance to be.
>
>That's why I've learnt to do so many things myself. It's the same story
>time and time again. I have something that's broken. The so-called
>service agents want to charge me an arm and a leg to so-say repair it (==
>swap random parts until it seems to work). So instead I take it to bits,
>_make_ new parts, get it working, and then attempt to share my knowledge
>with others. And amazingly so many of these so-called 'skilled jobs' that
>should only be attempted by trained professsionals turn out to be dead
>easy to do with the tools I have here.
>
>> larger than the price of a common lunch on hardware or software. While
it's
>> their choice about how they spend their time, if they valued their time
>> because it was of economic value, they'd better understand the situation.
>
>I don't value my time because nobody else values my time :-(. If I wasn't
>fixing old computers, what would I be doing? Watching TV???
>
Frankly, it's curious that you have no commercial application for your
talents. I know a few fellows who claim to know quite a bit about hardware,
software, etc, but who have problems with taking direction, reporting to
work on a schedule, adhering to a schedule in general, and solving the
problem at hand instead of some other related and more interesting problem.
>
>>
>> The fact is, not everyone wishes to run old and obsolete
hardware/software
>> exclusively, and not everyone is, therefore, in the position that they
have
>
>No, but I thought most people on Classiccmp had some interest in old
>computer repair/restoration. Obviously I am wrong (as usual). So the
>simple solution is for me to unsubscribe from the list.
>
Based on what you've said, that would probably be a mistake, but different
people will have different views on what aspect of repair/restoration is of
interest. In the current case, repair and restoration were not the issue.
Seamlessly adapting a fixed-frequency monitor to a multi-sync environment is
the issue. That's probably somewhat off-topic, since it doesn't really deal
with the classic hardware at all. However, since the monitor is "old" and
the problem is old as well, it popped up.
>
>> to fix something because they can't buy one. That's what thrift stores
are
>> for, or even used computer gadget stores.
>
>It's different in the UK. Many charity shops (thrift stores) don't sell
>electrical stuff at all, since all second-hand electrical stuff has to be
>safety tested. The second-hand computer shops that I know about tend to
>sell working stuff not much cheaper than buying it new. So I generally
>dig in the 'untested, spares or repair' bins and get an assortment of
>bits that I know I can fix.
>
I'm unprepared to comment on the situation in the UK, but, since the
individual who initiated this thread is in the UK, perhaps you could contact
him and determine whether he wants a fix or whether he wants an education.
>
>-tony
>
Hello,
I've followed the instructions to the letter for how to netboot a
VAXstation, and stuff happens, but it doesn't seem to do anything..
I turn the VAX on, and break it to the console, and type 'b/100
esa0'. Everything is up and running on my Linux box across the room,
and mopd reports activity. I see this on my console:
[root@kadath fs]# mopd -a -d
mopd: not running as daemon, -d given.
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP DL 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:1:0:0 len 18 code 08 RPR
MOP DL 0:40:5:5e:df:71 > 8:0:2b:12:84:6b len 1 code 03 ASV
MOP RC 8:0:2b:12:84:6b > ab:0:0:2:0:0 len 54 code 07 SID
This repeats ad nauseum, every 5 minutes or so. This appears in my
syslogs:
Jul 21 19:07:20 kadath mopd[12768]: mopd 2.5.3 started.
Jul 21 19:07:20 kadath mopd[12768]: Initialized eth0
Jul 21 19:07:20 kadath kernel: mopd uses obsolete (PF_INET,SOCK_PACKET)
Jul 21 19:09:53 kadath mopd[12768]: 8:0:2b:11:12:92 (1) Do you have
MOPBOOT? (Yes)
Jul 21 19:10:35 kadath last message repeated 3 times
...and so on. So, my box is seeing request from the VAX, but nothing
happens on the VAX screen. It simply hangs at '-ESA0'. Any idea what's up?
Did I miss some critical step in my massive ignorance? Help would be
greatly appreciated. :)
Thanks.
_______________________________________________________________
Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com
Anyone know how to get into the setup on a Honeywell/Bull HDS-5 terminal?
I need to get in and configure the connection so it can be used for an
application other than paper weight. :)
_____________________________________________
Free email with personality! Over 200 domains!
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>
> > I saw a hardcover book from 1957 at the used bookstore, that discussed
> > digital computer circuits, and had chapters on vacuum tube logic circuits,
> > corememory circuits, some transistor circuits, etc. If this is something
> > that someone here is dieing to have, perhaps because you're designing
> > a vacuum tube computer circuit, just let me know and i'll try to get it
> > before someone else does ;)
>
> In fact, my plan is to build a tube computer someday soon. What was the
> title of the book, and how much was it selling for?
>
Well, several people have asked about this book. Its "Digital Computer
components & circuits" by R. K. Richards, 1957, reprinted 1958. He says
its a companion book to his "arithmetic Operations in Digital Computers",
which the bookstore also has, but thats just a general boolean-logic type
of book.
Anyways, the used bookstore wants $15 for it. Perhaps I should see about
photocopying this.
chapters:
1 History & Introduction
2 Diode switching circuits
3 Vacuum tube systems of circuit logic
4 Transistor systems of circuit logic
5 magnetic core systems of circuit logic
6 Large capacity storage: non-magnetic devices
7 Storage on a magnetic surface
8 Magnetic core storage
9 Circuits and tubes for decimal counting
10 Miscellaneous components and circuits
11 Analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters
-Lawrence LeMay
Today I hit the jackpot and got a van load of items for only $10 at the
yard. I got Mac's (7) and Powerbooks (2) done 10 years old yet, Next Station
and Next laser printer, two other laser by HP, Inkjets (2), and the best was
SiliconGraphics Indy. I only got the missing the KB, mouse, memory, and
Monitor. I looked at SG's site and they still sell this unit for $2500.
All and all a good day for collecting. John
Hi,
I walked into Radio Shack today, and was delighted to see a row of posters
on their wall with photos of old Radio Shack stores and equipment from the
beginning of the chain to now. They mentioned that the TRS Model 100 was
'the first laptop in the industry'. Is this even marginally true?
--Max Eskin (max82(a)surfree.com)
http://scivault.hypermart.net: Ignorance is Impotence - Knowledge is Power
Does anyone know the approximate value of a TRS-80 MC-10 computer with 4k
RAM, in good condition?
Also, does anyone have any pictures of one?
ThAnX,
///--->>>
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
Dang, Dang, Dang!!!
These 13+ hour days really make me lose my mind!
Sorry, all!
"Merch"
--
Roger "Merch" Merchberger --- sysadmin, Iceberg Computers
Recycling is good, right??? Ok, so I'll recycle an old .sig.
If at first you don't succeed, nuclear warhead
disarmament should *not* be your first career choice.
plz see embedded remarks below.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 2:00 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>> >No normal VGA card (I am not talking about the special ones designed to
>> >work with sync-on-green monitors) has the hardware for sync-on-green. So
>> >programming the card, however you do it, won't produce a sync-on-green
>> >output. That is what your resistor mod is for - to stick sync pulses (I
>> >wouldn't have thought they met the specs either...) on the green signal.
>> >
>> I seem to recall that several of the Brooktree DAC's, almost excusively
<snip>
>> the DAC pins, had the ability to impose negative sync on the green video
as
>> well.
>
>Since monitor video inputs are almost always AC coupled (at least on real
>monitors), you don't need to be able to generate a -ve output.
>
>If you want to use the DAC for this, then either you need to use up part
>of the range of the DAC for the sync pulse (which will reduce the number
>of colours you can get), and find a way of loading the right values into
>the DAC during the sync pulse time, or you need to fiddle the bias
>votlages at that time. Either way it's a pain.
>
I've got a couple of Philips workstation monitors and one from DEC which
aren't AC-coupled, or at least don't tolerate the resistor bias trick I
mentioned before.
>
>But adding an external sync mixer is a lot easier. Using separate syncs
>is easier still.
>
The advantage to using the resistor from composite blanking is that the
frequencies, albeit not the pulse widths, are correct.
>
>> Multiple encounters with this particular task have taught me that this
>> entails a >1K-hour involvement for a specialist who has experience and
all
>> the precise specifications at his disposal, including the unpublished
ones.
>> I have no idea how long it would take someone who knows little about
>> graphics and less about the undocumented features of the display
controller
>> LSI.
>
>Never underestimate what hobbyists can and will do. It may suprise you,
>but often a good hobbyist can easily outperform many so-called
professionals.
>
That's true, but in this case, we're looking for a solution, not an amusing
problem.
>
>I am not suggesting that reprogramming an SVGA card is a good idea if you
>know _nothing_ about video - although you will surely know a lot about
>video by the time you've done it. Just that it's certainly possible.
>
>> >At VHF you may well have problems if you try to make it on stripboard.
>> >Dead-bugging would work. A proper double-sided PCB with a ground plane
>> >would be even better. Decoupling is going to be very important.
>> >
>> >Compare that to inverting a 64kHz signal (less than 1 thousandth of the
>> >frequency) with a 74LS04. You can stick that on stripboard, tag a 0.1uF
>> >capacitor across the power lines for decoupling and expect it to work
>> >first time.
>> >
>> With orderly and precise assembly techniques, the little circuit I
recommend
>> and use will work every time. The transistors are spec'd to 500 MHz and
the
>
>I don't dispute that at all. But RF (and this most certainly is RF)
>circuit construction _is_ an art that not everybody has experience of.
>There is a a lot more to RF construction than components that happen to
>have suitable specs.
>
>There is a well known myth in electronics. It goes like this : Resistors
>have resistance, capacitors have capacitance, inductors have inductance.
>It reality, all components have all 3 properties. So do pieces of wire.
>And while I'll believe in wires without resistance, to have them without
>inductance or capacitance would involve major changes to the laws of
>physics.
>
>So, in fact, you might find that your nice little electrolytic capacitor
>has a very high impedance at 100MHz due to its self-inductance. Not what
>a beginner would expect at all.
>
>Now, all this is 'old hat' to anyone who's done a lot of RF work (high
>speed digital electronics is most certainly RF, BTW). But I've seen
>plenty of so-called designers who have made a mess of it.
>
>I'd have no worries in building this (I've worked considerably faster,
>many, many times).
>
>> >But if the card already supports something near the right rates, it's
>> >worth giving it a go. Maybe the card supports 1024 lines at 60Hz
>> >vertical. Your monitor uses 52Hz vertical (I've seen monitors that have
>> >that, for some odd reason), also at 1024 lines displayed. You probably
>> >could reprogram the card to do that.
>> >
>> I keep forgetting that a major part of the world doesn't use 60 Hz.
!!! )
>
>It's not that at all (FWIW a lot of machines over here do use 60Hz
>vertical rates, or whatever is used in the rest of the world). The reason
>some workstation monitors used strange scan rates was precisely the
>reason you mentioned earlier - the DACs weren't fast enough, so they had
>to slow everything down to get the number of pixels/line that they wanted.
>
>> This means that you have to do your own arithmetic. I've designed and
>
>Which is not hard, provided you remember that #displayed line != #total
>lines and #horizontal displayed pixels != #equivalent pixels/line. There
>are blnking intervals to consider...
>
>> >At these sorts of frequencies it's worth taking care with the layout,
>> >decoupling, etc. After all, ghosting on green (only) is going to look
>> >terrible. I am not saying it can't work. It can. I would also claim that
>> >you could have problems with it.
>> >
>> You'll see it's dirt simple to build one of these that works fine because
>> the switching speed is relatively leisurely, though the Brooktree folks
>> spec'd a 1/2 GHz transistor array. The one I used is spec'd faster than
the
>> CA3227. Like I wrote above, it's likely a 100 KHz version would work
since
>> all it switches is the sync.
>
>Sure.. But none-the-less you are working with a 100MHz video signal, even
>if only to resistively mix it with the sync pulses. And that's where
>problems _could_ start.
>
The combiner is only active well into the blanking cycle. Before the
blanking cycle, and I'm referring to my 5-transistor/2-diode green+sync
combiner, the circuit draws its constant current from ground through one
side of the dif-amp. When sync goes active, it switches to the other side,
which draws current from green video and sinks it into a mirror-controlled
constant current sink. That's why the negative voltage is needed. That
way, the circuit is essentially passive except during blanking. The only
connection to GREEN is through the collector of one of the transistors in
the dif-amp, which is in cutoff when sync is inactive. I admit it may have
imperfections, but it's served many of us well for many years. What's more,
it's easy to build, since the transistor array is a package which serves as
a platform for the diodes and resistors.
>
>> >You seem to think of everything in terms of money. You are totally
>> >forgetting that (a) you'll learn a lot from doing this (or are you in
>> >favour of knowing nothing and letting everybody else do the work). (b)
>> >that some people enjoy doing this sort of thing. (c) that the 20"
monitor
>> >from the PC shop is most likely a cheap/poor design which gives a
>> >marginal picture even when new. That Sony looks like a good design from
>> >the schematics.
>> >
>> . . . and you're assuming that, perhaps like you when you started this
>> stuff, one knows nothing about this stuff. The third time you do this
job
>
>I am not sure I follow you. Of course I knew nothing when I started, but
>I learnt it pretty quickly. And I've used knowledge gained from doing
>things like this to solve problems elsewhere.
>
That wasn't my point at all. I know from your previous writings that you
are a devoted hobbyist and you enjoy very much tinkering with things that
perhaps don't work quite as you'd like in order to learn how to make them do
what you do like. The guy who started this thread, however, at least in my
perception, was concerned about how to get some utility from a very heavy
and difficult to ship monitor he already owns and is unlikely to move
without considerable expense/effort on his part. What I tried to do is find
him a quick and easy, perhaps quick-and-dirty, solution to his particular
difficulty which probably involved a tradeoff between utility, economic
conservation, and space. My solution may not be THE solution, but it's
worked for me and others, so I thought it might work for him as well.
>
>The sure way to learn something is to do it. You can read all the books
>you like, and you _won't_ get the full story.
>
>
>> I remember the monitors we bought for $30K each back in the mid-'80's,
which
>> are comparable in the most superficial way to this GDM1950. The 20"
>> monitors down at the discount have everything superior in almost every
way
>> to the SONY except for the tube. The ones with a SONY tube cost $500
>
>Have you sat down with the schematics and compared them? Looked at build
>quality? Looked at the specs they're supposed to meet for things like
>corner convergence? You'd be amazed.
>
>I've got a PC monitor on my bench at the moment. The fault is an
>open-circuit horizontal driver transformer (not the flyback). Now this
>transformer handles almost no power. There is no other fault that would
>cause it to burn out. No, the reason it failed is that the wire was
>damaged when it was wound (I have unwound it, you see, as I intend to
>rewind it). That's the sort of thing you get on cheap monitors.
>
>> >You seem to be of the opinion that it's not worth learning how to do
>> >something if somebody else (doesn't matter who or where) can do it for
>> >you. This is a strange attitude for a hobby. It also probably explains
>> >the state the computer industry has got into.
>> >
>> Well, if it's an industry, it's not a hobby to everyone, and the state
it's
>> gotten into is PROFITABLE, which means it will be around a while longer.
>
>Profitable != it will be around, alas. Not in this case. What has
>happened is that companies are making a lot of money selling the same old
>stuff. Just finding ways to cheapen it. There is next to no inovation
>going on any more, at least not in the UK.
>
>Oh, there'll still be companies selling computers/software. Whether
>anybody will still be designing them is another matter...
>
>> >Sometime in the future I intend to make a mechanical clock. The
necessary
>> >tools are certainly not cheap. And it's going to cost me around \pounds
>> >100 for the metal, etc to do it. The result will be less accurate than a
>> >\pounds 5.00 quartz clock. So what!
>> >
>> Well, some of us already know enough about how a mechanical clock works
and
>
>Have you made one?
>
>Sure it's trivial to 'count a train' (work out the number of teeth on the
>gears in a clock). Any schoolkid could do that. What is a lot less
>trivial is to make an escapement that runs, carries on running, and keeps
>good time.
>
>There are other things that seem wrong until you've done them, as well.
>Most people think that the holes in clock plates are cylindrical.
>They're not. They're conical - the pivots run essentially on an edge.
>There is a lot of 'slop' when you put a pivot into just one of the
>plates. That's how it should be. A clock with cylindrical holes will
>almost certainly stop at once.
>
>> even how to build one. Of course that's not everybody's goal, but . . .
>
>I don't beleive anyone can claim they can do something until they've
>actually done it. In this case, by taking a piece of sheet brass and a
>length of steel rod and actually making a clock.
>
>-tony
>
<Someone who is very experienced has suggested doing a bulk erase
<on a TK50 tape and using it in a TK70 tape drive! Has anyone
<ever done so and what happened?
Ah, I believe TK50 and TK70 tape is different media (magnetics). That is
why the TK70 can only read TK50 formats.
<I want to decide if a TK70 is the drive for doing backups? It is
<more than twice as fast as a TK50 and the capacity is about
<4 times when a TK70 is used. Also, the "/VERIFY:ONLY"
<switch in BUP works very well taking less than double the
<time as a straight RESTORE.
This is a no brainer, TK70 is better. By then the technology is more
mature and fewer tapes will be needed to backup a large disk.
Allison
From: allisonp(a)world.std.com (Allison J Parent)
> Ah, I believe TK50 and TK70 tape is different media (magnetics). That
> is why the TK70 can only read TK50 formats.
The number of tracks is different, with more on the TK70 than on the
TK50 (not surprisingly). When a TK70 drive tries to read a TK50 tape,
it's easy enough to center a smaller (TK70) read head on a larger (TK50)
track. It is far more difficult (that is, practically impossible) for
the smaller write head to write a track which covers the larger track
well enough to satisfy the larger read head. _This_ is why a TK70 drive
can not write a tape which can be read by a TK50 drive.
The magnetic properties of the tapes may or may not be different. My
experience suggests that they're close enough. (Of course, also I've
used HD floppies as DD by taping over the hole, again, with no
problems. Please, let's not start that discussion here.) Regardless,
it's the difference in track configuration which is the fundamental
source of the problem. The same argument applies similarly to QIC tape
drives of various densities.
If anyone actually _knows_ about the magnetic properties of the two
types of tapes, I'd be pleased to learn of the differences, if any. I
could live happliy without additional uninformed speculation.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steven M. Schweda (+1) 651-645-9249 (voice, home)
1630 Marshall Avenue #8 (+1) 612-754-2636 (voice, work)
Saint Paul MN 55104-6225 (+1) 612-754-6302 (facsimile, work)
sms(a)antinode.org sms(a)provis.com (work)
Your assessment that the display is more or less TERRIBLE when using a TV
with WINDOWS is correct. My WinBook provides NTSC video output on demand,
ostensibly for when you're away from home and your docking station/port
expander, and want to use a BIG display. It's pretty sorry looking!
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 4:26 PM
Subject: Computers using a TV as the display
>I happened to notice an advert in a UK newspaper today.
>
>Apparently some company (related to Tiny Computers I believe) is offering
>a free PC if you use them as your telephone company and make a certain
>value of calls in each of the first 12 months (the details are not
>important).
>
>However, in the small print it says something like (from memory)
>
>'The PC is not supplied with a monitor. However the necessary
>cables/connections to use your TV as a display are included'
>
>So it appears that using a TV as a computer display is alive and well in
>the UK. Mind you, IMHO trying to view Windows (and I am sure that's the
>OS that came with this machine) on the average TV screen would make it
>even more unpleasant than usual.
>
>-tony
>
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 4:24 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>>
>> OK . . . I admit it . . . I'm off topic getting into attitudes, etc. I
>> agree that there are times when it's certainly better to fix something
than
>
>You're righht. This thread has drifted too far...
>
<snip>
>
>Oh well. I guess some of us do think there were better machines than the
>PC :-)
>
The question is really not one of better, just of convenience.
>
>-tony
>
I agree, the sony mavica is a great camera for $500! the built-in floppy
drive makes it so convenient to save files and the picture quality is really
good. my brother had one and used it to take pictures for my computer
collection site.
In a message dated 7/13/99 9:51:27 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
rigdonj(a)intellistar.net writes:
> Lawrence,
>
> I've been using a Sony Mavica 81 and I LOVE it! I has 1024 x 768
> resolution and a 3X **** Optical***** zoom. Many of the cameras out there
> use a digital zoom That just blows up a portion of your image and you get
> a bigger picture but lower resolution. A digital zoom is worthless IMHO.
> I've been able to focus in on lots of circuit boards and the like with the
> Sony without having a Macro capability. Take a look at
> "http://www.intellistar.net/~rigdonj/don-ad.htm". There are links there to
> several pictures that I took with the Sony. This were just a quick and
> dirty web page for a friend of mine to advertise his stuff and I didn't
> take much care to get the best possible picture. Also you should be aware
> that ALL the current cameras except the Sonys require Windozes 95 or 98
> just to download your pictures to a PC. The Sonys use 3.5" floppy disk in
> the camera and save the pictures as standard JPEG files.
>
> Joe
OK . . . I admit it . . . I'm off topic getting into attitudes, etc. I
agree that there are times when it's certainly better to fix something than
to buy a new one. With the classic computers, that's not an option, and for
TONY, the hobbyist, it's not an option either because it's what he loves to
do. The question originated about how a guy who has an ostensibly
functional fixed-frequency monitor too heavy to ship without going into
debt, could possibly squeeze a bit of usefulness out of it, and I felt that
since this isn't a fix but rather a hack that's called for, the simplest and
lowest cost hack would probably serve the purpose the best. I know how long
it takes to work through someone else's object code trying to figure out how
an undocumented LSI works. It just seemed to me that rather than spending
kilobucks' worth of time, since that's not what the originator of the
question defined as "fun," primarily, it would be easier to buy a second
hand board, already capable of doing what he needs done, use it with the A/B
switch he indicated he wanted to use in order to put a normal vga monitor in
use when the scan rate was wrong.
What I proposed was simply what I perceived to be the shortest path to the
solution sought after in this particular case.
The last time I mentioned something like this, i.e. application of a SUN
monitor to a PC, someone jumped me for suggesting a way to do that,
insisting that the only REAL way to do justice to the monitor was to get
some SUN equipment to use with it. I thought that was a bit off the mark
too.
It confuses me when people complain on one hand about the COST of a given
solution, yet are perfectly willing to spend hundreds of hours which, if
spent shining shoes, would solve the problem a dozen times over. I
understand that there are people who are happy when something breaks, so
they can fix it. I am not one of them, however.
Please accept my apologies for presenting my position in a narrow way, but,
in the spirit of looking at the "big picture" it's wise to keep in mind that
some people want to tinker while others merely want to play.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Yakowenko <yakowenk(a)cs.unc.edu>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 1999 12:36 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>From: yakowenk(a)csx.unxc.edu (remove x's)
>
>On Tue, 20 Jul 1999, "Richard Erlacher" wrote:
>] Well, if it's an industry, it's not a hoby to everyone, and the state
it's
>] gotten into is PROFITABLE, which means it will be around a while longer.
>] ...
>] I guess if you only want to do what people did 20 years
>] ago, then fixing stuff isn't a priority, since it will be much more of an
>] antique once you get it fixed. I always figured it's good to know what
is
>] happening out there now. That's particularly true since that's how I
intend
>] to continue making my living.
>]
>] What the computer industry is about is MAKING MONEY. It's good that
there
>] are some people working in the industry who realize that it's about
GETTING
>] PAID, and not so much about having fun.
>
>I think maybe you have a little case of tunnel-vision here. The goal
>is not just "get a working monitor". And "$MAKE MONEY FAST$" is not
>even vaguely a part of the equation. The bottom line is that he wants
>to fix it, and there definitely are benefits to doing that. The financial
>bottom line may not show them, but they are there. Those dollar signs
>on the bottom line don't show the whole quality-of-life picture, just
>one aspect of it.
>
>Zoom out and look at the whole picture. Having dollars in your pocket
>are certainly a good thing. But having toxic waste buried everywhere
>is not. Having megacorporations trampling civil rights is not. Having
>bored geeks is not. Having people who don't understand the world they
>live in, but vote about it anyway, is not. These things may not all
>be connected to Tony's monitor, but they are all results of seeing only
>the financial bottom line. Somebody makes a big profit in causing each
>of those things. Money in their pocket; crap for the rest of the world.
>Keep that in mind, and think about everything that is affected by the
>decision of repair vs. buy new: where the physical material goes, where
>the money goes, whose mental states are changed and in what ways, etc..
>Then, repairing an old monitor instead of buying a new cheap one makes
>a lot more sense. You don't enjoy it yourself, fine, for you the
>holistic bottom line is still a no-go. For others it can go positive.
>
>So lets not have any more "your hobby is a waste of time" talk, OK?
>Especially when that hobby is the raison-d'etre for this list.
>
>Okay, end of rant.
>
> Bill.
>
Hi,
>The software is called gPhoto....
Thanks, I'll go take a look at their web site.
TTFN - Pete.
--
Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk | www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
--
Hi Richard,
>if the monitor is one of the SONY GDM1950 types, you can adapt
>a1280x1024-capable display....
I think I'd have to dismantle the thing to figure out the type since the sticky
labels identifying it have long since shrivelled and disappeared.
I did consider modifying it for use on my PC but, to be honest, the thing is
way too big for my uses so I just want rid of it.
TTFN - Pete.
--
Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk | www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
--
Have a look below, plz.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 1:05 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>> The Sony GDM1950 designation is strange. Yours was a Sun, mine is a
SuperMac
>> and in searching the net I also found references to a Radius version,
whom I
>
>That monitor was used/badged by a lot of companies. There have been other
>common workstation monitors as well - Hitachi made one (HM4119), KME made
>a number of monochrome ones that turn up on all sorts of UK machines,
>etc. Very few companies designed and built their own monitors.
>
>> had thought manufactured their own monitors. There seem to be 19-21"
versions
>> and now I find also 3 and 5 BNC editions. Makes finding specs difficult.
I
>> found this reference in the Sync on green FAQ :
>>
>> "For example, a STORM 1280/256 will drive a Sony GDM-1950 at 640x480,
800x600,
>> 1024x768, 1280x1024 and DOS modes (this monitor is rated at 63.34Khz
Horizontal
>> sync. and the card runs at 64Khz Horizontal sync.). This card uses an S3
>> graphics accelerator. See also PC Magazine/April/13/1993."
>>
The easiest way to stay within the range of the fixed frequency while
switching video modes as this one does is to play with the fonts. If you
use a large font (lotsa pixels) you generate fewer lines of text and fewer
characters, yet don't change the actual sweep rate at which the monitor
operates.
Unfortunately, most cards don't allow enough character generator
flexibility. That might mean drawing the fonts manually, or at least in
segments potentially supportable by the features of the graphics chip.
>>
>> Now what kind of bloody "fixed frequency" is this. On another site ISTR
they
>> even had a different scan rate.
>
>Fixed frequency != known scan rate :-(.
>
>Fixed frequency means that the scan frequencies are set when the monitor
>is built and can't (easily!) be altered afterwards. But different
>monitors may have been built for different frequencies. I've got monitor
>manuals that cover (say) 50kHz and 64kHz versions of the chassis. They
>all go under much the same model number though.
>
>-tony
>
From: yakowenk(a)csx.unxc.edu (remove x's)
On Tue, 20 Jul 1999, "Richard Erlacher" wrote:
] Well, if it's an industry, it's not a hoby to everyone, and the state it's
] gotten into is PROFITABLE, which means it will be around a while longer.
] ...
] I guess if you only want to do what people did 20 years
] ago, then fixing stuff isn't a priority, since it will be much more of an
] antique once you get it fixed. I always figured it's good to know what is
] happening out there now. That's particularly true since that's how I intend
] to continue making my living.
]
] What the computer industry is about is MAKING MONEY. It's good that there
] are some people working in the industry who realize that it's about GETTING
] PAID, and not so much about having fun.
I think maybe you have a little case of tunnel-vision here. The goal
is not just "get a working monitor". And "$MAKE MONEY FAST$" is not
even vaguely a part of the equation. The bottom line is that he wants
to fix it, and there definitely are benefits to doing that. The financial
bottom line may not show them, but they are there. Those dollar signs
on the bottom line don't show the whole quality-of-life picture, just
one aspect of it.
Zoom out and look at the whole picture. Having dollars in your pocket
are certainly a good thing. But having toxic waste buried everywhere
is not. Having megacorporations trampling civil rights is not. Having
bored geeks is not. Having people who don't understand the world they
live in, but vote about it anyway, is not. These things may not all
be connected to Tony's monitor, but they are all results of seeing only
the financial bottom line. Somebody makes a big profit in causing each
of those things. Money in their pocket; crap for the rest of the world.
Keep that in mind, and think about everything that is affected by the
decision of repair vs. buy new: where the physical material goes, where
the money goes, whose mental states are changed and in what ways, etc..
Then, repairing an old monitor instead of buying a new cheap one makes
a lot more sense. You don't enjoy it yourself, fine, for you the
holistic bottom line is still a no-go. For others it can go positive.
So lets not have any more "your hobby is a waste of time" talk, OK?
Especially when that hobby is the raison-d'etre for this list.
Okay, end of rant.
Bill.
From: "Edward Hennessey" <edwjhnhnnssy(a)earthlink.net>
To: "Paleonet" <paleonet(a)ucmp1.berkeley.edu>
Subject: paleonet Free Scanning Electron Microscope in Santa Barbara,Ca.,USA
Date: Wed, 21 Jul 1999 12:51:56 -0700
Sender: paleonet-owner(a)ucmp1.berkeley.edu
Reply-To: paleonet(a)ucmp1.berkeley.edu
This is an abstract of an offer just posted on another listserv.
Free Hitachi mode S-500 SEM, manufactured in 1977,disassembled for
transport and complete with all manuals and some spare parts.
Contact: Dave Pierce--Geology Department,University of California at Santa
Barbara
pierce(a)magic.geol.ucsb.edu
voice and message phone: 805-893-2466
fax:805-893-2314
They need this out by the first week in August. There are machinery movers
and crating firms out here that can handle the shipment if a more detailed
report on the condition and function of the machine makes the prospect
attractive.I can get recommendations if needed.
Regards,
Edward Hennessey
Hi,
>Yes, that was also made by the "Model T" OEM manufacturer, which was
>Kyocera. They also made the Olivetti M-10....
On this subject, does anyone have any hardware docs (or boot disc image) for
the Hitachi OEM'd Olivetti M-15?
I recently came by one and guess what....I gave away my docs and discs a couple
of years back....
TTFN - Pete.
--
Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk | www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
--
Hi Dan,
>Just spotted and thought UK members might be interested. I know
>nothing about the poster so please contact him directly.
>Dan
>-----Original Message-----
>From: stu <s.d.birchall(a)surveying.salford.ac.uk>
>Newsgroups: comp.sys.dec.micro,comp.sys.dec,uk.comp.misc
>Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 7:00 AM
>Subject: UK, PDP11/23 free to good home
>
>
>>Hi,
>>I have a PDP 11/23, two rl02 drives and CPU, several disk packs....
I can vouch for Stu and the machine.
The machine was actually mine until I traded it to him about 6 weeks ago, it's
in good condition and mounted in the standard, "classic", forty inch cabinet.
One correction however, the drives are actually RL-01s.
TTFN - Pete.
--
Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk | www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
--
Just spotted and thought UK members might be interested. I know nothing about
the poster so please contact him directly.
Dan
-----Original Message-----
From: stu <s.d.birchall(a)surveying.salford.ac.uk>
Newsgroups: comp.sys.dec.micro,comp.sys.dec,uk.comp.misc
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 7:00 AM
Subject: UK, PDP11/23 free to good home
>Hi,
>I have a PDP 11/23, two rl02 drives and CPU, several disk packs. Works
>fine. Free to good home.
>Collect in Salford/Manchester
>
Please view comments embedded in the quoted text below.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 6:39 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>>
>> Unfortunately the "few weeks' training you get from programming the VGA
>> chips on most display boards is worth less than nothing because it's
>> consuming too much time and effort and using time which could be used in
>
>By that argument just about anything to do with classic computers is a
>waste of time and effort. I don't agree with that, and I don't agree that
>hacking aVGA card is a waste of time. You _will_ learn about graphics
>chipsets, video, etc. You will find that knowledge comes in useful the
>next time you have to do something like this.
>
>> more valuable pursuits. I can assure you that soldering a resistor onto
the
>> back of a display adapter is sufficient to verify that the monitor can be
>> used, and no programming of any sort is needed. If the card is capable
of
>> 60 Hz non-interlaced 1280x1024x256-color display, programming it won't be
>> necessary, as it will support that format. If it's not, all the
programming
>> either of us could do won't help.
>
>You are confused, very...
>
>No normal VGA card (I am not talking about the special ones designed to
>work with sync-on-green monitors) has the hardware for sync-on-green. So
>programming the card, however you do it, won't produce a sync-on-green
>output. That is what your resistor mod is for - to stick sync pulses (I
>wouldn't have thought they met the specs either...) on the green signal.
>
I seem to recall that several of the Brooktree DAC's, almost excusively
what's used on VGA cards and later adapters, including the ones internal to
other mfg's devices, are entirely capable of generating a bias on the video
sufficient to allow the sync to be run negative with respect to nominal
black. Others, also from Brooktree or Inmos, (they made similar products by
arrangement) would, in the presence of sufficient negative level on one of
the DAC pins, had the ability to impose negative sync on the green video as
well.
>
>What programming can do - on some cards - is support strange scan rates
>that the on-card BIOS doesn't give you. Things like xfree86 do this
>anyway on some cards (mostly the ones where the programming information
>is available). But you might want to modify the on-card BIOS ROM so that
>the BIOS/MS-DOS work with this card/monitor combination.
>
I've seen some of these attempts, some good, some not so good. They're all
limited by the performance of the DAC. Most cards with a fast enough, hence
much more costly, DAC have that DAC because they support the high pixel
rate. If they do, they probably already have a special mode in their BIOS
to allow the exploitation of that costly feature. If they don't have the
DAC, all the programming in the world won't make it adequate.
>
Multiple encounters with this particular task have taught me that this
entails a >1K-hour involvement for a specialist who has experience and all
the precise specifications at his disposal, including the unpublished ones.
I have no idea how long it would take someone who knows little about
graphics and less about the undocumented features of the display controller
LSI.
>
>>
>> The sync mixer I have used, and instructed others to use, many times
since
>> the mid-to-late '80's is quite simple, uses a current mirror, a dif-amp,
and
>> a couple of diodes configured as a negative logic OR, with the aid of a
half
>> dozen resistors. It's a circuit any first year EE student should be able
to
>> build and fully understand. If the first year EE student can do it, so
can
>> anyone else! It was probably designed by a student and then cleaned up
by
>> the guys at Brooktree, from one of whose app-notes I pinched the circuit
>> back in days of old. I had to add details about the hookup, but it's
>> essentially their circuit. The benefit is that it will happily tolerate
>> either polarity of one or the other sync signals if you fiddle with it a
>> bit.
>
>I am not disputing that the circuit works. There are plenty of good sync
>mixer circuits out there. But this won't solve the scan rate problem. Nor
>is it necessary with a GDM9150.
>
>I have no worries _myself_ in working with VHF (and the sort of dot rates
>we're talking about are VHF). But it's a lot harder than simply linking
>up a 74LS04 to invert the sync signals.
>
>At VHF you may well have problems if you try to make it on stripboard.
>Dead-bugging would work. A proper double-sided PCB with a ground plane
>would be even better. Decoupling is going to be very important.
>
>Compare that to inverting a 64kHz signal (less than 1 thousandth of the
>frequency) with a 74LS04. You can stick that on stripboard, tag a 0.1uF
>capacitor across the power lines for decoupling and expect it to work
>first time.
>
With orderly and precise assembly techniques, the little circuit I recommend
and use will work every time. The transistors are spec'd to 500 MHz and the
actual rate at which they switch is not harmed by the fact that the
switching is done in a DIF-AMP and the result of switching is simply that
the circuit draws current from the opposite transistor each time the amp
switches. It sinks the current into a current-mirror-controlled sink so
there's little noise. If the circuit is neatly built it can be
double-sticked onto an open ground plane on the video adapter card, which is
nearly anywhere on the board, these days, since they have little circuitry
other than a few memories and a control LSI. If it's built such that its
profile is low and there are no protrusions aside from a judiciously located
bypass cap or two, it will occupy little more space than the DIP in which
the transistor array lives. This location also facilitates the use of a
negative supply from within the computer.
I've never tried this circuit with a CA3083 which, though MUCH slower, has
the same pinout and array configuration as the very fast CA3127 or the
somewhat slower (than the 3127) CA3227 which is still a VHF array, but I bet
it would work, since the video doesn't go through it. My mod only requires
that the sync be drawn via the termination resistor in the monitor during
the blanking interval. That's why the blanking will work.
>
>>
>> I'd not consider trying to program this display format in to a board
which
>> doesn't normally support it because that normally indicates it isn't
>
>Depends on what the board also supports. There's no point in taking an old
>plain VGA (not SVGA) card and tying to get this sort of rate out of it,
sure.
>
>But if the card already supports something near the right rates, it's
>worth giving it a go. Maybe the card supports 1024 lines at 60Hz
>vertical. Your monitor uses 52Hz vertical (I've seen monitors that have
>that, for some odd reason), also at 1024 lines displayed. You probably
>could reprogram the card to do that.
>
I keep forgetting that a major part of the world doesn't use 60 Hz. ( !!! )
This means that you have to do your own arithmetic. I've designed and
supervised the build and test of scan-rate-converters intended to display
output from a variety of sources on a (US) standard television projection
system in an auditorium in several instances, and never had to deal with the
European video scheme. I don't know what the pixel rate would have to be
for a DAC supporting a 1280 x 1024 formatted display, but it's pretty high
at 60 Hz. The 1024 x 765 is barely supported by the fastest (65 MHz) of the
common 28-pin DAC's they no longer use. I'd have to say that at 50 Hz
vertical rate, which is used on cards offering the 87 Hz interlaced rate as
do most cards today, isn't far off the mark for this monitor if it's set up
for a 50Hz vertical rate. The rates can all be reduced by 17%.
>
>A lot of the better SVGA cards _do_ have the bandwidth to drive these
>workstation monitors. They just don't support them in software.
>
>> capable. You might want to get out your slide rule and figure out how
fast
>> the pixels have to fly out of the DAC if you want 1280 of them in the
active
>
>Sure, I know it well. That's the standard PERQ mode (albeit in 1
>bit/pixel monochrome) and I've had to debug the video output often enough.
>
>IIRC the dot rate would appear to be a little under 90MHz, apart from the
>fact that you have to consider the flyback time as well. In other words a
>'line' consists of 1024 displayed pixels + flyback time. That sticks the
>effective pixel clock to somewhere between 90MHz and 100MHz.
>
>> >Inverting a TTL signal (particularly one < 1MHz) is IMHO a lot easier
>> >than making a sync mixer which has to handle video signals aproaching
>> >100MHz. Still, it's up to you.
>> >
>> You're right, it is easier, but this circuit is already designed and
proven.
>
>Are you seriously claiming that using a 74LS04 to invert a slow-ish TTL
>level signal is _not_ a proven circuit. I can't think of a circuit that
>is more likely to work first time :-)
>
>> It simply needs to be built faithfully to the schematic and such that it
>> looks good. So long as there are no excessively long (meaning longer
than
>> absolutely necessary) wires, and so long as the soldering is neat and
clean,
>> everything should go well.
>
>At these sorts of frequencies it's worth taking care with the layout,
>decoupling, etc. After all, ghosting on green (only) is going to look
>terrible. I am not saying it can't work. It can. I would also claim that
>you could have problems with it.
>
You'll see it's dirt simple to build one of these that works fine because
the switching speed is relatively leisurely, though the Brooktree folks
spec'd a 1/2 GHz transistor array. The one I used is spec'd faster than the
CA3227. Like I wrote above, it's likely a 100 KHz version would work since
all it switches is the sync.
>
>> >You've forgotten the education you'll get doing this :-). You'll learn
>> >about programming VGA chips, working with video/sync signals, maybe
>> >getting inside the monitor and tweaking the scan rates, etc.
>> >
>> at $1(US) per hour you'll save a fortune by buying a good 20" monitor at
a
>
>Rubbish!
>
>You seem to think of everything in terms of money. You are totally
>forgetting that (a) you'll learn a lot from doing this (or are you in
>favour of knowing nothing and letting everybody else do the work). (b)
>that some people enjoy doing this sort of thing. (c) that the 20" monitor
>from the PC shop is most likely a cheap/poor design which gives a
>marginal picture even when new. That Sony looks like a good design from
>the schematics.
>
. . . and you're assuming that, perhaps like you when you started this
stuff, one knows nothing about this stuff. The third time you do this job
it gets old! It's always the same story . . . fix the other guy's mistakes
and then spend a year coding a device that was taken out of production ten
years ago. That's not terribly useful information unless it's your first or
second time.
I remember the monitors we bought for $30K each back in the mid-'80's, which
are comparable in the most superficial way to this GDM1950. The 20"
monitors down at the discount have everything superior in almost every way
to the SONY except for the tube. The ones with a SONY tube cost $500
instead of $400. However, if you want to be able to see the display from
Windows2050 as the first stabile display you see on the thing, then go ahead
and hack the ROM. That might work with one of the *NIX versions which don't
whip the display format around as much as WIN/DOS, but if you want to use
current stuff within this life, you need equipment today, not in the next
millenium.
>
>It's for the last reason that I spent a couple of afternoons fixing a
>colour TV monitor that I was given. Yes, I could buy a new onr for not
>much money. But it wouldn't have been anything like as good as my Barco...
>
>> computer store. You'd be better off shining shoes for it than trying to
>> program a board which doesn't already do what you want.
>
>You seem to be of the opinion that it's not worth learning how to do
>something if somebody else (doesn't matter who or where) can do it for
>you. This is a strange attitude for a hobby. It also probably explains
>the state the computer industry has got into.
>
Well, if it's an industry, it's not a hoby to everyone, and the state it's
gotten into is PROFITABLE, which means it will be around a while longer.
Because of volume increases on the order of 1000%, those monitors like the
one on the floor to my left, for which I paid >$5k some 8 years ago, now can
be had for $500. I guess if you only want to do what people did 20 years
ago, then fixing stuff isn't a priority, since it will be much more of an
antique once you get it fixed. I always figured it's good to know what is
happening out there now. That's particularly true since that's how I intend
to continue making my living.
What the computer industry is about is MAKING MONEY. It's good that there
are some people working in the industry who realize that it's about GETTING
PAID, and not so much about having fun.
>
>> >
>> >Or at least that's how I justify spending a few weeks mending something
>> >when I could buy one for a few pounds down at the local PC shop :-)
>> >
>> Don't they say, "penny-wise, pound-foolish" where you live?
>
>Yes, they do.
>
>But time is something that I have a lot of. Money (not from choice) I
>don't. So it is worth me spending time to fix things. If I was being
>payed at <n> pounds an hour it might be rather different.
>
>Anyway, it's impossible to justify the money you spend on hobbies IMHO.
>Sometime in the future I intend to make a mechanical clock. The necessary
>tools are certainly not cheap. And it's going to cost me around \pounds
>100 for the metal, etc to do it. The result will be less accurate than a
>\pounds 5.00 quartz clock. So what!
>
Well, some of us already know enough about how a mechanical clock works and
even how to build one. Of course that's not everybody's goal, but . . .
>
>-tony
>
I just received this month's 'return it or pay' notice from the LIbrary of
Science's A-Book-When-You-Dont-Look of the month club and one of the
alternate selections was "ENIAC: The Triumphs and Tragedies of the World's
First Computer by Scott McCartney"...
Thought I'd pass along the title if anyone is interested.
:)
- Mike:dogas@leading.net
Possible heads up:
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 21 Jul 1999 09:22:58 -0700
From: Dr. Pepper <DrPepper(a)iwvisp.com>
To: "QTH@BITBUCKET" <bitbucket(a)qth.net>,
"QTH@FORSALE" <forsale-swap(a)qth.net>, "QTH@TANDY" <tandy(a)qth.net>
Subject: [BitBucket] FS Tandy 200 computer
I was going to use this for packet, , , , but no joy.
I have a Tandy 200 "Portable computer" that I can't
get to work. There are two manuals, and it looks clean
and nothing missing (apparently). If someone wants it,
I'll take $5.00 plus shipping from 93555.
--
73 de Ron, WB6GKI
----
Submissions: bitbucket(a)qth.net
>> As Tony said, option 31 is not related to the 31 calculators. In fact it is
the
>> multiple pen option for the 4662 - an 8-pen semicircular carousel.
>
> I was sure happy to hear that!!! Seeing something dumpstered is bad enough,
> but to find it is something relatively rare is enough to bring ulcers ... or
> is it continued paranoia about getting rid of stuff!
The 4662 was considerably more popular than Tek's computers and calculators, I
think, but that doesn't mean there are loads of them out there...
>> How technical is this manual? I have some manuals, somewhere, I think, but I
>> need to know the part number for the little gear that bolts onto the motor
>> spindle in the option 31. (This drives a toothed belt which in turn drives
the
>> carousel).
>
> I took another look at the manuals, and one is labeled "Programmer's
> Reference Manual" and the other is "Operators Manual." As I browsed through
> the manuals, I didn't see anything relating to the mechanical portions of
> the plotter.
Programmer's Reference is the manual I have. Mine is a photocopy of a
pre-release draft, I think, but it fulfils its function pretty well, so I won't
ask you to send me your copy unless the only alternative is the trash.
Operator's I may also have. Probably won't tell me much of use anyway.
Philip.
Someone's selling a System/36 on ebay -- current price is $100.
<http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=132600363>
Might be worth a look for those in the area (Grand Rapids, MI, USA).
Seller doesn't know how to spell "peripherals", so I'd suggest an
in-person inspection before bidding.
--
Brad Ackerman N1MNB "...faced with the men and women who bring home
bsa3(a)cornell.edu the pork, voters almost always re-elect them."
http://skaro.pair.com/ -- _The Economist_, 31 Oct 1998
In a message dated 7/20/99 9:58:39 PM Eastern Daylight Time, edick(a)idcomm.com
writes:
> What the computer industry is about is MAKING MONEY. It's good that there
> are some people working in the industry who realize that it's about GETTING
> PAID, and not so much about having fun.
For those of us who are both computer professionals and hobbyists the trick
is making enough money to be able to have fun with our hobby ;>)
Glen Goodwin
0/0
In a message dated 7/20/99 2:56:49 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk writes:
> This is even more amusing when the machine in question has an RK05-like
> drive. People won't believe that the 14" packs for one of those are the
> rough equivalent of floppy disks.
LOL! I'll bet you have fun when that situation arises!
> > Yeah, we've got a junk bin full of those cards at the shop, but who
> remembers
>
> Hey, I'm still using them :-)
Right on!
Glen Goodwin
0/0
From: Jerome Fine <jhfine(a)idirect.com>
> Someone who is very experienced has suggested doing a bulk erase
> on a TK50 tape and using it in a TK70 tape drive! Has anyone
> ever done so and what happened?
It's been done. I just bulk-erased a couple of TK50 tapes which had
been written by a TK70 drive so I could use them in a TK50 drive again.
Long ago, I wrote a few TK50 tapes in a TK70 drive and had no problems.
I always use BACKUP /VERIFY.
> I want to decide if a TK70 is the drive for doing backups? It is
> more than twice as fast as a TK50 and the capacity is about
> 4 times when a TK70 is used. Also, the "/VERIFY:ONLY"
> switch in BUP works very well taking less than double the
> time as a straight RESTORE.
The rated capacity of a TK50 is 95MB, and that of a TK70 is 296MB, so
I'd say 3X is closer than 4X. The TK50 tapes can be read by either
drive type, but it's slower, and you need more tapes that way. What's
more important to you?
Not to sound ignorant, but "BUP"? "/VERIFY:ONLY"?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steven M. Schweda (+1) 651-645-9249 (voice, home)
1630 Marshall Avenue #8 (+1) 612-754-2636 (voice, work)
Saint Paul MN 55104-6225 (+1) 612-754-6302 (facsimile, work)
sms(a)antinode.org sms(a)provis.com (work)
Someone who is very experienced has suggested doing a bulk erase
on a TK50 tape and using it in a TK70 tape drive! Has anyone
ever done so and what happened?
I want to decide if a TK70 is the drive for doing backups? It is
more than twice as fast as a TK50 and the capacity is about
4 times when a TK70 is used. Also, the "/VERIFY:ONLY"
switch in BUP works very well taking less than double the
time as a straight RESTORE.
Can anyone else comment please?
<The previous mentioned article in Byte is "Coincident Current Ferrite Core
<Memories" and is in the July, 1976 Issue. It is very helpful. It describes
That's the one. Lost my copy (a whole xerox paper box of 3+years) two major
moves ago. A copy of that would be of some help. Finding patterns for
stringing the core plane is tough.
Allison
Unfortunately the "few weeks' training you get from programming the VGA
chips on most display boards is worth less than nothing because it's
consuming too much time and effort and using time which could be used in
more valuable pursuits. I can assure you that soldering a resistor onto the
back of a display adapter is sufficient to verify that the monitor can be
used, and no programming of any sort is needed. If the card is capable of
60 Hz non-interlaced 1280x1024x256-color display, programming it won't be
necessary, as it will support that format. If it's not, all the programming
either of us could do won't help.
The sync mixer I have used, and instructed others to use, many times since
the mid-to-late '80's is quite simple, uses a current mirror, a dif-amp, and
a couple of diodes configured as a negative logic OR, with the aid of a half
dozen resistors. It's a circuit any first year EE student should be able to
build and fully understand. If the first year EE student can do it, so can
anyone else! It was probably designed by a student and then cleaned up by
the guys at Brooktree, from one of whose app-notes I pinched the circuit
back in days of old. I had to add details about the hookup, but it's
essentially their circuit. The benefit is that it will happily tolerate
either polarity of one or the other sync signals if you fiddle with it a
bit.
I'd not consider trying to program this display format in to a board which
doesn't normally support it because that normally indicates it isn't
capable. You might want to get out your slide rule and figure out how fast
the pixels have to fly out of the DAC if you want 1280 of them in the active
portion of a 64kHz sweep. Most of them (the boards in question) simply
won't do that.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 1:05 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
>>
>> Having had a while to recall, I believe the SONY, formerly attached to a
SUN,
>> did, indeed, have five BNC inputs on it. However, in order to get the
>> display board and the monitor to "play" together, it was easier to use
only
>> three of them because, in the absence of SYNC on the last two BNC's it
>> happily responded to negative-going sync on GREEN. I'm not sure whether
>
>This is certainly going to be a YMMV thing, so I think it's best if I
>make my comments as well, and whoever is trying to get the monitor
>working can pick which one they prefer...
>
>I prefer to use separate syncs where possible. For one thing it
>eliminates the sync mixer and separator stages. For another, it gives me
>nice simple signals to trigger a 'scope off when I have problems.
>
>Inverting a TTL signal (particularly one < 1MHz) is IMHO a lot easier
>than making a sync mixer which has to handle video signals aproaching
>100MHz. Still, it's up to you.
>
You're right, it is easier, but this circuit is already designed and proven.
It simply needs to be built faithfully to the schematic and such that it
looks good. So long as there are no excessively long (meaning longer than
absolutely necessary) wires, and so long as the soldering is neat and clean,
everything should go well.
>
>> All the points you've made are well considered, which is why I suggested
you
>> start with the resistor to green just to see whether you can use this
>> monitor with the cards you own. It's really not worth the effort to make
a
>> card not already capable of the right scan rates do the job if you have
to
>> reinvent the display board's BIOS, as that vendor in southern California
>> does. At 50 cents per hour, the effort will approach the national debt.
A
>> really decent 19" monitor compatible with most any current VGA card costs
>> $400 at the Best-Buy or whatever other discount store you like. There is
a
>> point beyond which even I, frugal as I am, won't wander.
>
>You've forgotten the education you'll get doing this :-). You'll learn
>about programming VGA chips, working with video/sync signals, maybe
>getting inside the monitor and tweaking the scan rates, etc.
>
at $1(US) per hour you'll save a fortune by buying a good 20" monitor at a
computer store. You'd be better off shining shoes for it than trying to
program a board which doesn't already do what you want.
>
>Or at least that's how I justify spending a few weeks mending something
>when I could buy one for a few pounds down at the local PC shop :-)
>
Don't they say, "penny-wise, pound-foolish" where you live?
>
>-tony
>
On Jul 20, 22:15, Tony Duell wrote:
> Subject: Re: SSB DOS68? Anyone? Anyone?
> >
> > On 20 Jul 99, at 16:33, Bill Yakowenko wrote:
> > > Heck, while I'm begging, does anybody out there have Flex for
> > > the Radio Shack Color Computer?
> >
> > No but I wish I did. If you locate a source let us know.
>
> I've just found what I think is the Flex-09 boot disk for an Acorn 6809
> system...
Aha! Tony, can I have a copy of that? BTW, did you ever dig out the other
6809 bits for me? I suppose that means I'll have to type in that ROM
listing now...
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Dept. of Computer Science
University of York
From: yakowenk(a)csx.unxc.edu (remove all x's)
I just got e-mail from a guy reviviing an old SWTPC 6800 box
with SSB disk drives. He now has the CPU working, but his old
DOS68 disks won't boot. Does anyone out there have a copy that
they would be willing to send him? If so, reply to him directly
at: bxrinxson(a)us.ibm.com (remove x's).
For that matter, I hope to be in a similar situation in a couple
weeks, except that I have the SWTPC drives and controller rather
than the SSB ones. Anybody want to send me boot disks for that?
Heck, while I'm begging, does anybody out there have Flex for
the Radio Shack Color Computer?
Cheers,
Bill.
http://www.can.ibm.com/helpware/8590.html
In a message dated 7/20/99 3:38:41 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
rhblake(a)bigfoot.com writes:
> Also for anyone interested in what a 90 looks like or specs, go to
> http://members.tripod.com/~ps2page/ and click on the appropriate area.
>
> Joe wrote:
>
> > Does anyone want an IBM PS/2 model 90 XP 486? I have one that needs a
> > home. It's supposed to work but I haven't tested it. If someone wants it,
> > I'll check it out. This one has a built-in tape drive. I don't know if
> > that's standard on the model 90 or not but it certainly looks like it
came
> > from the factory that way. Trades or $$$ welcome.
> >
> > Joe
>
Having had a whileto recall, I believe the SONY, formerly attached to a SUN,
did, indeed, have five BNC inputs on it. However, in order to get the
display board and the monitor to "play" together, it was easier to use only
three of them because, in the absence of SYNC on the last two BNC's it
happily responded to negative-going sync on GREEN. I'm not sure whether
there was a switch to enable this function. The monitor on the floor next
to me has such a switch and I was using it up until a few weeks ago, and for
seven or eight years, so it's likely I'll occasionally confuse it with my
SONY experience. The one on the floor is a multisync-capable Hitachi with
both the DE15 and the 5 BNC's on it with a switch to select which it uses.
All the points you've made are well considered, which is why I suggested you
start with the resistor to green just to see whether you can use this
monitor with the cards you own. It's really not worth the effort to make a
card not already capable of the right scan rates do the job if you have to
reinvent the display board's BIOS, as that vendor in southern California
does. At 50 cents per hour, the effort will approach the national debt. A
really decent 19" monitor compatible with most any current VGA card costs
$400 at the Best-Buy or whatever other discount store you like. There is a
point beyond which even I, frugal as I am, won't wander.
I'd advise you to find a card which looks like it works at a non-interlaced
60Hz vertical and approximately 64kHz horizontal sweep and negative going
sync. If it has the rate but not the polarity, don't fiddle with the
firmware, just attach the resistor as I suggested and see what you get on
the display. If that works, then maybe you should build an adapter which
serves more appropriately and safely for the long run. (The resistor never
impressed me as particularly good for the display board.) You can easily
build a perfectly solid adapter using a CA3127 or equivalent HF transistor
array and a few resistors which will adapt your display board capable of a
suitable sweep rate to "WINDOWS-compatible" sweep rates. If you want more
than that, perhaps you're beating a dead horse.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Lawrence Walker <lwalker(a)mail.interlog.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 1999 5:26 AM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK) (2)
On 19 Jul 99 at 18:48, Richard Erlacher wrote:
> What I meant was that IF your monitor has only three BNC's, as my formerly
> SUN SONY GDM1950 19" monitor did, then you need to impose negative-going
> composite sync on the GREEN Video output of your VGA/XGA card. IF your
> monitor has five BNC's on the back, then any reasonably close to 60Hz
> vertical and 64kHz horizontal sweep rate will probably work fine.
> Unfortunately, since these are fixed frequency monitors with a VERY fine
> pitch and a VERY linear sweep and a VERY easy-to-converge system, one
price
> you pay is that you can only use them at the ONE sweep rate for which they
> were designed or close to it.
>
> If you have the five BNC's, then you need an adapter cable which has the
HD
> DE15 connector at one end and, guess what, the five BNC's emanating from
it.
> These should have RED, GREEN, and BLUE, with the respective returns on
each
> 75-ohm coax, and HSYNC and VSYNC, negative-going from ground, by the way,
> but that may not matter as they're AC coupled at the monitor.
>
> Since you can buy the adapter for about $20 here in the US, I doubt
they're
> much different there in the UK. In any case, you've avoided any soldering
> other than at the cable if you build it yourself.
>
I use a 5 BNC to VGA adaptor with my NEC now so that's no problem.
The Sony GDM1950 designation is strange. Yours was a Sun, mine is a SuperMac
and in searching the net I also found references to a Radius version, whom I
had thought manufactured their own monitors. There seem to be 19-21"
versions
and now I find also 3 and 5 BNC editions. Makes finding specs difficult. I
found this reference in the Sync on green FAQ :
"For example, a STORM 1280/256 will drive a Sony GDM-1950 at 640x480,
800x600,
1024x768, 1280x1024 and DOS modes (this monitor is rated at 63.34Khz
Horizontal
sync. and the card runs at 64Khz Horizontal sync.). This card uses an S3
graphics accelerator. See also PC Magazine/April/13/1993."
Now what kind of bloody "fixed frequency" is this. On another site ISTR they
even had a different scan rate.
> If you need a circuit suitable for the three BNC arrangement, I actually
> have a really solid one using an HF transistor array and a negative
supply,
> which, by the way, is on the motherboard, so neatly attaching it to the
> video card isn't too unrealistic. For just checking it out, I'd suggest
the
> 500-ohm resistor, though, provided you can find an application (that's the
> formerly edge-connector at the top of the VGA cards of yesteryear. They
had
> 16 pins as do the current pin fields, so you'll find from old doc's which
> one's the composite blanking.) connector somewhere.
>
Ah, now I see what your referring to. Usually called a "feature" connector
by
IBM.
> If the monitor has all the signals entering via the 5 BNC's you just need
to
> fiddle with the VGA card's operating mode to get it into a 60Hz
> non-interlaced mode. Many of the newer VGA's won't do this, so read the
> spec's carefully! The older ones which did produce the high frequency dot
> clock required were expensive, and the newer ones don't have fast enough
> DAC's to do the job, so shop carefully, and make sure you can return the
> board if you buy one. IT MUST BE CAPABLE OF 1280 x 1024 lines at 60Hz
> without interlace!
>
> Good Luck!
>
> Dick
>
I'll likely bite the bullet and just try it on the old MCA ATI MACH 32 card
(which also has the "feature" connector BTW) in my PS2 8580 after seeing
what
info I can pry out of ATI who are based here in Toronto.
Thanks.
ciao larry
lwalker(a)interlog.com
Let us know of your upcoming computer events for our Events Page.
t3c(a)xoommail.com
Vintage Computer Collectors List and info http://members.xoom.com/T3C
On 19 Jul 99 at 18:48, Richard Erlacher wrote:
> What I meant was that IF your monitor has only three BNC's, as my formerly
> SUN SONY GDM1950 19" monitor did, then you need to impose negative-going
> composite sync on the GREEN Video output of your VGA/XGA card. IF your
> monitor has five BNC's on the back, then any reasonably close to 60Hz
> vertical and 64kHz horizontal sweep rate will probably work fine.
> Unfortunately, since these are fixed frequency monitors with a VERY fine
> pitch and a VERY linear sweep and a VERY easy-to-converge system, one price
> you pay is that you can only use them at the ONE sweep rate for which they
> were designed or close to it.
>
> If you have the five BNC's, then you need an adapter cable which has the HD
> DE15 connector at one end and, guess what, the five BNC's emanating from it.
> These should have RED, GREEN, and BLUE, with the respective returns on each
> 75-ohm coax, and HSYNC and VSYNC, negative-going from ground, by the way,
> but that may not matter as they're AC coupled at the monitor.
>
> Since you can buy the adapter for about $20 here in the US, I doubt they're
> much different there in the UK. In any case, you've avoided any soldering
> other than at the cable if you build it yourself.
>
I use a 5 BNC to VGA adaptor with my NEC now so that's no problem.
The Sony GDM1950 designation is strange. Yours was a Sun, mine is a SuperMac
and in searching the net I also found references to a Radius version, whom I
had thought manufactured their own monitors. There seem to be 19-21" versions
and now I find also 3 and 5 BNC editions. Makes finding specs difficult. I
found this reference in the Sync on green FAQ :
"For example, a STORM 1280/256 will drive a Sony GDM-1950 at 640x480, 800x600,
1024x768, 1280x1024 and DOS modes (this monitor is rated at 63.34Khz Horizontal
sync. and the card runs at 64Khz Horizontal sync.). This card uses an S3
graphics accelerator. See also PC Magazine/April/13/1993."
Now what kind of bloody "fixed frequency" is this. On another site ISTR they
even had a different scan rate.
> If you need a circuit suitable for the three BNC arrangement, I actually
> have a really solid one using an HF transistor array and a negative supply,
> which, by the way, is on the motherboard, so neatly attaching it to the
> video card isn't too unrealistic. For just checking it out, I'd suggest the
> 500-ohm resistor, though, provided you can find an application (that's the
> formerly edge-connector at the top of the VGA cards of yesteryear. They had
> 16 pins as do the current pin fields, so you'll find from old doc's which
> one's the composite blanking.) connector somewhere.
>
Ah, now I see what your referring to. Usually called a "feature" connector by
IBM.
> If the monitor has all the signals entering via the 5 BNC's you just need to
> fiddle with the VGA card's operating mode to get it into a 60Hz
> non-interlaced mode. Many of the newer VGA's won't do this, so read the
> spec's carefully! The older ones which did produce the high frequency dot
> clock required were expensive, and the newer ones don't have fast enough
> DAC's to do the job, so shop carefully, and make sure you can return the
> board if you buy one. IT MUST BE CAPABLE OF 1280 x 1024 lines at 60Hz
> without interlace!
>
> Good Luck!
>
> Dick
>
I'll likely bite the bullet and just try it on the old MCA ATI MACH 32 card
(which also has the "feature" connector BTW) in my PS2 8580 after seeing what
info I can pry out of ATI who are based here in Toronto.
Thanks.
ciao larry
lwalker(a)interlog.com
Let us know of your upcoming computer events for our Events Page.
t3c(a)xoommail.com
Vintage Computer Collectors List and info http://members.xoom.com/T3C
In a message dated 7/19/99 7:09:29 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
Hans.Franke(a)mch20.sbs.de writes:
> As we know, TV sets have been a very common display solution.
>
> can people forget that fast ?
> Isn't the C64 still (somewhat) around ? Where did these
> museum people live in the past 20 years ? some south sea
> island ? the moon ? or beyond ?
Oh, probably Mars, which is almost as far away as the Moon ;>)
They can't forget because they never knew. As has been pointed out here
before, to most folks "computers" were mysterious, faraway giants controlled
by trolls -- a totally abstract idea -- until the PC. So to most people a
"computer" is a PC, and they have 8 MB SVGA display adapters, 56K modems,
etc. What does a TV have to do with that (they ask) ???
Tony Duell wrote:
> DOubtless they'd think the same thing about using audio cassettes/normal
> cassette recorders for data storage....
The first thing people ask me about my old computers is "Where do you put the
disks in?" Most people these days would be shocked to learn that the
original PC could load programs from cassette.
> A TV display (US TV) was supported on the IBM PC with a CGA card. There's
> an internal connector for an RF modulator, and a composite output on the
> back.
Yeah, we've got a junk bin full of those cards at the shop, but who remembers
that there was an RCA jack in the back of their computer 15 years ago?
Moral of the story: the public knows very little, and has a very short memory.
Glen Goodwin
0/0
Now, hold on there, slim . . .
The GDM1950 that I had for a couple of years required negative-going sync.
The PC may not be generating negative-going sync, but you can bet it will
generate negative-going composite blanking! What's more, the GDM1950 I had
was complete with a switch which enable sync-on-green decoding, and it's
likely this one has it too. That provides an alternative to figuring out
how to switch the polarity of the sync the card puts out. I've never been
particularly good at that sort of thing, hence once built a little adapter
with XOR buffers, each of which could serve either as a buffer or as an
inverter, depending on how its "other" input was jumpered.
I'm also not convinced that the notion of "seeing something" as opposed to a
total lack of sync give much encouragement. If the polarity is wrong, for
example, it's likely even a monitor being driven at the right frequencies
will fail to sync. If only one of the sync signals is at the wrong
polarity, it might seem to sync, or not, and if only the vertical is right,
or only the horizontal is right, who knows what will be seen. The first
step, IMHO, is to examine and measure the signals. Since they're available
separately, It should be easy to count them.
Dick
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, July 19, 1999 7:02 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK)
>> a SuperMac rebadged 19" GDM1950 that I picked up from the curb. It has 5
BNC
>> connectors and displayed a dark screen when I powered it up bare, but I
was
>> encouraged because there was static on the screen. When I connected it
with the
>> 5 BNC connectors to the adaptor I use on my NEC multi-sync 4Ds and turned
it on
>> without a computer powered up, for one glorius moment it displayed an
azure
>> screen which then turned "IBM-blue" and then either to jaggies or
dark(can't
>> recall which). Since then it only displays jaggies. I hesitate getting a
>> fixed-freq card for it since they are quite expensive and I'm not sure it
>> works. As well, I use the NEC as an all purpose display with DOS, Mac,
and PS2s
>> on a ABCD switchblock so it would only be a secondary unit.
>
>Most expensive/difficult to fix faults on monitors result in no display
>at all. The fact that yours is doing soemthing probably means it can be
>repaired - if it needs it. Most likely it just can't sync to the PC output.
>
>> What is the "application connector composite blanking signal" and where
would
>> I find it. Would the V-sync and H-sync BNCs be ignored ?
>
>You don't need to bother.
>
>Some monitors, particularly workstation ones, use 'sync on green'. There
>are 3 BNC connectors. Red and Blue are what you'd expect. But the green
>signal is really a composite video signal consisting of the 2 sync
>signals and the green part of the video.
>
>PCs don't do that. They have 5 separate signals - R, G, B and the 2
>syncs.
>
>To use sync-on-green monitors with normal PC video cards you have to
>combine the syncs with the green video signal. There are various ways of
>doing this - Richard's method is to pick up a signal off the VGA card
>'feature connector' (do those still exist???) and to resistively mix it
>with the green video signal. An external sync mixer is not that complex,
>though.
>
>But as your monitor already accepts separate syncs, you can just feed in
>the sync signals from the PC as you have been doing.
>
>-tony
>
>I just got (from Chrislin no less!) a Chrislin Q-bus based floppy
>controller called a "Flex02". This was from a clean up they did and they
>have _no_ documents. Apparently there was a large fire that destroyed most
>of their archives.
The Flex02 was originally sold by AED, I think Chrislin bought out that
particular arm of AED. I've got a manual for it right
here in front of me.
>It has a 50pin edge plug and ahead of that plug is an NEC 8255 (this is a
>parallel port so it suggests to me at least that there might be some "off
>board" intelligence required. No sign of a floppy controller chip.
The book says "The FLEX is constructed to interface a 50-pin flat cable
with pinouts of the Shugart 800 Structure. Any drive with similar structure
may be interfaced." This means that all the smarts are on the board itself.
While I have the FLEX book in front of me right now, it refers to "Logic
Diagrams" that I don't have in front of me for jumper settings. I'll try
to dig these up for you. But if you just cable the Flex up to two
SA-800 style drives and put the controller in a Q-bus backplane, you ought
to see the heads load and seek to track 0, and then unload.
--
Tim Shoppa Email: shoppa(a)trailing-edge.com
Trailing Edge Technology WWW: http://www.trailing-edge.com/
7328 Bradley Blvd Voice: 301-767-5917
Bethesda, MD, USA 20817 Fax: 301-767-5927
>Date: Sun, 18 Jul 1999 16:14:39
>Subject: [langalist] 19-Jul-99 LangaList
>To: "The LangaList" <langalist(a)lists.dundee.net>
>From: "Fred Langa" <fred(a)langa.com>
>List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:leave-langalist-1984989J@lists.dundee.net>
>Reply-To: listreply(a)langa.com
>
>Subscribe/Unsubscribe/Address Change info is at the end of this note.
>
>
>
>
>Just For Grins:
>
>Reader Assaf Tzur-El sends in this gem:
>
>
> MICROSOFT TO SELL AD SPACE IN ERROR MESSAGES
>
> Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) announced that it
> is selling advertising space in the error messages
> that appear in Windows. Acknowledging for the
> first time that the average user of their
> operating system encounters error messages at
> least several times a day, Microsoft is trying to
> take financial advantage of the unavoidable
> opportunity to make an ad impression.
>
> "We estimate that throughout the world at
> any given moment several million people are
> getting a `General Protection Fault' or `Illegal
> Operation' warning. We will be able to generate
> significant revenue by including a short
> advertising message along with it," said Microsoft
> marketing director Nathan Mirror. He also
> mentioned that Microsoft is intended to add banner
> ads into its Blue Screen of Death in the near
> future.
>
> The Justice Department immediately
> indicated that they intend to investigate whether
> Microsoft is gaining an unfair advantage in
> reaching the public with this advertising by
> virtue of its semi-monopolistic control over error
> messages.
>
>
>
>
>See you next issue!
>
>Best,
>
>Fred
>
>( fred(a)langa.com )
>
>---------------- Please Visit This LangaList Sponsor! ------
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>
Charles E. Fox
Chas E. Fox Video Productions
793 Argyle Rd. Windsor N8Y 3J8 Ont. Canada
email foxvideo(a)wincom.net Homepage http://www.wincom.net/foxvideo
In a recent haul of Vaxen I was fortunate enough to get 3 CMD CBI-1000 VAXBI
SCSI controllers.
Anyone have a list of CD-ROM's that will work with VMS? ie, that are
physically settable to 512 or
accept the appropriate mode command? I have seen a few mentioned here and
there, but I suspect
there is a list somewhere.
I have available to me a Sony CDR-222 and CFU55S. Anyone know if these
would be any good?
Cheers
Geoff Roberts
Computer Systems Manager
Saint Mark's College
Port Pirie, South Australia.
Email: geoffrob(a)stmarks.pp.catholic.edu.au
netcafe(a)pirie.mtx.net.au
ICQ #: 1970476
>> The GDM1950 that I had for a couple of years required negative-going sync.
I'm sure it was one of these that I had hooked up to a PC at one point -
I also had a 16" workstation monitor which was sync-on-green and for
which I built an external module to combine the sync outputs from the
PC. There used to be quite a few websites out there explaining how to do
all this - I believe there may even be a Linux HOWTO document on the
subject somewhere (I don't think I have any documentation on the subject
these days though).
I assume if you're using a PC running some form of windows you can
rework the graphics drivers somehow to drive the monitor properly?? It
was easy under Linux, and these sorts of monitors were best for building
X terminals based around old PC hardware running Linux (not something
I've done for a while though...)
cheers
Jules
>
On Jul 19, 20:36, Chuck McManis wrote:
> I just got (from Chrislin no less!) a Chrislin Q-bus based floppy
> controller called a "Flex02".
[ ... ]
> My contact at Chrislin said it "emulates and RX02 and the indicated
jumper
> specifies 'boot rom' enabled or not enabled." Which is fine except what
he
> didn't know is whether or not the 50 pin connector expected to go
straight
> to a pair of 8" floppies or to a breakout board ala the RQDXn series.
[ ... ]
> It has a 50pin edge plug and ahead of that plug is an NEC 8255 (this is a
> parallel port so it suggests to me at least that there might be some "off
> board" intelligence required. No sign of a floppy controller chip.
The RQDX series only need a breakout board because they cram the signals
for hard drives and floppies together. This Flex02 most likely goes
straight to standard drives -- a quick check is to see if all the
odd-numbered pins (ie, everything on one row of the connector) is grounded.
If so, chances are it's a Shugart interface.
Don't be put off by the lack of a floppy controller chip. No ordinary FDC
can handle the mixture of FM and MFM usd by an RX02.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Dept. of Computer Science
University of York
Just an addition to my previous post. I'd also be willing to trade some
stuff that I have. email me if you want a list, or I can post it to the
list if someone wants.
///--->>>
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
O.K....
I'll let someone else buy the one at the auction.....
Does anyone have an extra one that they'd be willing to sell? I'd be
willing to pay up to 3.36 times it's estimated value -- Plus Shipping! :)
($10)
ThAnX,
///--->>>
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
-----Original Message-----
From: SUPRDAVE(a)aol.com <SUPRDAVE(a)aol.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, July 19, 1999 2:32 PM
Subject: Re: Rdio Shack TRS-80 MC-10?
>
>its worth 2.98 without the a/c adaptor which is what i paid for one.
>
--- Chuck McManis <cmcmanis(a)mcmanis.com> wrote:
> Thanks everyone, I got a copy!
> --Chuck
Could someone post a location? I'd like it, too.
Thanks,
-ethan
===
Infinet has been sold. The domain is going away. Please
send all replies to
erd(a)iname.com
_________________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
Hello Everyone,
I just got (from Chrislin no less!) a Chrislin Q-bus based floppy
controller called a "Flex02". This was from a clean up they did and they
have _no_ documents. Apparently there was a large fire that destroyed most
of their archives.
My contact at Chrislin said it "emulates and RX02 and the indicated jumper
specifies 'boot rom' enabled or not enabled." Which is fine except what he
didn't know is whether or not the 50 pin connector expected to go straight
to a pair of 8" floppies or to a breakout board ala the RQDXn series. So...
if anyone has docs on this board and could tell me what I need to hook it
up I'd be grateful. This is what is on the board:
Dual wide Q-bus, w/Z80A on board and some ROMs for the Z80. ROM labels are:
390028 01 P
390029 01 R
890012 01 M
890013 01 K
Edge of the board says (c) 1980 "Flex 02" Rev 5
Back (solder side) says ICIM94V1
It has a 50pin edge plug and ahead of that plug is an NEC 8255 (this is a
parallel port so it suggests to me at least that there might be some "off
board" intelligence required. No sign of a floppy controller chip.
--Chuck
I have slowed down my collecting a bit because of space (warehouse and 4
storage units full plus what's in the house), so I'm looking for manuals and
specific machines to round out certain brands/models. Today I got 30+ books
for 10 cent each and one was a CP/M-86 operating system System Guide by
digital research dated April 15, 1983 Rev. 00 in very good shape. I also
got a ton of old software include on 5 1/4 diskettes for free. A lot of
drivers and setup disk for older machines. Saturday I did pickup a Laser
Computer XT that looks just like a Laser 128 must use the same cases. I
also got two external floppies with it. Keep computing.
I use really cheap video cards and they won't do this job! The older ones
which allowed you to specify whether they interlaced or not with, say, a
switch, would do it, however.
It takes a really fast DAC to shovel out the bits fast enough to allow the
production of 1280 dots at 64KHz! Most VGA makers have settled on a maximal
rate of 65 MHz, which means they have to interlace the 1280-long lines. If
you shop for older boards, you may find some capable of doing this task, but
they may fall short of your wishes for wild and crazy game graphics, as they
haven't the features newer cards offer.
IF you find a suitable card, let me know, plz.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Lawrence Walker <lwalker(a)mail.interlog.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, July 19, 1999 6:26 PM
Subject: Re: Sun Monitor (UK)
On 19 Jul 99 at 7:41, Richard Erlacher wrote:
> if the monitor is one of the SONY GDM1950 types, you can adapt
> a1280x1024-capable display board for use with it by means of a 500 ohm
> resistor between the GREEN output and the application connector composite
> blanking signal. It's not perfect, but there's a company on the west
coast
> of the US which sells boards made in just this way witha custom BIOS which
> "sort-of" fixes the remaining issues.
>
> Unfortunately, it requires you have another monitor for use outside the
GUI,
> one compatible with the DOS' 720x400, 640x400, etc. modes, etc. but these
> SONY monitors are better used that way than hauled around. The only
signal
> connections required are the three BNC coax connections to R,G,and B, with
> their respective returns on the shield.
>
> regards,
>
> Dick
>
Dick, could you elaborate on this a bit. I realize it is a bit OT but I
have
a SuperMac rebadged 19" GDM1950 that I picked up from the curb. It has 5 BNC
connectors and displayed a dark screen when I powered it up bare, but I was
encouraged because there was static on the screen. When I connected it with
the
5 BNC connectors to the adaptor I use on my NEC multi-sync 4Ds and turned it
on
without a computer powered up, for one glorius moment it displayed an azure
screen which then turned "IBM-blue" and then either to jaggies or dark(can't
recall which). Since then it only displays jaggies. I hesitate getting a
fixed-freq card for it since they are quite expensive and I'm not sure it
works. As well, I use the NEC as an all purpose display with DOS, Mac, and
PS2s
on a ABCD switchblock so it would only be a secondary unit.
The big screen is enticing however and if I could use it without having to
lay
out too much, since there's no guarantee that it is actually functioning, it
might be impossible to resist. I'm semi-retired, so money is an issue.
What is the "application connector composite blanking signal" and where
would
I find it. Would the V-sync and H-sync BNCs be ignored ?
Also do you have the name of this company that has these cards ?
I've also seen unverified info that some ATI cards work with this monitor.
Obviously you would need an adaptor but have you heard of this ? I have an
MCA ATI Mach-32 card in one of my PS2 beasts but have been reluctant to try
it
with the GMD1950 because of fear of the "magic smoke" escaping . Both my
Power
Mac 7100/66AV and PS2 80 have on-board video and secondary monitor abilities
I
believe.
ciao larry
lwalker(a)interlog.com
Let us know of your upcoming computer events for our Events Page.
t3c(a)xoommail.com
Vintage Computer Collectors List and info http://members.xoom.com/T3C
if the monitor is one of the SONY GDM1950 types, you can adapt
a1280x1024-capable display board for use with it by means of a 500 ohm
resistor between the GREEN output and the application connector composite
blanking signal. It's not perfect, but there's a company on the west coast
of the US which sells boards made in just this way witha custom BIOS which
"sort-of" fixes the remaining issues.
Unfortunately, it requires you have another monitor for use outside the GUI,
one compatible with the DOS' 720x400, 640x400, etc. modes, etc. but these
SONY monitors are better used that way than hauled around. The only signal
connections required are the three BNC coax connections to R,G,and B, with
their respective returns on the shield.
regards,
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Peter Pachla <peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, July 19, 1999 7:34 AM
Subject: Sun Monitor (UK)
>Having recently gotten rid of my Sun 3 series workstations I'm left with
the
>monitor, it's a 20" RGB unit (made by Sony I think) and was previously
attached
>to my 3/60.
>
>Anyone in the UK interested in this? I'd be interested in swapping it for
>something I can use, like a colour VGA monitor (PLEASE!!!) or something
>obsolete.... :-)
>
>I'm located in Birmingham and due to the size of the thing I'm NOT shipping
it,
>so it's come and collect only.
>
>
> TTFN - Pete.
>
>--
>Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
>Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
>
>peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
>peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
>peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk |
www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
>--
>
>
OK. Found and installed a 74LS32 at U30.
There are all kinds of jumper pins (with
wire wrap wires connecting various pins)
and DIP switches on this thing.
I started to try to describe all the pins
and switches on this board... gave up when
I got to 200 lines. There are 11 blocks of
jumpers and two sets of DIP switches. Could
some kind soul email me the config info (at
least for the serial port) on this thing?
Thanks,
Bill Sudbrink
have you emailed Todd Fisher of www.imsai.net fame? I asked him for
connector pinouts for the PIO4 and PIO6 boards and he did, after some time
searching for and preparing the documents, post them on his web site. I've
already checked and the MIO is not supported yet. Perhaps a little jarring
>from you would motivate him.
He's probably busy, though, as he was planning to release his new computer
in the old box, or whatever he was planning . . . by mid-summer (that's
now!)
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Sudbrink <bill(a)chipware.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, July 19, 1999 5:02 PM
Subject: RE: IMSAI MIO REV.2
>> jumpers and two sets of DIP switches. Could
>> some kind soul email me the config info (at
>> least for the serial port) on this thing?
>
>And the pin-outs for the edge connectors
>would help too.
>
>Thanks,
>Bill Sudbrink
>
In a message dated 99-07-19 11:34:59 EDT, you write:
> Does anyone know the approximate value of a TRS-80 MC-10 computer with 4k
> RAM, in good condition?
>
> Also, does anyone have any pictures of one?
its worth 2.98 without the a/c adaptor which is what i paid for one.
I meant to post this Tuesday, but things got busy.
My IMSAI is up with the front panel, CPU and
memory card. I can now reliably do all front
panel operations and can toggle in and run short
programs on either the 8K SRAM or 64K DRAM card
(only one in the box at a time). For those keeping
score:
Replaced all chips on the front panel. All are
now socketed.
Replaced two switches on the front panel.
Routed several traces around burned or otherwise
damaged spots on the front panel.
And... (this is the kicker)
Re-patched the MWRITE circuit. The original (and
incorrect) patch brought the SOUT signal to U25
pin 5. What was actually required at U25 pin 5
was NOT-SOUT.
So next, I suppose, is to get the MIO working
(at least the serial port) so I can get a terminal
on this baby. If anybody has MIO REV.2 schematics,
it might make my life easier. To begin with, all the
chips on this card are socketed. It is a very neatly
and carefully done soldering job. The following chips
are missing: U8, U11, U30 and U34. I can see the
silkscreens for U30 (74LS32) and U34 (8T20), but the
sockets hide the silkscreens for U8 and U11. Does the
absence of these chips simply indicate that one of the
functions of this board is disabled?
Thanks,
Bill Sudbrink
Hi Tony:
In a message dated 7/17/99 1:31:20 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk writes:
> > > and used it to get more colours). And that the luminance resolution
> > > (bandwidth) has to be limited to prevent the colour subcarrier from
> > > causing annoying moving lines in the image.
> >
> > Is this what causes the infamous dot-crawl on the Spectrum?
>
> I'm pretty sure it is, yes.
> People moan about the poor quality of computer displays on TV screens,
Thanks for the information. I picked up a TS 2068 a couple of months ago and
haven't had time to find out what causes the screen crawl. And no moaning
here -- it's handy being able to use a common household TV set for a monitor
(though I'm moving to an RGB monitor soon :>).
Thanks again,
Glen Goodwin
0/0
I thought some of you might be interested in Clearpoint's response to my
strange Sun3 board. At least I found it an amusing reaction.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 19 Jul 1999 07:43:33 -0600
From: Jeff Sullivan <memory(a)clearpoint.com>
To: Adam Fritzler <mid(a)auk.cx>
Subject: re: old board
Adam:
No at Clearpoint currently has direct experience with that Sun product.
We do know from the memory stand point it was a very difficult memory
product to develop and an expensive memory product in its day.
I am sorry I can not offer more assistance.
Jeff Sullivan
Clearpoint
I must admit to not being entirely sure if such an announcement as this is welcome in the group - but it does deal with a 10+ year old programmable computer (yes, handheld calculator, but it's STILL a computer).
To support my collection (of Russian calculators/computers), I'm selling a few spares - in this case, a programmable MK-52 calculator from Russia. A great machine to play with, with lots of interesting quirks. Please visit the eBay listing at...
http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=133853540
There's a couple of photos there.
If this message is NOT appropriate to the group, somebody drop me a line telling me why, and I'll be happy to refrain in future (if it's a valid reason :)))
Cheers
A
>> Now compare that with the 330 lines per mm you get from a typical
>> apo-lanthar or apo-tessar as were made back in the '30's . . .
>
> Indeed. As several of us commented last night, a reasonable 35mm SLR will
> give you 100 lines per mm. Medium format (or large format) will do a lot
> better, of course.
Of course? I don't understand the "of course". I see no fundamental reason why
a larger format will give you a greater resolution _per mm_. In fact, I would
think that the wider viewing angle for the same focal length would mean that you
might get less resolution.
The big advantage as I see it of larger formats is that for the same resolution
per mm you get much more detail in the frame!
I use medium format - I got a Yashica TLR (Rollei clone) for 6 pounds at a
charity auction a few years ago, and it got me hooked on it. Recently I damaged
my Yashica, so I've just bought a Hasselblad (a good set of accessories is
looking rather pricey, though). I'd love to find an 16384*16384 or similar
digital back at an affordable price! Heck, if I saw a 4096 * 4096 digital back
for my 'Blad below 500 pounds I'd probably buy it, even though that's only 36
lines per mm!
>> I guess most people are used to the unsharp pictures that come from the
>> average point-n-shoot, with film processed by one of the 'photos back in
>> an hour' places. Digial cameras might well produce results similar to
>> those. But that doesn't mean you can't do a lot better with film (or
>> indeed with a digital camera given a decent CCD (=$$$$$$$$$$))
I think there are two independent viewpoints here. If you are taking pictures
for display on people's computer monitors (e.g. on web sites) you don't need
more than a few lines per mm, since the monitor itself will probably only
display 3 or 4 pixels per mm (say 2 lines). A 640 * 480 pixel picture is the
largest that will display on many people's screens. For this purpose a digital
camera of say 1280 * 1024 is probably perfectly adequate.
If you're taking pictures to blow up to a foot or two across and print on high
quality paper, then most digital cameras are quite inadequate, and a large or
medium format or really good 35mm film camera is required.
>> >If you have a 100mm wide print (normal sort of size) and 640 pixels,
>> >that's only 3 or 6 lpm (depending on whether you think a line is 1 pixel
>> >or 2). That's not a poor resolution, it's a non-existant resolution!
>> >
>> >Ouch!. Now I know why I can't stand those digital cameras.
Tony, when you talk about 640 pixels across a 4 inch print being only 6 pixels /
3 lines per mm, you've just stopped looking at film resolution and started
looking at print resolution. Don't forget that the standard 35mm negative is
generally considered blowable up to as much as 12*8 inches, so 100 lines per mm
at the film becomes 12 lines per mm at the print; 3 lines per mm at the print
corresponds to 25 per mm at the film. So it is poor resolution, but not the
"nonexistent" resolution you were talking about.
On the subject of lines per mm, what is the resolution of a typical ccd per mm
_at the surface of the chip_?
Philip.
PS why do people so often talk about blowing 35mm up to 10*8 or 12*10 as the
limit? Is it simply standard paper sizes? It's certainly not the aspect ratio
of the negative.
A repost for those who didn't see it the first time. I'm only posting it
once a week. -Ron
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Looking to clear some shelf space and don't like ebay so in classic
fashion I'm running my own. Take a look. Highlights include:
TI-99/4 (not 4A!)
TS-2068
TS-1000
Kaypro 10
Kaypro 4 -- no bid yet!!
Kaypro 2
Kaypro II
TRS-80 Coco 1
TRS-80 pocket computer PC-2
Coleco ADAM
SWTPc S/09 System
all with various accessories and manuals. Also software and books,
including original muMATH/muSIMP for the Apple II.
http://net-24-42.dhcp.mcw.edu/auction/auction.html
is the URL. Shipping would be from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Ron Kneusel
rkneusel(a)mcw.edu
I have a few bits and pieces here which I want rid of ASAP, I did have someone
interested in them some 8 months ago (noone on this list I hasten to add) but
since he let me down I'm posting them here.
List follows:
Wang keyboard.
Olivetti wide carriage daisywheel printer (from S100 based WP system)
Star NB-15 wide carriage 24-pin printer
Princeton Graphics EGA monitor (x2)
Nixdorf VDU
Televideo 950 VDU (x2)
Zenith Z89 VDU
The latter items would really only be good for spares, e.g. the Star Printer
needs a new printhead, the Z89 is missing the "video" board, the TV-950s won't
communicate with their keyboards, but it's all available for the
cost of coming to get it.
I'd rather not dump this stuff in a skip but that's where it's all headed and
soon if someone doesn't take it away. I'm located in Birmingham, email me
directly if interested.
TTFN - Pete.
--
Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk | www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
--
Having recently gotten rid of my Sun 3 series workstations I'm left with the
monitor, it's a 20" RGB unit (made by Sony I think) and was previously attached
to my 3/60.
Anyone in the UK interested in this? I'd be interested in swapping it for
something I can use, like a colour VGA monitor (PLEASE!!!) or something
obsolete.... :-)
I'm located in Birmingham and due to the size of the thing I'm NOT shipping it,
so it's come and collect only.
TTFN - Pete.
--
Hardware & Software Engineer. Sound Engineer.
Collector of Arcade Machines, Games Consoles & Obsolete Computers (esp DEC)
peter.pachla(a)virgin.net |
peter.pachla(a)vectrex.freeserve.co.uk |
peter.pachla(a)wintermute.free-online.co.uk | www.wintermute.free-online.co.uk
--
I have little experience with Polaroid since the '60's when I occasonally
used a Polaroid back for my 4x5 (9x12 cm) Linhof. Since then I've only used
Polaroid for 'scope pictures.
However, what I do recall is that while they're OK for use as full-scale
snapshots, the film is too grainy for enlargement. I learned about this
when I used the negative film from Polaroid. I've concluded that the
quality of the photos from this technology is not as high as what's wanted
by users of digital photography in general, i.e. I doubt it's up to the
quality of the 640x480 resolution of the Sony cameras.
My interest in digital photography has been stimulated by the need to
integrate photographs into technical documents and correspondence. There's
plenty of software for rendering the color photos as what they are, up to
"glossy-paper-magazine" e.g. Time or Spiegel but once you start to enlarge
the image, the lack of resolution becomes a major factor. I've considered
other image processing approaches, e.g. scan-rate conversion software which
reduces a raster image to Fourier series in both directions, thereby
allowing you to "fit" the image to whatever resolution you like, though it
requires post-processing to straighten and sharpen edges, etc.
What really puzzles me is whether it can process and render a photo as black
and white line-art. Anyone have
experience with this?
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Hans Franke <Hans.Franke(a)mch20.sbs.de>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 14, 1999 9:23 AM
Subject: Re: digital cameras
>> > c) using an ordinary camera and scanning the prints.
>> > Pro: - Cheapest solution (imidiate or in mid range if
>> > a scanner has to be purchased)
>> > - Resolution at least as good as with an customer range
>> > digital camera
>> > Con: - No short turn around cycle - you'll have to wait
>> > for the prints and scan them
>> > - most work (you'll have to scan them)
>
>> E) do as in D but use a polaroid camara for the prints.
>
>Good idea - I didn't think about Polaroid.
>Has anybody ever tried to scan a colcour Polaroid
>picture ? I suspect it might be problematic due
>the glosy film on top of the picture. (Sorry, I
>don't have a Polaroid camera).
>
>So e) would be like c), but the klick to file time
>is way shorter (almost as an digital camera), with
>a high quality resolution, but higher cost per picture
>on the long run.
>
>Thanks
>h.
>
>
>--
>Stimm gegen SPAM: http://www.politik-digital.de/spam/de/
>Vote against SPAM: http://www.politik-digital.de/spam/en/
>Votez contre le SPAM: http://www.politik-digital.de/spam/fr/
>Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
>HRK
Yes, I got a reply from Bill with his address. I'm just waiting on the
package to arrive. Once it does, I'll ship his parts off to him.
Thanks!
Jay West
-----Original Message-----
From: David Hoskins <davhos(a)magna.com.au>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Saturday, July 17, 1999 7:54 PM
Subject: Re: Paging Bill Yakowenko!
>Have you had any luck getting a response from Bill?
>
>His home page is http://www.cs.unc.edu/~yakowenk/
>previously I have been able to contact him at
>yakowenk(a)cs.unc.edu
>but my last message went unanswered. Maybe he is away on holiday or
>something.
>
>David
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jay West <jlwest(a)tseinc.com>
>To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
><classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
>Date: Tuesday, 13 July 1999 9:33
>Subject: Paging Bill Yakowenko!
>
>
>>Sorry to all on the list for this personal traffic; I don't have an email
>>address handy for Mr. Bill Yakowenko.
>>
>>Bill;
>>
>>I'm getting the eproms you wanted from overseas. Send me your mailing
>>address so I can forward them to you.
>>
>>Thanks!
>>
>>Jay West
>>
>
>
hi there
I have a Intel MDS (micro development system) Intellec 2 for sale. I
wondered if you anyone is interested. Please check out my web pages at
http://home.freeuk.com/joro/trade.htm
for a better description.
regards
John
_____________________________________________
Free email with personality! Over 200 domains!
http://www.MyOwnEmail.com
Is there a good reference around that explains the details of setting up
SMD devices, specifically Fujitsu Eagles? I know nothing about them.
And this Sun3/280 here has two Eagles. One of them has a bunch of
connectors on the back (a db25+db50? for command in, the same for command
out, and then a seperate db25 'data'). The other drive (that I thought
was identical) lacks all those connectors, but has a rainbow-colored
ribbon cable coming out from underneith the back plate that splits into
two parts, one that larger db50? connector and another db25 (with a box
that is plainly labelled rs232 gender changer). This has all vastly
confused me.
I was able to boot SunOS 4.2 off the Eagle with the connectors partially.
However, the second eagle is listed in the fstab and it tries to check
them, failing miserably, and dumping me to a prompt. However, aparently
there's something else going extremely wrong as well since I can't type
anything at that # prompt (using a type 4 keyboard with a homemade adapter
to the Sun3 connector, the prom (v2.6 i think) detects it just fine as a
type 4 keyboard -- does SunOS 4.2 not support type 4 keyboards?) I know
its still running however because its still puts out an 'ie0: carrier
lost' message every few moments. Btw, I'm using a 501-1116(?) video card
in slot three, and it seems to work just fine -- I don't have a monitor
capable of using the onboard mono video.
Lets see, what else can I complain about. Oh, how much power do those
Eagles use? I've been plugging them directly into the wall (bypassing the
/280 rack's distribution panel, which uses a big (30amp?) plug that I
defintly don't have anything to plug into). Do any special considerations
need to be taken here?
mid
PS: Anyone know where to get boot images for an NCD 17in xterm? Or know
how to troubleshoot an HP Apollo 425t that won't come up to a boot monitor
(even serial)? Maybe a reference to what all those status lights mean
would help.
---
Adam Fritzler
{ mid(a)auk.cx, afritz(a)iname.com}
http://www.auk.cx/~mid/
"Behold the power of cheese." -- National Dairy Council
Well, I'm in Denver. This thing was given to me back in the CP/M days, as I
was using a CDC Lark drive on one of my CP/M systems.
It was in the possession of an employee of one of my clients about four or
five years after he'd collected it in place of a couple of days' wages when
they went under. I got quite a bit of office furniture and some almost
useful computer boards. They still owed me for a couple of thousand memory
IC's I'd previously obtained on a similar basis from yet another client who
hired competent help a bit too late.
Dick
-----Original Message-----
From: Ethan Dicks <ethan_dicks(a)yahoo.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Sunday, July 18, 1999 8:16 PM
Subject: Re: SMD Diagnosis Tool
>
>
>--- Richard Erlacher <edick(a)idcomm.com> wrote:
>> Since SMD's have popped up again...
>
>Indeed... I've got a quonset hut full of Fuji Eagles. I'm always
interested
>in info on SMD drives.
>
>> ...This thing is an SMD tester... It's here, and it's yours if you're the
>> first one to collect it.
>
>Where is here? I'm in Ohio.
>
>Thanks,
>
>-ethan
>
>===
>Infinet has been sold. The domain is going away. Please
>send all replies to
>
> erd(a)iname.com
>_________________________________________________________
>Do You Yahoo!?
>Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
>
--- Richard Erlacher <edick(a)idcomm.com> wrote:
> Since SMD's have popped up again...
Indeed... I've got a quonset hut full of Fuji Eagles. I'm always interested
in info on SMD drives.
> ...This thing is an SMD tester... It's here, and it's yours if you're the
> first one to collect it.
Where is here? I'm in Ohio.
Thanks,
-ethan
===
Infinet has been sold. The domain is going away. Please
send all replies to
erd(a)iname.com
_________________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
Since SMD's have popped up again, I'm reminded of a rather large item taking up space and doing little else of use hereabouts. This thing is an SMD tester, obviously packagaged for the travelling service person, i.e. in a fairly typical sized suitcase, larger than my TEK TM535 suitcase, and really quite typical of the size of a man's suitcase. It weighs about what a typical man's 5-day case weighs, so how you get it is up to you. It's here, and it's yours if you're the first one to collect it. I saw it in the shed the other day, and haven't looked at it since, however, so I can't vouch for its functionalitiy.
Dick
I have been shifting *heavy* things for the last two weekends...
now stuff's Gotta Go.
FREE!! FREE!!! FREEE!!!
Anyone want a nice CDC 9766 Storage Module Drive with four full
and one half packs, and spares? It weighs >650 pounds and takes
220V, but it's free, and it's going to get delivered to you, a
freight company, or the Champs de Junque the next time I have to
move it. Right now its in covered outdoor storage (in my carport). I
can deliver it in SoCal if you can get it off my truck at your
place.
LAST CALL!!! on the Wang VS7110 system, including four Fuji 8"
drives and two Printronix band printers.. was taken out of service
and stored, I saved it from the Dumpster/Skip/Tip/Basura... but it's
looking more and more like I'm going to have to dismantle it and
heave the better part of it. I have made enquiries on the few
Wang-specific sites I have been pointed toward, but nothing so far.
It is probably 1500 pounds in three large cabinets. Delivery will be
a Factor to be considered. I have most of the docs, and more than
likely >25 terminals for it, but they are in deep storage in the
Company warehouse.. if you want the Wang, I'll dig out the
terminals.
IBM 3714 terminal control unit.. free free free.. come and get it,
it's light enough to fit in a big car or small truck. Have set-up
diskettes but no doc. Soon to be Trash....
Somebody stop me before I SCRAP again........
snif
John
Well, as long as I'm replying to classiccmp e-mail, I may as well
get my two cents in on this thread.
It sounds to me like Tony has higher expectations than most of us.
Although I'd love to find a web site with _all_ the technical
details for a favorite system, it doesn't even happen in my daydreams.
To few people are in a position to put in the amount of effort,
time, and money to create that kind of thing. That may be changing
as disk space gets cheaper, higher resolution cameras and scanners
get cheaper, and our minutes of spare time add up to become whole
hours.
In the meantime, I still get some nostalgic jollies from seeing
low-res snaps of old machinery. That is not totally useless, even
if it is not yet enough to help me repair one. Heck, it could even
be useful in a technical way, as an aid to the identification of
those machines for people who have never seen one.
Then too, I've seen web sites in which all text was encoded as
images, with no "alt" tags. So there are certainly useless images
out there, by nearly anyone's standards.
Bill.
>I started to create a standalone backup this morning aand have a =
>problem. The backup process aborted because of a problem with the tape =
>drive. The drive is now sitting there with all three lights flashing. =
>If I press the 'unload' button all of the lights come on stadily for =
>some time and then start flashing again. =20
>
>Any suggestions as to what might be wrong, or at least how to diagnose =
>the problem?
Is this a TZK50 tape drive, or a TZ30 tape drive, or something else?
In any event, assuming a TKZ50 or a TZ30, this is often caused
by the leader coming unhooked from the plastic take-up strip. Sometimes
what you've gotta do is manually unload the tape. Let us know which
tape drive is connected and we'll give you some help.
--
Tim Shoppa Email: shoppa(a)trailing-edge.com
Trailing Edge Technology WWW: http://www.trailing-edge.com/
7328 Bradley Blvd Voice: 301-767-5917
Bethesda, MD, USA 20817 Fax: 301-767-5927
Hey all, I'm here, though sluggish sometimes.
Maybe it's time to advertise the Rescue Squad list again. For
anyone who hasn't yet seen it, take a look here:
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~yakowenk/classiccmp/ccrs_list.html
Additions to that list get pretty high priority, and usually get
handled within 24 hours of the arrival of the request.
Cheers,
Bill.
Hi,
I've got a Burroughs Class 5 adding machine here, which I am almost
finished repairing. It has 10 drums of numbers, and 9 rows of buttons
numbered from 1 to 9. One presses these buttons in order to add, and the
result is shown on the drums. There is a picture at:
http://www.teleport.com/~dgh/adddir.htm
If anyone wants this thing, please tell me. It's not very heavy. Maybe you
can show it off at your VCF, Sellam?
--Max Eskin (max82(a)surfree.com)
http://scivault.hypermart.net: Ignorance is Impotence - Knowledge is Power
I picked up a Sun 3/260 and a 3/280 yesterday. After pulling all the VME
boards from the /280, I found one I didn't recognize....
Board marked:
Clearpoint Research
SNX2RAM/8 Rev A
Serial Num 639
Copyright 1988
Major chips: (lines seperated by /)
N8X401I/ABW7840
CSI 5134/NCR0380477/F830215 F8816
CSI 5133/NCR0380475/F828347 N8749
Anyone have a clue what this is? The guy I got it from said he was told
it was an FPU. That doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me. It's also
got what appears to be 1mb of SRAM on it. The low serial number makes me
think its something a bit specialized, but I don't really have any idea
how many Sun3s were sold to compare that with.
thanks
mid
---
Adam Fritzler
{ mid(a)auk.cx, afritz(a)iname.com}
http://www.auk.cx/~mid/
"Behold the power of cheese." -- National Dairy Council
From: Mike <dogas(a)leading.net>
>Thank Bill, and congratulation
sorry, my 'S' finger isn't working too good this morning.... Thanks &
congrats
By the way, ever find anything on the OSI 630 board?
again
- Mike: dogas(a)leading.net
From: Bill Sudbrink <bill(a)chipware.com>
>this morning... Anyway, here are the important
>bits to get the 600 (Superboard II) going:
Thank Bill, and congratulation on the IMSAI revival... I've got a few
broken ones (8080 and VDP-80) if you feel like doing any charity work....
;)
I'll let you know if the old girl ( the Superboard ) has some life left in
her.
Regards
- Mike: dogas(a)leading.net
Have you had any luck getting a response from Bill?
His home page is http://www.cs.unc.edu/~yakowenk/
previously I have been able to contact him at
yakowenk(a)cs.unc.edu
but my last message went unanswered. Maybe he is away on holiday or
something.
David
-----Original Message-----
From: Jay West <jlwest(a)tseinc.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, 13 July 1999 9:33
Subject: Paging Bill Yakowenko!
>Sorry to all on the list for this personal traffic; I don't have an email
>address handy for Mr. Bill Yakowenko.
>
>Bill;
>
>I'm getting the eproms you wanted from overseas. Send me your mailing
>address so I can forward them to you.
>
>Thanks!
>
>Jay West
>
> J2 (to the left rear as you are looking down on the
> board with the keyboard toward you):
I should add that pin 1 is to the right given the above orientation.
Bill Sudbrink
Sorry, it turned out to be this evening instead of
this morning... Anyway, here are the important
bits to get the 600 (Superboard II) going:
J2 (to the left rear as you are looking down on the
board with the keyboard toward you):
Pin 7: casette out (to tape player mic in)
Pin 8: casette ground for both casette in and out
Pin 9: casette out (to tape player AUX in) (same as pin 7
except pin 7 has an additional 10K resistor in series)
Pin 10: casette in (to tape player headphone out)
Pin 11: video ground
Pin 12: video signal
(Other J2 pins are either no connect or are used for
serial port implementations. These are not populated
at the factory and don't look like they are populated
on your 600)
J3 (to the right of J2) gives TTL level access straight to the
USART and is not normally used.
J4 (to the left of the keyboard) gives you access to the square
wave generator circuit (not factory populated) and to part of the
keyboard logic (I guess to attach a non-analog joystick or
a numeric keypad).
J1 (the 40 pin DIP socket just above the keyboard to the right)
provides access to all address and data lines and some 6502
signals)
The board wants +5 volts usually attached at the back right
side to one of the pads labeled with a +.
The ROM code wants all caps as input, so make sure your
SHIFT LOCK key is down. If everything is working, when you
power up, you will get a screen of garbage. Don't panic.
Press the BREAK key. The screen should clear and you should
get a prompt like:
D/C/W/M?
Press C (again, case matters). Just press return if it asks for
screen width or memory size. You should then be in the BASIC
in ROM.
That should get you started,
Bill
Hello Tony:
In a message dated 7/16/99 9:52:57 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk writes:
> In a normal colour TV signal these are mixed together. This leads to
> several problems, including the fact that colour artifacts can occur with
> arrays of vertical lines in the image (CoCo owners will have seen this -
> and used it to get more colours). And that the luminance resolution
> (bandwidth) has to be limited to prevent the colour subcarrier from
> causing annoying moving lines in the image.
Is this what causes the infamous dot-crawl on the Spectrum?
Glen Goodwin
0/0
<P.S. - In this CI$ thread, someone mentioned how expensive the service use
<to be. I got my first modem in 1982 - a VIC-modem for the C-64. CompuServ
<was $6.00 per hour *off peak* at 300 baud. I don't remember what it was a
<1200 baud, I couldn't afford the modem, let alone the online charges. I
offpeak 1200 was 12.50 in 1984, I was on in then too.
<seem to recall that on-peak 300 baud was $22, but that might be bit rot.
sounds good to my memory.
I've been one to hae modem access since 1981'ish to BBSs and CIS a bit later
(1984). CI$ was not only 10 based both they also were one of the biggest
users of clustered 10s.
Allison
--- CLASSICCMP(a)trailing-edge.com wrote:
> > Speaking of Compuserve, what is its history?
>
> I think this goes back earlier than you wanted (to a time before
> home micros), but here's an excerpt from a summary written by
> Sandy Trevor [70000,130] I found at
>
> http://www.inwap.com/pdp10/compuserve.txt
>
> ****
>
> This may not be exactly what you had in mind, but it is a pretty accurate
> summary of how 10's have been used at CompuServe over the past 17 years. I
>
> --Sandy
>
>
> We Call Them 10's
>
>
> - A Brief History of 36-bit Computing at CompuServe -
>
> Alexander B. Trevor
> August 31, 1988
>
>
> CompuServe has one of the world's most powerful remaining thirty-six bit
> computing facilities...
> ...my two AHCL friends, Dr. John Goltz and Jeff Wilkins, went to Columbus, >
Ohio...
Wow! I worked with John Goltz around 1984-1986. We both worked at that
company I've mentioned here several times, Software Results Corp, the one
that made the COMBOARD and the one that sponsored "CPU Wars" (with the back-
cover ad). By the mid-eighties, he had moved from Ohio to Arizona, where
he still is. It's been a few years since I've talked to him.
I heard a great story about his days at CI$... He was looking over the
terminal driver and spotted ONE line of assembler with no comment. He
just _had_ to figure out why it was bare. It was, IIRC, a 36-bit immediate
compare against a constant that happened to be a packed ASCII string of all
"$" characters, with a branch. He determined that *that* compare and *that*
branch allowed a person to type ANY CompuServe user id code and use a
password of all dollar signs and log in as them! Talk about a wide-open-
back door. It was patched a short time later. I use the story as an example
of how powerful a single assembler instruction can be on a decent processor.
> By 1978 we had two computer centers - the one in Arlington full of KI's,
> and one in Dublin, Ohio...
In 1988, I worked next door to the Dublin data center, parking my car about
20 yards from the monster dish they had on the west side of the building.
With all that, I am still 10-less. :-(
-ethan
P.S. - In this CI$ thread, someone mentioned how expensive the service used
to be. I got my first modem in 1982 - a VIC-modem for the C-64. CompuServe
was $6.00 per hour *off peak* at 300 baud. I don't remember what it was at
1200 baud, I couldn't afford the modem, let alone the online charges. I
seem to recall that on-peak 300 baud was $22, but that might be bit rot.
P.P.S - in 1986 when I got my TTY with built-in data-set and touch-tone
pad (the one that is no longer installed in the unit), I wanted to test
the modem. I plugged it into the phone line and dialed up CompuServe.
It worked at 110 baud! I didn't stay on long at less than half the normal
bandwidth. but I did get on.
===
Infinet has been sold. The domain is going away. Please
send all replies to
erd(a)iname.com
_________________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
You now have less than two and a half months to prepare your VCF exhibit!
If you've decided what you want to exhibit already, please go to the VCF
website and fill out the exhibit form (if you've not already done so).
http://www.vintage.org/vcf/exhibit.htm
Please note, you will not get an immediate response as I am buffering all
the exhibit forms until I get back from vacation after July 26th.
Thanks!
Sellam Alternate e-mail: dastar(a)siconic.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't rub the lamp if you don't want the genie to come out.
Coming this October 2-3: Vintage Computer Festival 3.0!
See http://www.vintage.org/vcf for details!
[Last web site update: 05/25/99]
Well.... I was given the camera for free with the understanding it didn't
work at all. Once I did get it working, it didn't work all that well. The
viewfinder was starting to go bad, and the tape door lock was broken (duct
tape...)
I think I still have the camera part somewhere in a box. I figured that it
wasn't worth trying to fix the 'second half' of it. From what I remember,
the camera had standard RCA connections, so it would be good for a
video-capture camera.
Talking about video capture.... and video standards... On my video card,
there's three plugs: VGA, composite, and S-Video. What is S-video? my
video card didn't have a manual with it, so....
///--->>>
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1 >
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Friday, July 16, 1999 3:14 PM
Subject: Re: Video standards (was Re: digital cameras)
>
>Couldn't you get the head drum anywhere? A lot of them are still
>available - the TV spares place I normally deal with has head drums for
>VHS and Betamax machines going back to the late 1970's. Prices are pretty
>reasonable - a 2 head VHS drum for a 3V01 or something is about \pounds
7.00
>
>-tony
>
>
Joe Rigdon quoted someone (probably Jim Willing) as having written:
>>On Thu, 15 Jul 1999, Joe wrote:
>>
>>> What is it? I've never heard of one before. It looks kind of like a Lisa
>>> but has an attched keyboard and two 8" floppy drives. See
>>> "http://205.217.140.132/pcmuseum/default_page2.htm". This is one of the
>>> things from the guy that wants to sell his entire $25K collection.
>>
>>Its commonly referred to as the System/23 "DataMaster".
>
> Ah! OK now I know what it is.
I'm not convinced that it is a Datamaster. The screen is too small, and the
screen bezel the wrong shape; the trim is the wrong colour (ok, maybe it's a BW
photo, but the trim on a System/23 isn't usually that dark that I know of).
And, as I said, System/23 is 5322, not 5051 or any of the other model numbers
we've been seeing here :-)
Joe also wrote:
> Geez, that idiot can't even get the model numbers right!
>
> Joe
>
>
> At 08:03 PM 7/15/99 -0700, Rueben wrote:
>
>>5051 Try 5020:
>>
>>http://www.gazetteonline.com/money/monp263.htm
>>http://gallery.uunet.be/Christophe.Daeninck/cc06.htm
>>
Well, the model number at the first URL (Thanks Reuben) is 5120 - so which is
correct?
I agree that the "5051" looks very like a "5120" - far more than it looks like a
Datamaster.
So perhaps it is a 5110 derivative...
Philip.
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