Dear Mc Manis
or his Representative
We are a small group of student, who were running
VAX-3300 Computer System, for our research project.
Unfortunately the System has gone out of order. We are
in need of VAX-3300 System to retrieve our data
archived on TK-70 Tape Cartridge.
I have seen your site where from VAX Junks is
available. Micro VAX 3300 (Including SCSI Controller,
RAM more Than16MB, Hard Disk 1GB nor greater and KFQSA
DSSI card worth less than $50. We do not require KFQSA
DSSI card. However following Hardware/Software is also
required to us:
1. Hard Disk RF-30 and RF-31
2. Controller Card for TK-70 Tape Drive (M7559),
3. Interface Card (M7651)
4. Diagnostic Software on TK-70 Tape Cartridge
5.
If you have all or some of these items please inform
me about the availability along with their cost. We
will arrange the shipping and handling for the items.
Your early response would be highly appreciable.
Thanking you.
Regards
Khaleeq
khaleeq(a)yahoo.com
Hello,
I have many MFM Drives. Not all tested yet but can.
What are they worth.
I saw an old st225 just sell on ebay for 20 bucks or so + shipping.
Make me an offer or what for trade ect.
Oh by the way any body have HDFORMAT.EXE for PCTECH X16B 80186 IBM XT clone
motherboard with 5380 SCSI controller built in. Leading to SMS Omti 5400 SCSI
to MFM
adapter board connected to ST225 5.25 MFM Drive That won't read side 4. Could
boot floppy
and read Directory to find file names in utility subdir.
Need program to low level format MFM on SCSI interface. Bios won't detect
modern SCSI drives. Tried emailing one of designers (written on board) now
works at micron tech. (evolved name of Co.) But no reply.
Cy Van D. in Iowa compcyz(a)fbx.com
Headley:
I don't know if you still have this stuff, but I was the engineer who was
involved in the design of the MegaScan A33400(ITF-3102) VME Interface.
Please let me know if you still have this and if you still need help
answering any questions.
Regards,
Frank
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
That would be very cool and appreciated if someone put the time into
creating such a doc. I have a 2117F and a 2113E that aren't doing much now
that I would like to get doing something more interesting at some point.
Last fall I saw some scrap HP 1000 systems which I believe had the parts to
connect them in a two CPU pair. If I knew more about how to make use of
such a configuration I would consider trying to acquire that hardware.
>From: "Jay West" <jwest(a)classiccmp.org>
>
>Perhaps Eric and I (and any other interested parties) should get together
>and create a document like "So, you want to run HP TSB?". We could get
>definitive answers to exactly what pieces/parts are required, put in some
>comparisons between the different versions, etc. Kind of a road map to help
>people get these systems running.
_________________________________________________________________
The new MSN 8: smart spam protection and 2 months FREE*
http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail
What do I need to get started with 6502 Assembly on an apple II?
--- I have:
6502 Machine code reference
Apple IIc+
Prodos
Dos 3.3
--- Things I know I need to know:
What call prints a character?
What call gets input of some kind (preferably 1 key at a time)
Any calls to clear the screen?
Any calls to position the cursor?
--- Things I know I need to get:
Assembler
Editor
I don't as yet know how to get things from the web to my Apple II, I
use a Mac mostly to surf
Thanks for the help....
I'm trying to think of all the really old computer companies that are
still in business. GE and Honeywell no longer make computers. DEC and DG
are gone. So there's HP, IBM, Bull... are there any others left from
way-back-when? Oh yeah, there's Siemens. And Amdahl's part of Fujitsu
now. Do they still count? I guess Fujitsu probably counts on its own
merits. Hitachi and Toshiba left the industry recently, after many years.
And then there's Unisys, with their recent turn to weird hybrid systems.
Did I miss anyone?
Peace... Sridhar
I need one of the beige plastic headed screws that secure the side cover
on a Dell Dimension case. The is for my UMAX S900 that shares a
PaloAlto Design case with the earlier Dell Dimensions. I also need two
blank drive filler panels for a HP NetServer LC II.
James
--
http://webpages.charter.net/jrice54/classiccomp2.html
>When I was a kid, I tried and tried to make an igloo of packed cubes of
>snow. I never could get one finished as once the walls started to curve
>I couldn't get the layers to stick long enough to close the thing up and
>complete it. An igloo is a very stable structure, but a half-finished
>one isn't at all stable...
I have a feeling that in survival situations you don't make an igloo, but a
tunnel that you lay down in. Dig a trench into the snow first, then you just
use a few blocks above surface level to make the roof. Pack snow on top of that
to seal the gaps. One end is sealed, then after reversing in you use your pack
to seal the entrance up beind you.
The other alternative is to dig a tunnel. You make it T-shaped for some reason
that currently eludes me; the entrance is at the lowest point of the T and you
lay across the 'arms'.
Biggest problem if you're sheltering is making sure that someone can find you -
using the pack to seal the doorway off goes a long way to achieving that but
overnight snowfall could still hinder the rescuers.
cheers
Jules
Everything you'll ever need on one web page
>from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts
http://uk.my.yahoo.com
Hi All,
VAXELN is new to me, but I am reasonably at home in the internals of RSX11M,
MTS and OS 360. I was called in by the application programmer when he
encountered a somewhat deep problem.
One or two times a month in the 3rd of three RT1000 running V4.0 of VAXELN
the two communications tasks with the microVax 3300 running VMS 5.2 stop.
One with access violation, reason mask 05 and one with access violation or
with a kernel stack not valid exception. These tasks are identical and each
serves its own sorting unit. The VAXELN systems use the DDCMP_V2 module. The
systems run continuously. The stop address is for both tasks always in the
DAP module (from june 7 1989) at 1FFC from the start
It looks as if the FP register contains 0 during the last CLRB -4C4(FP)
intruction.I conclude this from the virtual address =FFFFFB3C message..
The system stopped at the same location during startup earlier in the
project each time when the 3rd realtime vax was started, but then:maximum
links was 32 and maximum circuits was16. This error disappeared when these
quantities were doubled to maximum links=64 and maximum circuits=32. The
earlier values were ok during the years when only two realtime vaxes were
active.and with 2 realtime vaxes these crashes were not noticed.
The realtime vaxes all have the remote debugger. The installation is 140 km
>from my home.
It looks as if register information is hard to get at. Suggestions?
Has anyone encountered a similar error? Who has suggestions?.
When this gets highly detailed contact off list might be best.
Any help will be greatly appreciated!
Wim
Yes, the OS allows entering of drive geometry. Actually only supports MFM up
to 70Meg. RLL drives will of course work, just not to RLL capacity. I'm
looking for the largest drives I can find.
From: Ethan Dicks
--- Kelly Leavitt <CCTalk(a)catcorner.org> wrote:
> Any good sources of MFM or RLL drives. This would be for a Tandy 6000
> running Xenix.
>
> I'm looking for 70 Meg or higher MFM (110 RLL capacity).
Hmm... those aren't so common (in the DEC world, there are two
choices - the RD53 (Miniscribe 1325) and the RD54 (Maxtor XT2190).
I take it you aren't constrained by a narrow set of expected
geometries? (i.e. - you have a running system and/or the install
procedure asks you about the drive rather than assuming?)
-ethan
Hi folks ,
>And, while we're asking, does anyone know what happened to Burroughs?
>The Burroughs corporation eventually merged with Sperry Univac and got
>absorbed into Unisys
>
>
I've been lurking for a while , have a few old box's about but the
ones i'm curious to
know the rareity of are 3 Burroughs desktop type units from early 80's
they are all 3
different models one newer 85 maybe , I'd have to dig them out and check
the model
numbers if need be , they all run the "B-20" operating system and booted
and ran the
last time they were plugged in (one is a smart terminal type ala net
boot) . On a couple
occasions i've searched all over the net for information and found very
little other than
the company history stored at the Babbage institute . Are these things
as odd as I think
they are or has info and availability just managed to elude me ?
Thanks for your time
Dean.
Someone sent me an unassembled Ohio Scientific Superboard II kit in its
original box the other day. Unfortunately, they didn't put the original
box inside another box before applying tape and the Fedex shipping receipt
pouch on the box (over the original OS label).
So I had to carefully peel off the various stickies. I was able to do a
pretty good job and except for the label tearing due to age, I was able to
remove the pouch without damaging it.
When I was removing the tape I accidently discovered that if I pulled the
tape in a horizontal plane, it actually causes the tape to lift from the
box without taking the top layer of the cardboard or any paper labels with
it.
Grab on to the tape and start pulling on it (hard) rather than peeling it
back. It will lift off. The kind of tape I am referring to here is the
clear packaging tape.
Anyway, something to try the next time someone does this to you. To avoid
this, be sure to have your sender put any original boxes inside another
box before shipping. I didn't realize this was coming in the original box
or else I would have instructed him to do so.
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
HP: Don't trash that old computer
By Ian Fried
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
February 5, 2003, 5:10 PM PT
Hewlett-Packard is hoping a little green will help make computer owners
recycle more of their old tech gear. The computer maker is testing a
program that gives those who recycle their old computers, monitors,
printers or other gear a coupon worth up to $50 for any purchase of $60 or
more on HP's online store. Under a program announced nearly two years ago,
HP charges anywhere from $17 to $31 to recycle products. The company says
the coupon will offset the amount customers must pay for the service, which
ensures none of the gear ends up in landfills. The need for recycling is
growing, particularly as nonprofit agencies become less willing to accept
older gear, said Renee St. Denis, manager of HP's recycling effort. The
problem of what to do with all this aging equipment has become a major
issue facing the tech industry. "Now there is nobody to use it, and
(charities) are coming to understand there is a cost to disposing of it
properly," St. Denis said in an interview. With the promotion--which runs
through April 30--HP hopes to find out whether a financial incentive will
boost the number of products being recycled. The company said it already
receives thousands of products each year, but would not be more specific on
the amount. "We thought we'd give this a shot; then we'll evaluate how to
move forward," St. Denis said. Those who return PCs, scanners, handhelds or
inkjet printers will receive $20, while those who return monitors and laser
printers will receive $30 coupons. A PC with a monitor fetches $50. While
most of the products HP gets back are obsolete, the company does keep a
list of what some charities are looking for and will donate any gear that
meets the charities' minimum standards. "For the most part what we get in
here is pretty darn old," St. Denis said. HP's recycling program accepts
its gear as well as similar products made by competitors. "We don't want
toasters, but we'll take other people's printers," St. Denis said.
Wow.
That's extremely good news.
Unfortunately, my experience in repairing the samsung TV's is that you
*start* by replacing about AUS $50 worth of power supply components, then
you see what else failed.
AARRGGH.
Doug Jackson
Director, Managed Security Services
Citadel Securix
+61 (0)2 6290 9011 (Ph)
+61 (0)2 6262 6152 (Fax)
+61 (0)414 986 878 (Mobile)
Web: <www.citadel.com.au>
Offices in Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra, Hong Kong, Boston
-----Original Message-----
From: Philip Pemberton [mailto:philpem@dsl.pipex.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 06, 2003 8:49 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: OT: RE: Collecting, Hacking and the Spooks (was: Gulf War,
Bryan Pope wrote:
> And thusly Fred Cisin spake:
>>> How much power / heat does a distiller use / generate?!
>> How much shine could you make from a still heated by a Pentium?
> Oooooh! ooooooh! How bout an ethanol cooling system for a P4?!! The
> next 'leet mod!
Only one problem with that approach - isn't ethanol, er...
highly flammable?
i.e. if it gets spilt on the CPU, said CPU goes up in flames
along with the
methanol cooler and pretty much everything else in the system case...
Speaking of naffed up PCs, I was given a Celeron 400 box to
play with. The
CD ROM was (supposedly) dead. And rattling - uh-oh... Opened up
the drive
and found out that some in-DUH-vidual put a badly cracked CD in
there. The
CDROM was a 48x. Can you guess what happened to the CD when the
drive got up
to speed? That's right. It shattered. I spent 25 minutes
picking bits of CD
out of the mechanism. And then I powered it up again. And it came up to
speed and read a CD fine. Guess that says something about
Samsung CD drives
then... Unfortunately, the other Samsung 48x drive I was given
really was
dead - the spindle motor bearings seized up...
Later.
--
Phil.
philpem(a)dsl.pipex.com
http://www.philpem.dsl.pipex.com/
CAUTION - The information in this message may be of a privileged or confidential nature intended only for the use of the addressee or someone authorised to receive the addressee's e-mail. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this email in error please notify postmaster(a)citadel.com.au. Any views expressed in this message are those of the individual
sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of Citadel Securix.
Feel free to visit the Citadel Securix website! Click below.
http://www.citadel.com.au
OK, I took it apart to take alook inside and clean it up. Now I can't get
the damn cover back on.
It seems to get caught on the tape eject button. Don't want to break the
cover forcing it.
Are you supposed to separate the monitor/tape brown faceplate from the rest
of the cover first?
HELP
RH
I have an RD54 available... no idea whether its working.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kelly Leavitt
Sent: Fri 2/7/2003 6:12 PM
To: 'cctalk(a)classiccmp.org '
Cc:
Subject: RE: Looking for source of MFM or RLL drives
Yes, the OS allows entering of drive geometry. Actually only supports
MFM up
to 70Meg. RLL drives will of course work, just not to RLL capacity. I'm
looking for the largest drives I can find.
From: Ethan Dicks
--- Kelly Leavitt <CCTalk(a)catcorner.org> wrote:
> Any good sources of MFM or RLL drives. This would be for a Tandy 6000
> running Xenix.
>
> I'm looking for 70 Meg or higher MFM (110 RLL capacity).
Hmm... those aren't so common (in the DEC world, there are two
choices - the RD53 (Miniscribe 1325) and the RD54 (Maxtor XT2190).
I take it you aren't constrained by a narrow set of expected
geometries? (i.e. - you have a running system and/or the install
procedure asks you about the drive rather than assuming?)
-ethan
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
I seem to have only up to RA81, but everything else :(
-----Original Message-----
From: Dan Veeneman
Sent: Fri 2/7/2003 3:04 PM
To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Cc:
Subject: Disk drive head locking (DEC RA-82 and HP 7920)
Hello,
I'm scheduled to pick up a pair of DEC RA-82 drives along
with an HP 7920 drive in the next couple of weeks.
I don't have any technical documentation for either of these
drives, but I'd be very interested in learning the proper
procedure for locking down the heads on these drives
prior to moving them. If anyone has the steps to take
for either or both of these drives, please drop me a note
or point me to the proper archive.
They've already been warehoused, so it might be too late,
but I'd like to be as safe as I can.
Thanks!
Cheers,
Dan
www.decodesystems.com/wanted.html
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
New Mexico, USA
-----Original Message-----
From: Eric Dittman
Sent: Fri 2/7/2003 4:46 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Cc:
Subject: Re: WANTED: RA7x Enclosure/Operator Ctrl. Panel
> Wanted: RA7x Enclosure/Operator Ctrl. Panel
Where are you located?
--
Eric Dittman
dittman(a)dittman.net
Check out the DEC Enthusiasts Club at http://www.dittman.net/
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
cctech-request(a)classiccmp.org schrieb am 06.02.2003:
----------<snip>-----------
Message: 23
Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2003 12:34:12 +0200 (EET)
Subject: Re: Old Computer Companies
From: "Jarkko Teppo" <jarkko.teppo(a)er-grp.com>
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Jochen Kunz said:
>> On 2003.02.03 03:10 vance(a)neurotica.com wrote:
>>
>>> > Norsk Data?
>>> I'm not familiar with them either.
>> I am not very familiar with them. They made some minicomputers in the
>> 70'es, mayby some other stuff too.
>
>I've seen (well, almost) Norsk Data machines in, hmm.. how should I
>phrase that: "big controversial power plants where security is quite
>important". This was less than ten years ago so I don't think they've
>"upgraded" them. Saw a couple of VAXen as well, 4000/90 if I remember
>correctly. The VAXes I saw were not in critical roles.
>
>(I checked, and they've replaced the Norsk Data system:
>http://www.tvo.fi/uploads/Outage_Excellence.pdf, works from google cache as
>html)
>
It seems, that Olkiluoto 1 still has the Norsk-data machines. They will change
those next year, so they might still keep all that hardware in stock for some
time until block 1 is also modernised.
If someone likes to save equipment, doc's or photoos, its time to act now...
(too far away for me...)
BTW, back in the seventies I was working for a large finnish company that build
(parts of) the security shutdown system of the Lovisa npp. They also build the
npp-operator's training simulator and I remember that it was using several big
Eliott computers from UK. What happened to them? I mean Eliott, not N...a
Frank Arnold
On Feb 6, 22:33, Tony Duell wrote:
> I don't see how you can do a proper test without a visual inspection
of
> the connections... And I've yet to see a moulded connector that
provides
> a proper strain-relief for the cable.
A good PAT tester will check at a sensible current (though admittedly a
lot only check earth continuity at a proper current). As for strain
releif, well you're not supposed to swing the equipment by the power
cable, Tony!
> > > What is the connector like the normal 'kettle plug' with round
pins?
> The cable mounted section looks like a normal 'cold condition'
_socket_,
> but there are 3 round pins sticking out of the face of it (where the
> socket holes would be). The chassis part looks like the normal plug
> (recessed into the panel, etc) with 3 holes in it in place of the
normal
> plug pins.
I've a feeling I've seen this used somewhere -- but not recently, and I
can't think where :-(
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
I'll see what I can do. Maybe I can scan them at work. Just
found out my UMAX scanner doesn't work under Mac OS X.
-----Original Message-----
From: pete(a)dunnington.u-net.com
Sent: Fri 2/7/2003 3:25 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Cc:
Subject: Re: DEC/PDP documentation received
On Feb 7, 13:39, Zane H. Healy wrote:
> Nice haul!
>
> I'm going to guess that the following would be of definite use to a
bunch of
> us. What are their age? As far as I know they aren't available:
>
> EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume I:
Systems Options
> EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume II: Module
Options A-K
> EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume III: Module
OptionsL-Z
PDFs of these would certainly be useful to me :-)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
5th Edition, January 1985
-----Original Message-----
From: Zane H. Healy
Sent: Fri 2/7/2003 2:39 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Cc:
Subject: Re: DEC/PDP documentation received
Nice haul!
I'm going to guess that the following would be of definite use to a
bunch of
us. What are their age? As far as I know they aren't available:
EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume I: Systems Options
EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume II: Module Options
A-K
EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume III: Module
OptionsL-Z
Of potential interest to a select few (again, I've no idea if they're
available):
VAXsimPLUS Field Service Manual
VAXsimPLUS User Guide
RM05 Disk Subsystem Service Manual
RM05 Disk Subsystem Student Guide (Digital Internal Use Only)
RM03 Disk Drive Maint. Print Set
RP04/05/06 Field Maint. Print Set
Model 733 DEC Disk Storage Drive Parts Catalog, Jan. 1976
RP04-TC Part II
RP04, RP05, RP06 Field Svc. Handbook
RP05/RP06 Field Handbook -Company Confidential-
RP05/06 677-01/51 Disc Drive Illustrated Parts Catalog
Model 677-01/51 RP05/06 DEC DISC MAINTENANCE Guide (Educ. Svcs.)
Zane
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
On Feb 7, 13:39, Zane H. Healy wrote:
> Nice haul!
>
> I'm going to guess that the following would be of definite use to a
bunch of
> us. What are their age? As far as I know they aren't available:
>
> EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume I:
Systems Options
> EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume II: Module
Options A-K
> EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume III: Module
OptionsL-Z
PDFs of these would certainly be useful to me :-)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
Hello,
I'm scheduled to pick up a pair of DEC RA-82 drives along
with an HP 7920 drive in the next couple of weeks.
I don't have any technical documentation for either of these
drives, but I'd be very interested in learning the proper
procedure for locking down the heads on these drives
prior to moving them. If anyone has the steps to take
for either or both of these drives, please drop me a note
or point me to the proper archive.
They've already been warehoused, so it might be too late,
but I'd like to be as safe as I can.
Thanks!
Cheers,
Dan
www.decodesystems.com/wanted.html
Nice haul!
I'm going to guess that the following would be of definite use to a bunch of
us. What are their age? As far as I know they aren't available:
EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume I: Systems Options
EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume II: Module Options A-K
EK-LSIFS-SV-005 LSI-11 Systems Service Manual, Volume III: Module OptionsL-Z
Of potential interest to a select few (again, I've no idea if they're
available):
VAXsimPLUS Field Service Manual
VAXsimPLUS User Guide
RM05 Disk Subsystem Service Manual
RM05 Disk Subsystem Student Guide (Digital Internal Use Only)
RM03 Disk Drive Maint. Print Set
RP04/05/06 Field Maint. Print Set
Model 733 DEC Disk Storage Drive Parts Catalog, Jan. 1976
RP04-TC Part II
RP04, RP05, RP06 Field Svc. Handbook
RP05/RP06 Field Handbook -Company Confidential-
RP05/06 677-01/51 Disc Drive Illustrated Parts Catalog
Model 677-01/51 RP05/06 DEC DISC MAINTENANCE Guide (Educ. Svcs.)
Zane
> Received from a former DEC service rep.:
Ohh... my... god !
What's the guy's address? I'll send him a crate of beer as thanks
for *not* redirecting his stuff to the garbage truck, as is done WAY
too often... yay yay yay!
--f
>When I was a kid, I tried and tried to make an igloo of packed cubes of
>snow. I never could get one finished as once the walls started to curve
>I couldn't get the layers to stick long enough to close the thing up and
>complete it. An igloo is a very stable structure, but a half-finished
>one isn't at all stable...
In boy scouts, we cheated. We used a plastic box to make the packed
cubes, and a spray bottle of water to make the blocks stick together. A
light misting on the top edge of a block, then press the next block down
onto it and hold for a second... igloo superglue!
It worked well enough to get the structure finished... alas we didn't
make it big enough for all of us in the troop to fit inside (10 of us?),
and the pushing and shoving that followed made quick work of tearing it
back down.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Any good sources of MFM or RLL drives. This would be for a Tandy 6000
running Xenix.
I'm looking for 70 Meg or higher MFM (110 RLL capacity).
Thanks,
Kelly
Picked this up from the LEM-Swap list, passing it on in case anyone was
interested. Reply to him, not me.
----
Subject: [swap] OT; Commodore 64
Date: 2/7/03 8:26 AM
Received: 2/7/03 9:25 AM
From: Nick Hull, nhull(a)mindspring.com
I need to get rid of a pair of Commodore 64 computers. Is there any group
that handles these? I hate to just trash things when someone might
actually want some.
----
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
> They restricted the use of HEAT SENSORS but they did not restrict the
>police from using estimates of exceesive power usage by the power
>companies. That's how they "caught" Zane. The thermal imaging sensors
>would have probably shown that the source was a computer and not growing
>plants. BTW they also use both technologies for detecking stills built
>inside of homes.
Does this open up the market to sell used big iron to drug dealers? This
way they can justify their extra power usage and heat output.
"No officer, I don't grow pot... its just my refridgerator sized
computer, pay no attention to the plants behind the curtain"
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
On Feb 6, 23:04, Adrien Farkas wrote:
> 10base-FL is 62.5/125. actually, I'm running fddi on 50/125 with no
> problems so it shouldn't matter _that_ much what cores you use for it
> (besides singlemode 8.5/125, of course).
Actually, the standards allow for both 50/125 and 62.5/125 for 10baseFL
and FDDI, and everything else up to Gigabit.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
I'm about to put some 10Base-FL in and I was wondering if someone could
tell me what kind of fiber I should be looking for? Is it 50/125 MMF like
GigE? Or is it 62.5/125 MMF like FDDI?
Peace... Sridhar
All,
I used to have an AX/2 server at home quite a while ago, and all I have
left is the hard drive. I want to get this software off the drive, but
I threw out my last MFM controller card ages ago.
Does anybody have a copy of the old RM NET LM software that ran (runs?)
Z-Net networks of PC186 machines? Even better, does anyone have an ISA
MFM controller they'd be willing to swap for money? :) eBay hasn't
turned up anything :(
Best wishes,
Peter.
Hi Pat,
Do you have any of the IBM 3164 terminals left?
Lisa
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type text/x-vcard which had a name of lisa.parmar.vcf]
I went thinking I was going to pick up an OT DY4 PPC embedded machine,
instead it is an DY4 Orion with dual 8" floppies, the manual, a box of disks
and a Volker Craig terminal.
A few sun keyboards and a unopened copy of PharLap thrown in for good measure.
My wife met me at the door saying this is the last machine, so I'll have to
get the stuff from the trunk on the weekend.
Does anyone have any tales to tell about the DY4?
I'm also looking for drive rails for a SGI Personal Iris.
Can anyone suggest a good book on file compression?
Or, does anyone know where I can find C source for a simple file compression
routine? The program needs to be portable to Linux, MS-DOS, CP/M and
CP/M-86. (I am capable of making changes in the code to accomodate different
compilers)
Of course, there are compression routines which run under each of these
OSs, but I need to run the same routine under all four OSs.
TIA for any help --
Glen
0/0
Seen on cam.misc usenet group (Cambridge, UK) - I have no connection with the
seller, so email them directly if interested.
cheers
Jules
=======
From: Alan Bain (afrb2(a)statslab.cam.ac.uk)
Subject: FS: Acorn System I Microcontroller Kit
Newsgroups: ucam.adverts.forsale.computer, ucam.societies.cucps, cam.misc
Date: 2003-02-06 02:58:03 PST
ACORN system I 6502 Microcontroller kit as shipped from Acorn in a box
full of packing beads. Never assembled, so time to get out your glue
can and build it yourself.
Kit contains 1 PCB (Issue 3 200000) Dates from 1980
1 Bag of components
1 Bag of ICs (incl SY6502 and the hard to find INS8154D,
you were supposed to supply the others yourself -- presumably
desoldered from dead boards) and a load of IC sockets.
1 Schematic Diagram
I can almost certainly also locate a copy of the construction manual
writen from Acorn's Market Square Address, most likely an original!
Reasonable Offers (maybe around 40 pounds but no reasonable offer
refused)?
Alan Bain
Everything you'll ever need on one web page
>from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts
http://uk.my.yahoo.com
Hi,
I am the proud new owner of an HP 85. Printer belts a little ratty but works
fine.
However when I attempted to Rew/Load/Cat any of the tapes I received with it
I got a stall error.
I cleaned the capstan which is intact, and did not fall apart, as I
understand they tend to do. The tape motor spins fine when I pressed the
tape sensor button inside and hit Rew.
Finally after a bunch of attempts the tapes began to spin and I could
perform the Load, Cat and Ctape operations. I still seem to get fairly
frequent stall errors however. Do you think I need to replace the capstan?
Can you get them (or the printer belts)anywhere, or should I use the silicon
aquarium tube method mentioned in the archives? Any other thoughts
appreciated.
Eventually hope to hook it up to a floopy drive but need to find a mass
storage rom.
Also do you know of any good resources on the web for the 80 series as I
haven't found a whole lot.
Thanks,
RH
(Whoops... let's try that again with the editing *finished* this time...
For those who haven't been to http://65c02.tripod.com/ , the SBC-2
is a single-board 6502 with the following onboard:
o 1 MHz 65c02
o 32K of static RAM
o 32k of EEPROM
o 2 x 65C22 Versatile Interface Adapters (VIA)
o 1 x 65C51 Asynchronous Interface Adapter.
o Eight 16-byte address blocks decoded for I/O (3 used onboard)
This will be the second run of boards. At the moment, Daryl has
ten orders. The deadline is 15-Feb.
Picture at http://65c02.tripod.com/sbc2.jpg Current cost breakdown is:
(from Daryl's announcement)
$26.20 per board
$4-6 shipping US
$4-14 shipping outside US
$2 for the serial cable
(The serial cable is a 10-pin IDC<->DE9M, like the kind you find
on Socket3 and Socket7 PeeCee motherboards).
No guarantees that more orders will hit a new price point, so if you
have an interest in a compact CMOS 6502 SBC, write Daryl: 65c02(a)softcom.net
Do it soon.
Disclaimer: I have no affiliation with the SBC-2 except as a potential
customer.
-ethan
Rumor has it that Fred N. van Kempen may have mentioned these words:
>Although this has come up a few times already, I am going to bring it
>up again. Come kick my butt if you don't like it :)
Awrighty -- I got my Size 9.5(US) Lacrosse Icemans on right now... ;-)
<thud> Wham. Wham. Wham. Wham. Wham.
-- Ascii representation of the sound of a dead horse getting
beaten once again... :-(
>Given the volume of the list, and the many off-topic (lets not discuss
>what is and is not on-topic here) talk, I would like to propose [again]
>that we do like other lists do: insert a tag [cctalk] in the Subject:
>line of the postings, so it's easy to distinguis the postings from
>other, perhaps more pressing e-mail.
Not just no... *Hell no*...
>Selecting/filtering based on sender address doesn't work well for all
>clients, and depends on the ability to use processing rules in the
>first place.
Then filter on the headers! It's not that hard...
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These are all unique headers to this list. Any MUA worth its salt can
filter on any one of these... even some not worth it, like LookOut Hexpress...
>As said, most lists out there already use this technique, it's been
>accepted more or less as a standard, so can we *please* use something
>like this ?
Accepted by whom? All but one of the lists I'm on *don't do this* (not to
mention the ones I admin) and the one that did I disliked, and unsubbed as
soon as a better list was available... And this is a "standard" just like
HTML email is currently a "standard" - it's not even compatible with
itself, and in all, it's just a plain bad idea... IMH-But-SysAdmin-Based-O...
>I don't want to start Yet Another Discussion, a mere vote would do, as
>we're all techies who know what this is about.
That sounds like the beginning of a 2-hour-pissing-match I had with my
father-in-law a *long* time ago... "I'm not saying this because you don't
want to become an auctioneer..."
In all fairness, if it were a *user configurable* option, I wouldn't give a
whit, so long as I could turn it off... otherwise, you know my vote... but
how many times do we have to vote on this, anyway???
Prost,
"Merch"
--
Roger "Merch" Merchberger -- sysadmin, Iceberg Computers
zmerch(a)30below.com
What do you do when Life gives you lemons,
and you don't *like* lemonade?????????????
>I do feel for the astronaut's families, and in almost equal measure for the
>future of humanity in space. We have *got* to find a better way of getting
>in and out of the gravity well.
As sick as it seems... these kind of accidents are exactly what brings
about the safer ways of doing things.
Nearly all safety measures we as society have for everything can be
traced back to someone (or many someones) being injured or killed.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>