>Low res monochrome porn, it doesn't get more pathetic.
I just DLd the images and took a look... it was what I remembered. It
should be noted that this was "Hi-Res" and there were versions in
color... if you want to call it that
>Best one I remember was called something like gogo, basically a topless
>gogo dancer that looped endlessly in a corner of the mac screen.
hehe... yeah, one of my favorite DA's of the time. When feeling stressed,
you just pop it open and watch her wiggle for a moment. A sure way to
lighten the mood.
>More on topic would be the guy that did MacPlaymate, and then one of the
>first CD games about some spaceship.
Well, if you are going to get into the later stuff, I think Virtual
Valerie should be mentioned. It might have actually beaten the spaceship
one to market (but I'm not sure).
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
I have a couple of more items that are looking for a good home.
1. A Commodore 1530 Datassette Unit (Casette Player), Model C2N-A, S/N
2267772. It is in its original box, but alas, I have no paperwork or manuals
to go with it. I have not tested this item to see if it works but it looks
complete and in good shape and even has a casette in it.
2. A KayPro memory card. It has both a 9 pin and a 25 pin female input
connector. It has no identifying marks except the word "Kaypro" and a S/N of
2046. I can't guarantee anything about this board as I got it in a large box
of mixed boards several years ago. This is not a motherboard.
Please contact me if you are interested. Cost will be postage charges plus $1
for my packaging costs.
Bill Machacek
Colorado Springs, CO
...for the near future...
Lost my 'regular' internet link, so until I get something new in place I
can only get to the net about once a day and for a limited amount of time.
So if you are trying to contact me, be patient... I'm out here
(somewhere), just slower than usual...
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
Umm... EEK!
Did not expect the 'feeding frenzy' that this would start, so a 'bulk'
reply is going out for the moment.
Short form: everyone who inquired about this system is getting this note,
as well as the 'list' ofr anyone else interested... 'First Call' on this
system is going out to the first response received (via a separate
message). Should that person decide not to purchase the system I will
move down the list as needed...
Description: (so I don't have to do this multiple more times) <G>
H-11A chassis and P/S, H-27 dual floppy drive unit, M7270 LSI-11 CPU, 64kb
RAM (don't look like either DEC or Heath, but a nice board), (2) H-11-5
serial I/O, H27 Floppy I/O.
No docs, unless I locate a spare set.
No floppy based software, tho I do have the original paper tape based
Heath software that was distributed with the unit.
(so... if anyone has a copy of 'HT-11' tha tI could get... B^} )
Condition: decent. The 'usual' nick and ding for something of it's age.
Should clean up rather nicely with a little TLC. No signs of notable
'abuse'.
All for now on this topic.
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
>French Postcards! The way it worked was that there were two pictures, one
>loaded into the first hi-res page and the other loaded into the second
>hi-res page. The two pages were then alternated to produce "animation".
>The obnoxious part was that it would play this loud trill between each
>page flips, so if you were trying to be discrete there was no chance of
>that.
That might have been it, but I remembered it being more animated
cartoonish video. Some kind of a story went with it (the two ladies came
home from the store pulled the salami from their bag, and wondered what
they could do with it).
The art quality was around that of ArtWorx's Strip Poker game.
And I don't recall their being sound with it, but I could be wrong.
The whole thing only ran 30 seconds or so IIRC.
I'll have to look thru one of the online A2 archives... someone must have
it imaged somewhere.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Due to the recommendation of several on the list, I went to the local Barnes
and Noble and picked up Horowitz & Hill's _The Art of Electronics_. You guys
weren't fibbing: this thing's great! I've only read about 10 pages so far,
but it already kicks the complete @#$% out of the book I previously had. I
give many thanks to those who recommended this book.
The other book I had was _Understanding Electronics_. I don't remember the
author's name but the publisher was TAB Books. I wouldn't recommend it to
anyone except maybe for use as a firestarter. That book sucks giant donkey
balls (IMHO of course).
--
Jeffrey Sharp
Roger:
This helps a lot. The CoCo drive I have is a single drive in a dual
slimline case. I have to open it up to get the drive model numbers but at
least now I have something to go on.
On the cable, I would call Tandy National Parts. About 3 years ago,
I ordered the DVI cable for the 102 and they had it. It was $30 or $40, but
well worth it. They had bood disks too for $5.
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)
-----Original Message-----
From: Roger Merchberger [mailto:zmerch@30below.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2003 10:44 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Model 100 DVI drive
Rumor has it that M H Stein may have mentioned these words:
>From: "Cini, Richard" <RCini(a)congressfinancial.com>
>
> Does anyone know if the specs on the Model 100 Disk-Video
Interface
>is the same as the CoCo disks? I have a single-drive DVI and a single
>low-profile CoCo disk drive. They physically look to be the same but I
>wanted to be sure before I lashed them together.
Depends... ;-)
The DVI wants a "standard" 34-pin interface MFM SSDD 40-track drive -- the
original CoCo drives were 35-track SSDD drives. If you put one of *these*
drives in the DVI, you will most surely hear bad clunking noises when you
try to format your first disk.
The CoCo slimline drives came in 3 flavors: The FD-500, which was 35-track
SSDD (bad) the FD-501 which was 40 track SSDD (which is OK), and the FD-502
which was 40-track DSDD (which side 1 will go unused, but should work fine).
I have a DVI as well, but I don't have a boot disk or interface cable for
my Tandy 200... so I have yet to use it.
Hope this helps!
Roger "Merch" Merchberger
--
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?????????????
Hi.
I have a SGI Indigo2 [1] with a SGI GIO64 FDDI / CDDI SAS UTP card. I
don't have copper ports on my concentrator, so I need the equivalent DAS
fiber optic FDDI card. (SAS would do also, but DAS would better fit in
my network topology.) I can trade the UTP SAS card and possibly soon a
SGI Extreme GFX for the DAS fiber FDDI card.
Alternative: A CDDI/copper to FDDI/fiber optic media converter or a
CDDI/copper interface module for my Hirschmann MC 10-03 concentrator.
If someone wants to get "rid" of this "obsolete" FDDI stuff, please drop
me a mail. ;-)
I am located in Germany.
[1] The I2 was released 5/93, so it is nearly on topic. :-)
--
tsch??,
Jochen
Homepage: http://www.unixag-kl.fh-kl.de/~jkunz/
>Message: 10
>From: "Will Jennings" <xds_sigma7(a)hotmail.com>
>To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>Subject: Re: PDP-8: anyone tried NVRAM simulation of hard drives?
>Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2003 19:44:46 -0700
>Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
>
>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
>
>
Hi,
one way of doing this would be the use of a TU-58 tape drive. This device is
internalley using a disc-like structure, and it will connect to any serial port.
There should be a PDP8 OS8 driver for this. And with the RS-232 interface, this
could be used for any other computer as well.
The real TU58 is sweet, but terribly slow. On top of that, the tapes are
expensive. But there are cool alternatives:
You will find a semiconductor-emulated TU58 kit on:
http://www.SpareTimeGizmos.com/Hardware/TU58_Emulator.htm
Also there is a PC-Emulation on:
http://www.not-compatible.org/PDP-11/programs/tu58sim.html
I havn't yet used any of these, (have a real TU58), so see for yourself how
useful this is in your system. Please post the results!
Frank Arnold
> I always find it interesting that computer types would also be gun
>nuts. I've got a 1942 Soviet Musen Nagent (Spelling?) 7.62x54R, a 1970s
>era Savage 30-06, and a .380 handgun. Cabela's has a good stock of
>various odd ammunition sizes, including 7.62x54R.
I believe that it has to do with "protecting" our precious computers, or
maybe the family ?
BTW, I prefer muzzle loaders (45 and 58 cal) and saddle guns
Rich Stephenson
Lake Berryessa,
California
Rainbow afficionadoes,
at URL
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=3204407169&category=21092
(auction title = "1985 DIGITAL AD/Rainbow Computer/DEC PC/Desq", ending
Feb. 4) is a picture of an advertisement (apparently clipped from a period
computer magazine, from the description). While I'm annoyed with the seller
(starting bid = $7.98 for *one page* of one of his old magazines??!!??),
more interesting to me is the content of the ad. It shows what looks like a
VR201 monitor and LK201 keyboard (presumably hooked up to a Rainbow, which
is not in view), running DESQ *with a color display*. The only color
monitor that I knew of that worked with a Rainbow is a VR240, and the
monitor in the picture does not look like one of those to me.
Question: is there a monitor that looks like a VR201 and acts (ie
displays in color if connected to a Rainbow) like a VR240, or is that
advertising hyperbole? I have to say that the "color display" looks
photo-retouched in - the upper border of the windows line up with the
monitor screen edge but the lower borders do not.
- Mark
No connection to the auction.
Thanks!
Done.
Ed
San Antonio, Tx, USA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jeffrey Sharp" <jss(a)subatomix.com>
To: "Ed Tillman" <ETILLMAN(a)satx.rr.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2003 06:11 PM
Subject: Re: Spectrum Holobyte's "BreakThru!"
> You probably want to send this to the list instead of to me. The correct
> address for posting is cctalk(a)classiccmp.org.
>
> On Wednesday, January 29, 2003, Ed Tillman wrote:
> > Thanks to all, for all the input that helped me locate Spectum
Holobyte's
> > BreakThru! I did indeed find it on the referred abandonware page, and
> > snatched while the gettin' was good. The actual file size was @ 1.2Mb
> > zipped, and over 5Mb expanded, with over 4.5Mb being the wall patterns.
I
> > do remember it pushing Windows 3.1 and 4Mb of 30-pin RAM to its limits
> > though... :)
> >
> > BTW: I thought I'd have to apologise for being OT about the game (still
> > debatably fuzzy), but right on the splash screen - the earliest
copyright
> > listed was/is 1989.
> >
> > If I can help anyone in a like manner, please don't hesitate to holler!
>
> --
> Jeffrey Sharp
Available cards
(1) Genoa Systems Windows VGA Mod# 8500VL Rev:A
" "
Rev:G
" " Phantom 32 Mod# 8900VL Rev:A
(2) Audio PCI 9722 Sound Card
(3) Creative Labs CT6030 Video Spigot for Windows
(4) Media Vision Pro Graphics 1024
(5) BIBM-VIDE-500X Video DCI tv
(6) Headland Technology VRAM 2 (1991) 650-0218-blank
(7) Sigma Designs ReelMagic CD Rev:A1
(8) Spider Graphics Spider 64VLB
(9) Seattle Computer Ram+(plus) SCP130C (four banks installed)
Free to a good home ;-)
More to follow, as I get the time
Rich Stephenson
loedman1(a)juno.com
> By popular demand, Jay and I have set up demime on the ClassicCmp server,
> and all posts are being filtered through it. From here on out, all posts you
> get from CC will be in plain text, with no attachments or HTML. If you send
> file attachments, they will be removed from your post. If you post anything
> other than plain text messages, plain text will be extracted or rendered as
> appropriate. Even HTML-only or RTF-only mail is rendered into plain text.
> Demime tries very hard to convert your post into plain text, but if it
> simply cannot, it will bounce your post.
*Sigh*
Thank you!
Glen
0/0
for the 'Garage' Garage sale...
(regular internet connection is down, so have to live with text for
now...)
Heath H-11A + H27 --- $300.00
Altos 586 --- $40.00
Altos 580 --- $40.00
Commodore VIC-20 in original box with docs and cables - $40.00
Items are untested and as such are offered AS-IS. Shipping/packing
charges additional. Offers/interesting trades considered.
Thanks;
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
Contact original sender.
Reply-to: silvernails(a)mindspring.com
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2003 23:30:09 -0500
From: Tim <silvernails(a)mindspring.com>
To: Vintage Computer Festival <vcf(a)siconic.com>
Subject: Re: Mac II to donate
I have a Mac II (still working!) to donate. It is from 1987. Please
advise if you are looking for such things.
--
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 *
The EPP-2 software is available on the Art website.
http://www.artbv.nl
- Doug
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Arts [mailto:paularts@home.nl]
Sent: Tue 1/29/2013 1:17 PM
To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
Cc:
Subject: Re: Spare Chips
I want to work my Art EPP-2 programmer but i lost the software
google doesn't have what i'm looking for
any of you pherhaps
(its for the 27 and 28 series)
Paul
[demime 1.01a removed an attachment of type application/ms-tnef which had a name of winmail.dat]
>Message: 45
>Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2003 10:03:44 -0800
>From: Marvin Johnston <marvin(a)rain.org>
>To: ClassicCmp <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
>Subject: Ebay: Mark 1 Computer Cards
>Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>
>The pictures didn't load for me right now, but if these truely are the
>Mark 1 cards, it sounds like a neat collection!
>
>http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2303799002&category=1247
Most of the cards pictures are small cards with 1 or more transistors on
them. Theres a couple of other parts that I can't identify from the
pictures, and and 8 bit ISA card that obviously doesn't belong. Not Mark 1
parts, at least not Manchester Mark 1 parts. Could be from some other
machine called Mark 1 that I don't know of.
Greetings programs.
I must de-lurk here for a video game related item :)
The security bits used to open Sega and Nintendo items are 4.5mm and 3.8mm
inverted torx bits. www.mcmelectronics.com
part numbers 22-1150 and 22-1145 and they are listed at $1.99 each. They
also have the tri wing bits that open gamecube and gameboy stuff.
They are also a source for replacement cartridge edge connectors and other
video game hardware.
I promise my next post will be about free CBM and PET computers in the
Philadelphia PA USA area. :)
Mark
webmaster
www.vulcanjedi.com 30 years of game history!
Message: 19
From: "Sue & Francois" <fauradon(a)frontiernet.net>
To: <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: Tamper proof tools
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 06:00:23 -0800
Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Yep there they are again :) Now that I have a few names to search with I can
find exactly what I need. But at $15 a piece that makes it spendy at the
moment. But hey it's for the nomad after all... :)
Thank you
Francois
Minnesota
Same here! If anyone finds pieces of mine, let me know; being Canadian,
they'll be wearing little toques with red maple leaves on them...
mike in Toronto
---------------Original message------------------
From: "Jeffrey S. Worley" <Technoid(a)30below.com>
Subject: I am not dead!
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 15:27:03 -0500
There are very few things of which I certain these days, but one thing I
am sure of is that I am not dead.
I'm sorry for making such a mess of the list and of my dealings with
Curt. He deserved better. I just lost my mind. Plain and simple. I
have some of it back now and am hunting for more. If any of you find
some, please let me know so I can put it back.
Regards,
Jeff
Hi,
I have got my hands on a couple of old dec terminal servers, and am having
trouble finding the firmware to make them work.
These devices do not have flash, and are attempting to boot from a bootp
server, so I guess that they need an image.
Does anybody on the list still have an image for these boxes.
Unfortunately, without software, the boxes appear to be junk, and it would
be really great to get these boxes going, so that I could connect to various
systems (including my SBC6120) from my pc (via TCP!)
regards
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
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
Hmm... Could you please list the dimensions/size/capacity of these drives?
I'm trying to cobble together an authentic late-XT or early-AT clone system,
and would like to get hold of one or two fairly early (as authentic as
possible) 1/2- or 1/4- height hard drives.
Note: If there are any serious cc history buffs out there, I'm curious when
the first CDs and or sound cards were installed in marketed XT/AT systems.
Ed Tillman
Store Automation Tech Support Specialist
Valero Energy Corporation
San Antonio, TX; USA
Phone (210) 592-3110, Fax (210) 592-2048
edward.tillman(a)valero.com <mailto:edward.tillman@valero.com>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk-admin@classiccmp.org@PEUSA On Behalf Of
> loedman1(a)juno.com
> Sent: Monday, January 20, 2003 7:23 PM
> To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: Free stuff
>
> The following hard drives were delivered to me yesterday
>
> (1) Conner CP3000
> (2) Seagate ST-125
> (3) Maxtor 7213AT
> (4) Maxtor 7245AT
> (5) Maxtor LXT340A
> (6) Maxtor MXT540A (3)
> (7) Conner CFA340A
> (8) Seagate ST-225 (2)
> (9) Seagate ST-238R
>
> Also received a bunch of miscellaneous chips and cards that I need to
> sort and identify that will be available
>
> Rich Stephenson
>
>
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?
--
Christopher L McNabb
Operating Systems Analyst Email: cmcnabb(a)4mcnabb.net
Virginia Tech ICBM: 37.1356N 80.4272N
GMRS: WPSR255 ARS: N2UX Grid Sq: EM97SD
I have a number of TI power supplies
Texas Instruments Power Supply - Model AC 9131
IP 120va 60hz 6 watts OP 3.3vac 500ma
Texas Instruments Power Supply - Model AC 9132
IP 120va 60hz 6 watts OP 5.7vac 240ma
Texas Instrument Power Supply Model AC 9180
IP 120vac 50/60hz 5w OP 9.5vdc 50ma
Which is the correct Power Supply for the TI 99/4A
What TI machines are the others for?
>Jeffrey Sharp <jss(a)subatomix.com>
>By popular demand, Jay and I have set up demime on the ClassicCmp
server,
>and all posts are being filtered through it. From here on out, all posts
you
>get from CC will be in plain text, with no attachments or HTML. If you
send
Thank You, you have no idea how much I appreciate this !!!!!!!
Rich Stephenson
Lake Berryessa,
California
By popular demand, Jay and I have set up demime on the ClassicCmp server,
and all posts are being filtered through it. From here on out, all posts you
get from CC will be in plain text, with no attachments or HTML. If you send
file attachments, they will be removed from your post. If you post anything
other than plain text messages, plain text will be extracted or rendered as
appropriate. Even HTML-only or RTF-only mail is rendered into plain text.
Demime tries very hard to convert your post into plain text, but if it
simply cannot, it will bounce your post.
You don't need to change anything. This change should be totally transparent
to all subscribers. Just keep posting or lurking as you always have. A round
of thanks goes out to all who suggested the use of a tool like demime.
For more information about demime, you may wish to visit its web site:
http://scifi.squawk.com/demime.html
--
Jeffrey Sharp
<!-- just my 0.02 worth -->
testing
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
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
The saga of the ARM Evaluation Kit discs continues...
I still don't have a complete uncorrupted Disc 1, which is the disc
containing the editors and assembler for the ARM. Rob, who hoped to
make a copy for me has found that his Disc 1 also has a corrupt track
in exactly the same place as mine and Kevan's. Perhaps there was a
batch of corrput discs from Acorn's disc duplicators.
Can I ask anyone who thinks they have Disc 1 for the ARM Evaluation Kit
to *please* make an effort to dig it out, and either copy it for me, or
lend it?
I now know of at least four or five people who would be very grateful.
I'll pay for postage etc, of course, by recorded delivery if
necessary. I've worked out at least one way to make disc images that
should be accessible to a BBC Micro, so if I can get Disc 1 sorted out,
I can not only make copies for those who I know want them, but make the
images available on a website.
Thanks to those who've already made helpful suggestions about disc
images.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
http://www.mcmelectronics.com/Home/level_5.jhtml?PRODID=9629&SKUID=8874
Above is a set of tamper proof bits At MCM electronics. Dayton OH USA
web-store.
SECURITY SD2519 BIT SET 30 PC W/ SCREWDRIVER
30 Piece Security Screwdriver Insert Bit Kit
This is a complete set of security bits for all of those difficult service
applications, such as IBM PS/2 monitors, cable boxes, telephone equipment
and many others.
Kit contains: 5/64", 3/32", 7/64", 1/8", 9/64", 5/32" security hex keys; T8,
T10, T15, T20, T25, T27, T30, T35, T40 security torx bits; #6, #8, #10 torx
set bits; #4, #6, #8, #10 spanners; #1, #2, #3, #4 tri-wings, bit holder,
1/4" socket adaptor, 7-1/2" magnetic handle and plastic carrying case.
Larry Truthan
Digest subscriber
Dublin OH USA
(posting to list because I'm not sure my first try went through)
Colin,
I'd be very interested in the 5360.. Where is it? I have a full set of S/36
software on 5.25" disks...
Will J
Hi Tony and everyone,
Thanks for the suggestions. All of the floppies that I substituted looked
absolutely identical to the one that wasn't working.
The last thing that I did was to try another floppy drive data cable (it's
the standard PC-style dual floppy cable with the 34-pin IDC connector on the
controller end and the card edge connector on the other end). When I simply
replaced the original cable on the left-hand drive with the new one, the
problem remained. When I swapped the cables to each drive (right going to
left and left going to right), it worked perfectly! I assume that there must
be some sort of drive select or other difference between the two floppy
drives, but why the right one works in either location, and the left one
works only as the primary (right-hand) drive is beyond me.
After I convinced myself that everything was now okay, I physically
interchanged the floppies (left to right and right to left) and took the
opportunity to examine them very carefully to look for differences. I saw
none. Even the date codes were identical! I'm not saying that there aren't
any differences--in fact, there must be--but there wasn't anything obvious
to me.
The only difference with the 9836C that I notice now (besides the obvious
lack of an error message at startup) is that the LED on the floppy
controller board labeled "TR00" (those are zeroes) is no longer illuminated
after the POST. I assume that is a Track 0 seek failure indicator, but I'm
just speculating.
Whatever the case, I'm delighted that it's fixed! Thanks to everyone for
their help and suggestions!
Regards,
Stan
From: ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell)
Subject: Re: Problem with 9836C floppy drive
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2003 19:06:48 +0000 (GMT)
Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
> series of high and low pitched beeps (low, low, high, low, high, high,
low).
I assume that's some kind of error code, which would be useful if the
video side was malfunctioning. Anyone have a table of them?
> After that, it is able to load an OS (HP BASIC) and run fine, with the
> exception that the left-hand floppy drive is inaccessible.
>
> I've taken a known good floppy drive, floppy controller, and even the CPU
I assume you checked that the replacement drive was configured the same
way (link settings, termination resistor pack) as the old one?
What about the cables to this drive? Have you checked it's getting power
(IIRC there's a conventional 4 pin power connector in there). Have you
tested/swapped the data cable?
-tony
> By popular demand, Jay and I have set up demime on the ClassicCmp server,
absolutely brilliant!! Can you set something up to automatically strip off my
yahoo .sig too? ;-)
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
Bill:
I don't have a CoCo, but I do have a DVI. So I was going to raid the
drive from an external CoCo drive that I somehow got and use it in the DVI.
I was concerned more with electrical compatibility than software
compatibility. I didn't realize that in those machines Tandy used standard
floppy drives. I guess by that point in time, many manufacturers (except
Apple and Commodore) standardized on an IBM-style drives rather than
proprietary setups.
I'm sure I'm over-generalizing and will start a sprightly discussion
on disk formats :-)
Thanks to all who responded.
Rich
-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Allen Jr [mailto:n8uhn@yahoo.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2003 12:14 AM
To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Model 100 DVI drive
I cannot remember what the model 100 used for a drive.
the coco and coco 2/3 both used standard (ibm
compatable) mfm, 5 1/4 in, single sided, low density
floppy drives.
the card edge connector for the coco cable between the
interface cart and floppy was a streight thru cable -
(pin 1 went to pin 1 etc).
i have used standard 360k floppys on the coco - it
only uses one side of the diskette for 180k.
if the model 100 has the same pinout and uses a
standard mfm dirve it should work.
btw the coco drive case did have a power supply in it
for the drive - power did not come from the cart.
Bill
Message: 36
From: "Cini, Richard" <RCini(a)congressfinancial.com>
To: "CCTech (E-mail)" <cctech(a)classiccmp.org>
Subject: Model 100 DVI drive
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 10:55:53 -0500
Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Hello, all:
Does anyone know if the specs on the Model 100
Disk-Video Interface
is the same as the CoCo disks? I have a single-drive
DVI and a single
low-profile CoCo disk drive. They physically look to
be the same but I
wanted to be sure before I lashed them together.
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)
End of cctech Digest
A friend gave me a LM-2 Logic monitor from Global Specialties Corp. It has a
button called the Family Threshold Select with 5 settings: RTL, DTL, TTL,
HTL, and CMOS. Did a google search trying to find a manual but no luck so
far.
Got a brand new unopened 500+ piece puzzle called MICROCHIP and it's dated
1983the cover of the box is a huge picture of a microchip circuit design.
Not sure if I should break the seal and put it together or just leave it
untouched for now?
Data General walkabout computers (3) not tested yet. Need power adapters.
I've managed to pick up a pair of "Atomic Instrument Company" Model
1091's from Purdue yesterday. They were manufactured in 1962, and the
reason that I claim that they're on-topic is because they 'count'.
Googling for "Atomic Instrument Company" brings back a grand total of
three results... nothing that looks useful. Does anyone know anything
about the company or where a schematic could be found?
These are the first things i've brought home that use a set of vacuum
tubes (thermionic valves for those on the other side of the pond) to
count.
Really neat.
I've put up a pair of blurry pictures of its front (I don't have access to
good lighting at the moment...) on my web site:
http://purdueriots.com/mr-atomic/
Warning: the pictures have a large resolution, but are only about 80kB in
size.
Pat
--
Purdue Universtiy ITAP/RCS
Information Technology at Purdue
Research Computing and Storage
http://www-rcd.cc.purdue.edu
IBM PS/2 model 35SX - HDD of some description, 1920Kb RAM. Also with
Proprinter XL, and IBM Monitor (heavy burnin).
This is going in the skip next week, if anyone wants to rescue it from
Ellesmere Port (UK) then let me know and I'll rescue it.
Tim.
>Anyone who likes a different expression other than
>"NEWFIX" that is 6 letters or less - please suggest.
Y2KFIX or Y10KFX (as appropriate)? That seems more specific.
- Mark
I cannot remember what the model 100 used for a drive.
the coco and coco 2/3 both used standard (ibm
compatable) mfm, 5 1/4 in, single sided, low density
floppy drives.
the card edge connector for the coco cable between the
interface cart and floppy was a streight thru cable -
(pin 1 went to pin 1 etc).
i have used standard 360k floppys on the coco - it
only uses one side of the diskette for 180k.
if the model 100 has the same pinout and uses a
standard mfm dirve it should work.
btw the coco drive case did have a power supply in it
for the drive - power did not come from the cart.
Bill
Message: 36
From: "Cini, Richard" <RCini(a)congressfinancial.com>
To: "CCTech (E-mail)" <cctech(a)classiccmp.org>
Subject: Model 100 DVI drive
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 10:55:53 -0500
Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
Hello, all:
Does anyone know if the specs on the Model 100
Disk-Video Interface
is the same as the CoCo disks? I have a single-drive
DVI and a single
low-profile CoCo disk drive. They physically look to
be the same but I
wanted to be sure before I lashed them together.
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)
End of cctech Digest
It would be easier if you specified what these parts were - a lot of us don't
have manuals etc, so we end up looking at the numbers on the boards or other
components. Don W
> Message: 26
> Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 09:30:31 +0100
> From: ANTIK <antikgmbh(a)compuserve.com>
> Organization: ANTIK
> To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
> Subject: Looking for DEC parts
> Reply-To: cctech(a)classiccmp.org
>
> Hello,
>
> I found your e-mail address after searching for the DEC part#
> 21-15542-01 on the "googles" platform.
>
> We are a German independent distributor and looking for several DEC
> parts for our customer.
> May you can help ???
>
> These are the parts we are looking for:
>
> 5 pcs. DEC 21-17311-01 or 21-17311-02
> 2 pcs. DEC 21-17312-00 or 21-17312-01
> 2 pcs. DEC 57-00001-01
> 2 pcs. DEC 57-00000-01
> 2 pcs. DEC 21-15542-01
>
> Any luck for us ??
>
> Thank you for a short notice.
> Best regards
> Erika
> Antik Elektronik-Vertriebs-GmbH
> Tel: +49 4191 89441
> Fax: +49 4191 89337
>
> --__--__--
For those in Europe there's a Sharp 3100 with the very
rare floppy dd on UK EPay. Has display problems but
likely not hard to fix. They are similiar to the HP 100s
handhelds and take the same memory card. Also seems
to have the proprietory laplink cable and the manual.
2Megs memory on board. Has DOS 3 in ram. I'd kill to
find one this side of the pond but overall cost would
likely be too pricey for me.
It's presently at 16 lbs with 8 days to go.
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&categor
y=3728&item=3003997495
I have no connection with the seller.
Lawrence
lgwalker@ mts.net
During my electrican days, we used screw heads like that to secure light
fixture covers in jail cells. They were the standard screw on jail rate
fixtures. Those fixtures used a welded frame with 1" thick lexan lenses.
James
>>I've also seen some screw heads that have three tiny round holes, arranged
>>>in a triangular pattern.
>
>
> I've never seen those or the tools to R/R them (and I have a BOX full of bits). I'm guessing that they're proprietary to one company.
>
>
> Joe
>
`
-------------------Original Message----------------
From: "Cini, Richard" <RCini(a)congressfinancial.com>
Subject: Model 100 DVI drive
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 10:55:53 -0500
Hello, all:
Does anyone know if the specs on the Model 100 Disk-Video Interface
is the same as the CoCo disks? I have a single-drive DVI and a single
low-profile CoCo disk drive. They physically look to be the same but I
wanted to be sure before I lashed them together.
Thanks.
Rich
----------------------------------------------------------
Hi Rich:
I can't answer your question, but I do have a DVI and the manual and s/w,
if that can help you in any way. It runs CP/M IIRC.
And if anybody's interested, make me an offer...
mike in Toronto, Can.
Jim Willing wrote:
> Well... eight 'arrow' keys (I think, I'm not in front of it at the
> moment) with the 'usual' up, down, left, right... then diagonal (???)
> keys, and some have the legend 'roll' on them as well...
> I think it has its proper keyboard, but it has no numeric pad. Did note
> an alternate numeric set in the alpha keys similar to some keypunch
> machines...
These make me think that it is a 2621-style keyboard. Sorry, like I
wrote before, the 2621 wasn't capable of running VPLUS applications
and so it was sort of shunned at the PPOE where we had one. But I
remember it had a single group of keys with the cursor keys right
above the numeric keys (and I think doing double duty as function keys,
albeit non-programmable function keys).
-Frank McConnell
I'm dusting off this old AXPpci33 motherboard of mine and ran into a few
issues... I'm attempting to upgrade the firmware and I have the file
>from the Digital/Compaq/HP web site (Dec 2002 version), but the
instructions don't match my situation. I don't have the ability to
cobble up a boot floppy with OpenVMS (my DEC 4000 has no RX33 or
equivalent), I don't seem to have a compatible network card to BOOTP
it in, and the FAT floppy technique doesn't work with the firmware
I have in there now.
So... does anyone know where I can find a reference to which network
cards are supported for network boot? I have all the common cards
like NE2000s, 3C509s, 8013s, etc., and a few PCI cards. I even have
a card in there now with a DEC 21143-PA chip, but the ROMs don't seem
to like it. Alternatively, in a similar vein to what someone else
recently requested for their Multia, can someone on the list make a
raw disk image I can "dd" onto a blank floppy? The Unix technique
on the HP webpage requires a Digital Unix binary program to convert
the firmare utility file to some other format and I can't do it from
Linux or Solaris.
Thanks,
-ethan
P.S. - I also can't find any reference to the supported memory
configurations of the AXPpci33 board - I have some parity 16MB
SIMMs, giving me 64MB, but I'd like to use some of these parity
64MB SIMMs I have here from AIR motherboards (formerly CompuServe
"CompuHosts"). Got a set of 4 ready to go, but it seems that few
boards ever supported 64MB 72-pin memory. :-(
__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now.
http://mailplus.yahoo.com
thanks to everyone for the website pointers! I've just tried the three systems
and they all seem to work; unfortunately the LC and the Performa have been
cleared of application software, but the Mac II stil has Word on it. Word feels
faster to use on that than the modern version on my 1GHz PC - progress, huh!?
:-)
> The Mac II has a port for a second (external) floppy.
yes, this one has both an 800K and 1.4MB drive installed. Not sure what speed
the CPU is yet, I haven't dug around inside too much.
> These machines can run up to MacOS 7.6.1 but
> are quicker and more at home with 7.5.3 or even 6.0.8, which is quite speedy
> on even machines as slow as these. Do you plan to display them, actually
> use 'em or what? I have a slew of parts and old drives and whatnot for these
> machines - the drive's usually what goes on them.
well I'm not short of spare SCSI drives if you mean the hard disc, but floppies
are another matter.
I put SCSI in any PCs that I build so I have a stack of older drives spare as a
result of upgrades. What I don't have is any OS or application software for
these critters, so when the disks fail I'm currently stuffed.
I haven't tried any of the floppy drives yet to see if they work...
I'll probably pass a couple of the machines on to a good home in a few weeks as
I don't really have space for everything; I was just curious about them as I
haven't used macs for about ten years now. Strangely enough, I used to live
around here and I've just found at that the mac II is the very same machine
that I used to use at college! Funny seeing it again - I bet it's changed hands
a few times in the meantime...
Not sure which system I'll hang on to yet... the II has the advantage of having
ethernet and the twin drives, plus the application software - but the LC III is
perhaps the more usable machine if I can get software for it and get it on the
ethernet LAN somehow. With a copy of Word on it I'd probably use it now and
then; I'd forgotten how nice those keyboards were and it certainly feels like a
quick machine for its age.
> By the way: check the motherboard battery to make sure it's live (3.6v
> lithium).
I noticed those on the boards. They seem to be OK, at least no complaints on
startup...
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
On Tue, 28 Jan 2003 23:14:12 -0600, you wrote:
>It would be nice to find a source of the DEC plastic module handles,
>and the metal stiffener/ejector handles used on DEC hex-height modules.
>But I'm not holding my breath for those, either.
Have you tried Douglas Electronics? They have handles (not
original DEC colors but a strange whitish color) and prototyping
cards of all sizes.
http://www.douglas.com/hardware/pcbs/breadboards/digital.html
-Charles
At 05:06 AM 1/29/03 -0600, Toth wrote:
>
>> For cleaning computer plastics, the absolute best product I've found (in
>> the US) is Hoppe's No. 9 Powder Solvent. Found at your local sporting
>> goods store. Even removes PERMANENT Sharpie.
>
>Has anyone tried removing Sharpie from a chassis with textured paint? I
>have a couple of items that were marked up with a Sharpie, and short of
>paint thinner (which seems to dilute and bury the ink in the paint while
>damaging the texture), I've found nothing that seems to work.
I've used alcohol on that stuff and it seems to remove some but not all of it. I've never found anything that would remove it completely.
Joe