Hey, Did you ever get HD to respond? If so let me know. I've tried everything
I know to get this 1520 up and running. I thought it would be cool to run it
with windows 1.01.
Thanks, John
>I have a progam somewhere for 8 bit Ataris that strung
>together a bunch of stills of a woman performing felatio,
>which I found more humorous than erotic. Also some 8-
>bit Demos by Michel Jarre and another even bigger
>German demo programmer whose name escapes me .
>Some of their sound-light programs are even now
>astounding.
I had something for the Apple II that was similar. Animated video like
thing of two girls playing "hide the salami" with... well... a salami.
I have NO idea what was called, or where the disk went, but I remember it
because it was to me just incredible that a computer could turn something
like that out.
>This was on-the-edge shit and for the most
>part seems to be dying (what do you do when not coding
>boring stuff) in favor of repeating some hi-paying sort of
>state propaganda shit based on GI-Joe.
But I seem to recall the game "GI-Joe" was pretty cool. Although honestly
I don't remember too much of it, and I know that I was way more easily
amused back then than I am now (as testiment to watching Cartoon
Network's "Boomerang" channel and wondering why on earth I loved some of
those cartoons so much as a kid)
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
All,
I've two disks from a friend who's looking to sell them. They are Bernoullli
cartridges. The box and disk markings are as listed below. The cartridges are
5-1/4-in squared. Oh, yeah...there's either two 120's and six 230's, or vice
versa. Anyone interested in the lot?
Darren Peterson
disk 1 (sealed in transparent plastic bag)
------------------------------------------------------
box: Double-Sided
ESDI
525000-120
Information Storage, Inc.
2768 Janitell Rd.
Colorado Springs, CO 80906
disk: Certified Optical Media
Information Storage, Inc.
000024061
000024602
disk 2 (sealed in transparent plastic bag)
------------------------------------------------------
box: Double-Sided
WC 230
99-1108-02
Literal / ISI
2180 Executive Circle
Colorado Springs, CO 80906
disk: Certified Optical Media
Information Storage, Inc.
000100356
000100357
I have several rolls of TI Silent 700 thermal paper in the original plastic
wrapping. These date to approximately 1982. What are the chances that
they are still good? And is anybody looking for some TI Silent 700 paper?
>Alright all you tech heads, dust off your grade school prayers
>and say a few for the Shuttle astronauts. No time like the
>present to show some respect.
>John A.
>news: Columbia lost 16min before landing at ~40+mi. altitude
I had the good fortune of being at Edwards AFB for the first landing of
Columbia and will never forget the thrill of being one of 250,000
cheering witnesses to that unforgettable event. Over the years I acquired
every piece of Columbia memorabilia I could locate, much of it through a
friend who works for NASA, and have continued to follow the "career" of
the first functional shuttle. Today has not been a good day in my house.
Rich
Stephenson
Calif.
After selling several boxes of books today at the flea market I started
looking at them myself later in the day and fond this black book titled
Dictionary of Computing Second Edition 1986. But the cool factor was that it
was stamped apple computer inc. LIBRARY in several spots through out the
book. The card pouch in the back covers has a stamp with APPLE COMPUTER,
INC LIBRARY CUPERTINO, CA 95014 and a Apple Library bar code label with the
number 22505 on it under the bar code. I started looking at the other boxes
of books and could not find any other books from Apple and I'm not sure how
many I may have sold earlier in the day. :-(
I have an old 286 laptop that i can't find any info about on the net.
the only markings i have to go by are as follows:
top markings - attache'
bottom markings - FOREFRONT
model: LV-286D
17V 12.7A
I picked up two testers and need help finding info on them. One is a black
UART tester made on metal and is 14"x10"x6". On the top panel are all the
switches with large labels such as INTERRUPT INPUTS, DISCRETE INPUTS, and
REU ANALOG INPUTS. These are the smaller labels under each switch D.GND,
WRITE/READ UART A REGISTERS, PWB CONNECTOR, WRITE/READ UART B REGISTERS,
VIDEO SELECT VSYNCA/VSYNCB ON, LOW VOLTAGE ALARM INPUT ON, WR/RD, EOC
INTERRUPT, ACD INTERRUPT, UART B INTERRUPT ON, UART A INTERRUPT ON, PWB DC
CURRENT (+5V), RESET, COMPANSATION DISABLE, SELF TEST REQUEST. REU/DU HOT,
VREF/VS, and 0.012/0.25/0.50. On the front panel are a power switch with
selects for INTERNAL or POWER SUPPLY SELECT, MAIN POWER ON switch with red
light. On the back panel we have a 25 pin connector, External Power
connectors +12, A.GND, -12, and +5, a Fuse, and plug for a power cord.
There is no ID labels anywhere on this black box. Any leads?
The second tester is a Field Test Unit for old tape drives made by Magnetic
Peripherals Inc. part of Control Data. Has equipment ID of TB303A, Series
code of 11, PN 75255003 and is this thing every heavy close to 50 pounds in
a special carrying case. Any help on this one? Thanks in advance.
Well, it seems that I have some bad news to pass on to the group.
The GRiDCase 3 I just recently bought has bit the dust. Thanks for
everyone's help, but it looks like it just wasn't meant to be.
Sad to say, I'll have to confine this machine to he trashpile.
--
David Vohs
netsurfer_x1(a)fastmailbox.net
--
http://fastmail.fm - Choose from over 50 domains or use your own
Found on spamnet news, no relation, yadda yadda yadda...
Bob
----- Original Message -----
From: "peter" <prymno(a)spamprym.nl>
Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.as400.misc
Sent: Saturday, February 01, 2003 12:35 PM
Subject: AS400 surplus
> Hi,
>
> At this moment I have a AS400/9404 model F25 and I am going to take it to
> the junk yard.
> If anyone is interested? It is here for you to pick it up.
>
> Machine is dated 940909.
> It has (dutch) V3R1 with PDM, RPG compiler and TCP/IP.
> It is possible to install the english version if you have the tapes.
> 32Mb internal memory, 1.9Gb disk.
> Ethernet (2617). Twinax and V24.
> QIC1000 tape unit. UPS, key for keylock and LIC-tape.
> I am not selling, just giving away. I hope that is not illegal.
>
> Mail me at prymxxx(a)prymxxx.nl (remove all the x's)
> (I am in the Netherlands, 10 minutes drive from Amsterdam)
>
> Peter
>>On Wed, 29 Jan 2003, Lawrence Walker wrote:
>>
>> I have a progam somewhere for 8 bit Ataris that strung together a bunch
>> of stills of a woman performing felatio, which I found more humorous
>> than erotic. Also some 8- bit Demos by Michel Jarre and another even
>> bigger German demo programmer whose name escapes me . Some of their
>> sound-light programs are even now astounding. This was on-the-edge shit
>> and for the most part seems to be dying (what do you do when not coding
>> boring stuff) in favor of repeating some hi-paying sort of state
>> propaganda shit based on GI-Joe.
Along those lines there was "Sex Cartoons" for the Commodore 64, a series
black and white cartoons that looped. One high school I attended had a
room full of Commodore 64s running from a shared 1541 via some peripheral
sharing unit. At the start of class everyone would do LOAD"*",8,1 to boot
>from whatever disk was in the drive. One day I replaced the typing tutor
disk with a copy of "Sex Cartoons". At 13 years of age seeing that running
on a room full of Commodore 64s was worth the week of detention I got for
it.
Then there was "Party Games" on the Amiga, imagine a Decathlon style
joystick waggling game with somewhat different graphics.
Hi all,
Trying to clean up the "inbound" queue of systems-to-check-and-fix, and here's a few boxes I
cant seem to figure out. Heeeelp ! ;-)
Basically, the monitor madness I guess.
I have:
- various VAXstation 3100-family systems with mono, GPX and SPX cards
- various VXT2000 boxes with their SPX card
- a VXT2000+ box with "SPX PLUS" card
and, two monitors (only.. gave the rest away long time ago.), a VR19-D3 (seems to be a
generic GDM1960 - it also has the HI-LO switch on the back) and a VRT320.
The VRT320 is the one that actually seems to work on all the GPX cards, and on the SPX
cards in the VXT2000's. It does NOT sync with the SPX cards in the -M38 and -M76's, and
neither for the SPX PLUS card in the VXT2000+.
Obviously, I would want the -M38 and -M76's SPX cards to be used, and the SPX PLUS in
the VXT2000+. No specs on the latter can be found, though, although I did notice that there
is a 74.3MHz xtal on it, rather than the 69.9 one on the regular card, so it might be doing the
1280x1024@74 rather than @70.
Does anyone have info on this?
Cheers,
Fred
I think Ethan's points are excellent; in fact, the main reason I had suggest
an SSD in the first place was because the real drives used with the 8/i were
not very large (by modern standards). I'd like to add that a major reason
for my desire for such a beast is the fact that I have absolutely no
peripherals for my 8/i, nor do I have the required boards to control them if
I did have them. Heck, I don't even currently have a complete machine, but
I'm working on it. I'll hopefully soon have a list of needed boards I can
post to the list... Anyone have any REAL manuals for the thing that they'd
part with? Or a paper tape reader? Please? *begs*
Will J
Omnibus or Posibus? Why not Negibus? Neither Omnibus nor Posibus would help
me on my 8/i, since mine is Negibus... An SSD would be a Very Cool Thing to
have though... Especially since it really wouldn't have to be very large in
terms of capacity..
Will J
_________________________________________________________________
Tired of spam? Get advanced junk mail protection with MSN 8.
http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail
Robert, I think I still have a LaserJet IIIp paper tray.
I will check my garage this weekend.
Ethan, I offered but you said you already found one.
--
Paul R. Santa-Maria
Monroe, Michigan USA
> From: cctalk-request(a)classiccmp.org
> Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 12:00:01 -0600
> To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: cctalk digest, Vol 1 #424 - 60 msgs
>
> Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 06:01:04 -0800
> Subject: The Fools Errand (Was: Sierra Adventure Games)
> From: "tim lindner" <tlindner(a)ix.netcom.com>
> To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Anybody have a copy of TFE that still contains sound?
I have an ancient copy of this game on two 800K floppies - whether it has
sound or not I'm not sure as I don't have a system 6 Mac handy to test with
but it dates to maybe 1988 or 1989 - I have a note to myself on one disk
that it's "not Multifinder compatible and needs to be run after restarting
with the Command (Apple) key down", which locks out Multifinder. If you'd
like a copy I'll make disk images and e-mail them...
Seth Lewin
On Jan 26, 7:34, Ian Primus wrote:
>
> On Saturday, January 25, 2003, at 10:26 PM, Jim Strickland wrote:
>
> > Can you ping your domain name server?
> >
> Yes, I can. I have also tried using both the DNS addresses provided by
> the ISP, as well as the address of my router, which works for all of my
> other machines. I can even access web servers if I manually punch in
> the IP address.
If you show us the contents of /etc/resolv.conf, /etc/nsswitch.conf,
/etc/config/static-route.options (if you're going through a gateway like a
local router) or if you're using PPP: /etc/ppp.conf (obscure the
passwords!), and the output of netstat -ia, netstat -rn, and ifconfig -a,
we might be able to figure it out. Is routed or gated running? yp/nis?
named?
You mentioned "your router". Does your router do DNS? If you have
/etc/resolv.conf pointing to the same nameservers as your router is, and
you also list the router itself, and the router is doing some form of NAT,
chances are that replies to DNS requests from your machine will get lost.
What happens if you use nslookup? Can you ping other local hosts by name?
Remote hosts?
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
To everyone who's waiting to hear from me
about stuff I've offered, another apology!
Been awfully busy with work & health matters
and haven't had time to look at things in
detail, but you'll all hear from me Real
Soon Now...
mike in Toronto
I not too recenly picked up a GRiDCase 3 with 2 "GRiD Disc System 2204"
external hard drives. Just yesterday they both started acting up on me.
It would initially spin up when you turned it on, but after a few seconds
they would just kick off. A few seconds later I get a "1702" message on
my screen.
I'm lead to believe that there could be a configuration problem
somewhere, but I'm not 100% sure on this.
My questions are:
1. What is going on here?
2. How do I fix this?
--
David Vohs
netsurfer_x1(a)fastmailbox.net
--
http://fastmail.fm - Choose from over 50 domains or use your own
I'm still putting stuff on E-bay. Today I added two custom ROMs for the HP-41 calculator, S-100 Stepper Motor Driver boards, 6U wire wrap cards, Omnibyte VME card manuals, HP 263x Printing Terminal manuals, Cisco manuals, sockets for the Data I/O Unipak 2B insert of the 19 and 29 EPROM programmers and more. Take a look at <http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewSellersOtherItems&userid=rigdonj>.
Joe
>So who remembers "The Fool's Errand" on the Mac---waaaay back!
> Did it ever get ported eleswhere? I never quite got all the way through
>it-IIRC.
Do a google search... the author still has it and its mates for sale, and
yes, I think he ported it to other platforms (I found his site thru a
google search a few weeks ago).
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
>Anybody have a copy of TFE that still contains sound?
Yes.
I was able to beat it without a solution guide... but I did make use of a
pocket electronic spelling dictionary :-)
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Oh, I am -NOT- going to power any of htis up, I don't want to chance
blowing anything, this is a ca. ~ 1974 system so there's no knowing what
condition the caps are in...
I've got the 2100 now. no paper tape reader :( oh well....
it's a HP 2100A main chassis, i -THINK- it has it's full compliment of
boards,
I also have 2 HP 2640B terminals that went with it (according to the guy
I got it from)
he may also have 2 more of the terminals.
one of the keyboards has some plastic damage but they -look- like they
should be functional.
unfortunately he doesn't have any of the cabling except the one connected
to the terminal's keyboard.
If anyone is interested in some Sun 3 stuff in the Portland, OR area,
contact "rick at eaglet rain com".
I'm not sure what he has, he contacted me, and since I wasn't interested, I
offered to forward it to the mailing list.
Zane
--
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Administrator |
| healyzh(a)aracnet.com (primary) | OpenVMS Enthusiast |
| | Classic Computer Collector |
+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
| Empire of the Petal Throne and Traveller Role Playing, |
| PDP-10 Emulation and Zane's Computer Museum. |
| http://www.aracnet.com/~healyzh/ |
>> Hey! I still have LSL1 1.0 - 5.25" original disks, not a copy (fished it
>> out of a pile of debris left by a departing college student a number of
>> years ago)
>>
> It's... um... a *classic*!
>I have the original, text-based adventure game that Leisure Suit Larry is
>based on. It's for the Apple ][ and is called "Softporn Adventure".
I have the Atari 800 version, from memory there was also a TRS-80 version.
I'm sure I have an ad for it in at least one of my old magazines. I know I
remember ads for a series of porn themed text adventures, not sure if they
are related. Some of them were simple black and white text ads, but at
least one has a picture of a cheesecake model in a teddy sitting on a bed
with a TRS-80 model 3.
Hello,
I'm looking for an Hewlett-Packard 9880A/B hard disk drive
to use with a 9830 desktop computer, either to buy or borrow.
I've got half a dozen platters for this drive that I'd like to pull the
data from.
Does anyone have, or know where I could find such a drive?
Or even borrow some time on someone's working drive?
Any leads would be appreciated. If it's relevant, I'm located on
the east coast of the United States.
Cheers,
Dan
www.decodesystems.com/wanted.html
>One of the deal pages I haunt had this link, remember the I opener pc in a
>lcd screen people were sticking in a laptop drive and making little linux
>boxes etc.?
>
>Anyway this joint has refurbs for $65 shipped,
>http://www.badflash.com/iopener.html
I picked one up on eBay for just under that including shipping ($20
shipping, $35 win). That was with MUCH waiting and patience to get one
that low... so personally, if anyone wants one, $65 including shipping is
a pretty good deal.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
>>Anyone know where to get a copy of Virtual Valerie? I
>>remember hearing about it years ago.
>
>I might have a copy... I think I also have VV2. I'll take a look later
>and let you know.
Ok, I have Virtual Valerie, but now I have changed computers and your
email address is on my other computer... so I'm letting you know via the
list, sorry.
I don't see Virtual Valerie 2 in my list of software, but I thought I had
it as well... alas if it isn't in my database, then I can't say for sure
where it would be (I do have a ton of software that hasn't made it into
my database yet, so I can't rule it out... but I can say that it isn't
something that will surface soon).
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
> Message: 48
> Subject: Removing Duct Tape Residue
> From: Christopher McNabb <cmcnabb(a)4mcnabb.net>
> To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Organization: The McNabb Family
> Date: 27 Jan 2003 22:28:26 -0500
> Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>
> While out in Idaho picking up a PDP-11/83 I also managed to pick up a
> working LA-100 at a government surplus place. It had a piece of duct
> tape stuck to the clear plastic cover with the word "Spare" written on
> it. Anyone know of a good way to remove the remaining duct tape residue
> from the cover?
Try a product named "Goo-Gone" which is a citrus-oil based concoction meant
to remove adhesive residues and whatnot from items on which you'd rather not
use hydrocarbon-based solvents. Works well (though slowly) at removing
adhesive labels so should probably work on duct tape residue, especially if
you warm the residue up a bit. Full-service hardware stores should have the
product.
Seth Lewin
Folklore for PC's was that if you recorded data on a hard drive with the
platters horizontal, remounting it vertically could cause read errors. Any
truth to this?
-----Original Message-----
From: John Allain [mailto:allain@panix.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2003 10:32 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: OT: the 1U system
<snip>
I wonder if disk drives fail at the same rates horizontally
as they do vertically (an open question) ?
John A.
Remember the early Kings Quest series of adventure games?
KQ1 has been remade for VGA graphics by a group called Tierra Entertainment.
They are doing a terrific job of rebuilding the games. Same great gameplay.
The remade version is a free download and works fine in Windows.
KQ1 site: http://www.qknowledge.net/royalquest/KQ1index.htm
Tierra main site: http://www.qknowledge.net/royalquest/index.html
Ed
Vancouver, WA
> So who remembers "The Fool's Errand" on the Mac---waaaay back!
> Did it ever get ported eleswhere? I never quite got all the way through
> it-IIRC.
I just finished it yesterday. With much help from the solutions guide and an
electronic spelling dictionary. :)
http://www.fools-errand.com/
Cliff Johnson has downloads for Mac and Windows of various games.
One sad thing about the version of _The_Fools_Errand_ he distributes it has
no sound. He removed all of the sound from TFE becuase it caused any Mac
newer than a MacPlus to crash.
Anybody have a copy of TFE that still contains sound?
--
tim lindner, sf, ca, us tlindner(a)ix.netcom.com
We could use him as a footstool -- Or a table to play Scrabble on
Then tie him up and beat him up -- And throw him out of Babylon!
>Anyone know where to get a copy of Virtual Valerie? I
>remember hearing about it years ago.
I might have a copy... I think I also have VV2. I'll take a look later
and let you know.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
In a message dated 1/31/2003 4:35:18 AM Eastern Standard Time,
eric(a)brouhaha.com writes:
> >So who remembers "The Fool's Errand" on the Mac---waaaay back!
>
> Speaking of *early* Mac games, does anyone remember "Alice" by Steve Capps?
> That was the *first* commercially sold game for the Macintosh, and was
> sold by Apple.
>
> Dark Castle and Beyond Dark Castle were also among my favorites.
> Remember the "Nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah!" and "Mawk, mawk!" sounds of
> the critters?
>
> And I'm looking for a copy of the *DEMO* version of SmoothTalker.
> I'd be interested in the real thing as well, but I mainly want the demo.
>
I think Crystal Quest is one of the best early Mac games, and then Spectre
for later models. Anyone know where to get a copy of Virtual Valerie? I
remember hearing about it years ago.
--
Antique Computer Virtual Museum
www.nothingtodo.org
Guys,
I'm intrigued by the availability of AS/400 machines ; the prices are
within grasp of the typical mainframe/minicomputer enthusiast.
However....
What are the licensing methods available for OS/400? I'd really love to get
a PPC AS/400 and run Linux under control of OS/400 using the partitioning
scheme. The idea of running several Linux instances on a nice cool-looking
chunk of IBM hardware sounds really neat.
(And yes, I have heard of and used User-Mode Linux on x86)
I've seen a few messages regarding home users of AS/400, and the messages
aren't very positive with respect to using one of these machines for
home/hobbyist use.
Does IBM have a hobbyist program similar to what is available for OpenVMS?
Do licenses for OS/400 expire and start shutting down CPU availability in
the machine?
Are licenses applied to OS/400 such that you have to "plug in" licenses to
enable certain hardware/software components?
It think it would be really cool to work with an AS/400, but only if it
doesn't start shutting down and beg for license renewals!
Thanks for any insight that you IBM gurus have on this....
- Matt
Matthew Sell
Programmer
On Time Support, Inc.
www.ontimesupport.com
(281) 296-6066
Join the Metrology Software discussion group METLIST!
http://www.ontimesupport.com/subscribe_t&c.html.
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad
"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" - Adolf Hitler
Many thanks for this tagline to a fellow RGVAC'er...
Hi all,
Sorry for the OT post but I think it is worth noting since it relates to the
list.
I seen a few post where people add their location after their name in the
signature, I think this is way cool and give a perspective on the
globalization of the list.
I would like to strongly encourage everybody on theis list to do the same
and add your location.
Thank you for your attention
Francois
Minnesota USA
Most ticker stuff was feed via geo satellitte or fm
broadcast band S.C.A. (subsidarary carrier
authorization)
there are four sca freqs that are on channel in band
fm mono data or audio services.
ibm and others used sca or sat for ticker and other
audio/data services.
i have a clearlink plus sat modem that did two way sat
link for upi or aps.
it's a ku band tranciever but i did not get the
orignal dish with it.
it still works - you can used a standard ku band feed
horn for recieve.
most of the sca fm suff is off the air.
the rcvrs for sca and sat are eather one way (sca) or
two way(sat) addressable.
thats how they controled the subscription and auth'ed
users.
Bill
Message: 7
Date: Wed, 29 Jan 2003 17:31:48 -0800
From: Marvin Johnston <marvin(a)rain.org>
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Lotus Signal Receiver, was Re: QUOTE or
TICKER
Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Mike, I have what I *think* is the same thing, and it
is copyright
1986;
he was looking for pre 1984 or so. If you need copies
of the software,
*assuming* the software I have is good, it won't be a
problem. I can
bring it to TRW late this month.
Anyone know what frequency this works on, and if the
supporting
transmitter is still on the air? It indicated this was
a subscription
service, and I would be most interested to know how
they enforced that.
Mike Ford wrote:
>
> At 11:46 PM 1/21/03 -0500, Jim Keohane wrote:
> > Looking for handheld quote device, ticker
display or any
peripheral
> > for IBM PC, Apple ][, etc. to pick up ticker
broadcast via FM
Broadcast
> > or geosynchronous satellite broadcast. Does not
necessarilly have
to be
> > functioning. User manual would be great.
>
> I have a Lotus box, but no software or paperwork.
>
> Lotus FM Receiver
>
> Lotus Information Network Corp.
> Burlingame, CA
> Model No. 109-13011XX
> FCC ID No. EVL5TTRABSTROPS
> Serial No. M1300678
>
> Beeps and lights blink when plugged in, so I suspect
with the proper
stuff
> it still works, or would if the signal were still
broadcast.
--__--__--
From: "Will Jennings" <xds_sigma7(a)hotmail.com>
>
>Can anyone tell me if this board is supposed to have a crystal or something
>plugged into it? It has this little 2-hole socket-type thing on it, but
>without looking at others, I cannot tell if there is something that belongs
>there... This is part of some variation of the KW8I clock, FYI.
>
The two pin connector on the edge goes to a transformer on the bottom of
an 8/I to the left of the fans. It is a schmitt trigger to convert your line
frequency into a clock pulse for the real time clock.
If you need a picture I can take one.
The schematic is in the 8/I maintenance manual I have online, pg II-57, volume
II.
David Gesswein
http://www.pdp8.net/ -- Run an old computer with blinkenlights.
>Please add to the list your personal experience of computers sales.
>If you didn't sell it don't add it.
Do you want actual "sales" as in worked in a computer store and pushed
the stuff on people, or do you count VAR sales.
If you count VAR sales, then my company VAR'd the MacXL, Toshiba T1000
laptop (I think that was the model, I have one left somewhere), Apple
II+, Corona luggable, IBM System 23, and I recently came across paperwork
that indicates we did the IBM 5110 as well.
There may be others, those are just the ones I remember/know of (I
suspect we also did the Lisa 2, 128k Mac, and have a feeling on a
TeleVideo, the all in one model that had the drives/CPU mounted on end
next to the tiltable monitor)
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Paul,
I am looking for a letter size paper tray for my LaserJet IIIP.
Are any of these paper trays still available?
Larry Wolfrum
Naperville, Illinois
----- Original Message -----
Someone was asking about paper trays for a LaserJet IIIp in Ohio.
I have a half-dozen broken LaserJet IIp's and one IIIp for parts,
including the paper trays. I live just north of Toledo. Contact
me if you still need it.
--
Paul R. Santa-Maria
Monroe, Michigan USA
Hello, all:
I came across an Applied Microsystems in-circuit emulator on eBay
and wondered if anyone on the list has any familiarity with it. It's model
627593, 750-03207-00 and comes with one pod, model 68360-33. Any idea how
this is configured?. Google info is pretty limited except for the
announcement that Applied went out of business and sold out to Metroworks.
Thanks.
Rich
==========================
Richard A. Cini, Jr.
First Vice President
Congress Financial Corporation
1133 Avenue of the Americas
30th Floor
New York, NY 10036
(212) 545-4402
(212) 840-6259 (facsimile)
>Yes, French Postcards is what it was called. The pictures were all
>drawings.
>
>Another scenario featured a woman bumping into a guy working at the post
>office licking envelopes that had a rather large tongue. Another was a
>lady, her maid, and a bottle of champaign. I forgot what the last one
>was.
As I kind of figured, you are right. Those other scenarios sound familiar.
>I've still got it on disk.
I'm pulling what might be them off asimov as I type this.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Hi,
Can anyone tell me if this board is supposed to have a crystal or something
plugged into it? It has this little 2-hole socket-type thing on it, but
without looking at others, I cannot tell if there is something that belongs
there... This is part of some variation of the KW8I clock, FYI.
Will J
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Hi all,
This may be stretching the 10-year rule a bit, but...
I've just bought a nice little 386 motherboard, real small thing, from
one of my friends. Catch is, I thought I had a VGA card, but it's walked.
Soo... Does anyone here have an ISA video card suitable for a 386-based
computer?
I'm also after an ISA-bus network card that can do 10BaseT - a 3com
Etherlink III or something similar would be great.
I'd prefer it if the video card could do at least 640x480x16 colours
(VGA) and 320x200x256c (MCGA), so that kinda limits it to a VGA or SVGA
card. 256k or more RAM. And it must have a standard 15-way VGA high-density
D-sub connector for the video output.
Thanks.
--
Phil.
philpem(a)dsl.pipex.com
http://www.philpem.dsl.pipex.com/
At 09:56 AM 1/30/03 -0700, you wrote:
>Folklore for PC's was that if you recorded data on a hard drive with the
>platters horizontal, remounting it vertically could cause read errors. Any
>truth to this?
I've turned a lot of drives on their side, upside down, etc etc while working on various computers and I've never had any problem with them.
Joe
Spotted this in Melbourne Florida this morning. It's free for the taking. IBM PC-XT with original keyboard (and clear plastic cover) and IBM CGA monitor. It appears to be intact and in good condition. There are a couple of software packages with it but I grabbed the IBM packages (DOS, BASIC and Guide to Operation). It's located at Astro II "http://www.astrotoo.com/" in their free stuff pile. You need to pick up in person.
Joe