This is a longshot. But has anyone got Bill Bashams Diversi Dial for the
Apple IIe?
I've been searching for this for a few years, and have come up completely
empty. The people who have it want to keep it for nostalgia
(understandable). I would actually be connecting the Ddial to a terminal
server box (bsd or linux) and run the chat system live on a IIe.
I guess I'll have to find the serial cards too ;)
Thanks!
Hi Folks,
I'm new to the list, and yes, I found my way via the
SlashDot posting.
Question:
Do you include programmable calculators or PDAs under the
label of "classic computers?" What about game machines?
If this is in the FAQ, just tell me to RTFM. Thanks.
Art McGee
Communications & Technology Consultant
amcgee(a)freeshell.org
(510) 967-9381
Circuit Riders International
<http://npogroups.org/lists/info/riders>
NPO/NGO Media & Technology Calendar
<http://amcgee.freeshell.org/mtcalendar.html>
APC ActionApps Content Management System
<http://www.apc.org/actionapps>
Hi,
today I'm lucky to add another card to my (little) coprocessor card collection ...
... a YARC Sprinter card, which includes an AMD 29000 processor.
As for most of my other cards, this one doesn't include any documentation or software :-(
I do not expect to get any information from Yarc Systems/Trevor Marshall, as i got no
aswers for my requests regardning my Yarc transputer card ...
Can someone on the list help me ?
Thanks Bernd
Bernd Kopriva Phone: ++49-7195-179452
Weilerstr. 24 E-Mail: bernd(a)kopriva.de
D-71397 Leutenbach
Germany
I was wondering if anyone has used an FPGA or similar programmable device as
a replacement for the unobtainable lower-case 2513 character generator in
the ADM-3A terminal. I am trying to avoid fabricating an adapter board to
use a 27xx EPROM since the pinouts are quite different.
Since the only unusual pin on the 2513 is the GND on 10 (and 12 is not used)
I would like to just be able to jumper the board pin 12 to ground and plug
in a 24 pin device with programmable I/O pins to match the 2513 address
lines and data outputs. Does anyone know which device would be the most
suitable?
thanks
Charles
Sorry,
That was supposed to be private!
Gary
-----Original Message-----
From: Nick [mailto:nickmiller@charter.net]
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 9:50 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Looking for a Heathkit H-8 LED Display Cover
I picked up a Heathkit H-8 the other day, well... I won an eBay auction but
I got it for a good price. It looks to be in good condition and is full of
cards but it is missing the red LED display cover. Does anyone know where I
might find one? Also, are there any H-8 manuals out on the web? It would
be nice to check this thing out a bit before I fire it up. My H-11 manuals
were not much help.
Thanks,
Nick Miller
************************************
If this email is not intended for you, or you are not responsible for the
delivery of this message to the addressee, please note that this message may
contain ITT Privileged/Proprietary Information. In such a case, you may not
copy or deliver this message to anyone. You should destroy this message and
kindly notify the sender by reply email. Information contained in this
message that does not relate to the business of ITT is neither endorsed by
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************************************
Nick,
Seeing as you mentioned your H-11 manuals... I have an H-11 I'm trying to
bring back to life. Is there any way I could borrow (or have you copy) your
H-11 Operation manual. I have every H-11 manual except that one! I have
H-11 Assembly, Serial, Parallel, H-27, etc. just not the H-11 operation.
I've checked the PS (end of H-11 assembly), and everything *should be* fine,
but no workee! I'm not sure where the problem lies.
If you're unwilling to lend/copy the manual, could we spend some time
e-mailing each other about various steps for checkout?
Thanks,
Gary
(PS, I'm in Fort Wayne, Indiana if that matters any.)
-----Original Message-----
From: Nick [mailto:nickmiller@charter.net]
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 9:50 PM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Looking for a Heathkit H-8 LED Display Cover
I picked up a Heathkit H-8 the other day, well... I won an eBay auction but
I got it for a good price. It looks to be in good condition and is full of
cards but it is missing the red LED display cover. Does anyone know where I
might find one? Also, are there any H-8 manuals out on the web? It would
be nice to check this thing out a bit before I fire it up. My H-11 manuals
were not much help.
Thanks,
Nick Miller
************************************
If this email is not intended for you, or you are not responsible for the
delivery of this message to the addressee, please note that this message may
contain ITT Privileged/Proprietary Information. In such a case, you may not
copy or deliver this message to anyone. You should destroy this message and
kindly notify the sender by reply email. Information contained in this
message that does not relate to the business of ITT is neither endorsed by
nor attributable to ITT.
************************************
Speaking of DIBOL, I need COS-300 for some of my 11/23s... In case you
didn't know, COS-300 is RT-11 with DIBOL layered on it or something..
COS-500 is the same but its RSTS-based if I remember correctly..
Will J
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Bob Shannon <bshannon(a)tiac.net> wrote:
> I've got multiple 256KW boards working. Do you need the switch
> configurations??
Thanks for jogging my memory on this, I've been carrying the manual
around for a couple of days.
Looks like the 12699H, 12746H, 12747H, and 12749H boards each have
a set of switches or jumpers labelled with some subset of letters
A through H, and how these are set selects the base address of the board.
Jumper in or switch closed is a logical 0 and jumper out or switch open
is a logical 1.
A is 0x004000
B is 0x008000
C is 0x010000
D is 0x020000
E is 0x040000
F is 0x080000
G is 0x100000
H is 0x200000
Some boards have some of the jumpers/switches hard wired, others require you
to set them certain ways. E.g. 12746H needs A out, G out, H in and 12749H
claims that A, B, C, D, G, and H are all hardwired out.
All boards appear as a single chunk of memory, so a 12749H board with 256KW
can only appear at 0x000000-0x03ffff, 0x040000-0x07ffff, 0x080000-0x0bffff,
or 0x0c0000-0x0fffff (these are the four 256KW chunks from 0 to 1024KW).
Most boards appear to be limited to appearing below 1024KW. The 12746H
appears to be limited to appearing below 512KW.
-Frank McConnell
I have a Commodore SX-64 for sale. This is the semi-portable Commodore
64 with the built-in monitor. I think they are rather rare.
Reply to: fecooper(a)tva.gov
Jim,
I stumbled on www.classiccmp.org and noticed your reply to William Donzelli's
post (yesterday):
> have done a lot of business with them. Although they still give me
> grief when I bring the se30 in for its occasional upgrade (new disk,
> max out the ram, now idly seeking an FPU for it. :)
Is the FPU you're looking for the 68882? If so, I think I have one. I don't
know what package types this was offered in, my vague recollection is that the
one I have is about 1.5" square pin-grid array. Anyway, you're welcome to it
if you're interested.
In return (or in spite of this!) I have only one request: the FAQ link for the
Classic Computing message board doesn't seem to work for me - I need it
because I want to offer the rest of my old Apple hardware up for grabs, but I
don't want to spam the list with things like:
"I have a complete Apple][+ system with a fair number of expansion cards and
Sider 10MB HD. The remainder of what I have is old Mac-era stuff, I think I
have had to throw out all of my one-piece hardware (Pluses and SEs) but I have
a complete Mac IIci, possibly a IIsi, and some PM6100 and Centris 610 form
factor stuff that wants a home."
Perhaps there is a subset of folks that are interested in providing a home to
more old hardware? I'm located just north of Boston MA.
All the best,
Arthur
LDB4401 is a mini data cassette produced by Philips.
We currently have over 100 in stock in anyone is interested:
http://www.rtc-systems.co.uk
Rgds,
David Ward
Sales engineer
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Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
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Does anyone need a 2.88 meg floppy drive, IBM FRU 64F4148 (a Mitsubishi
underneath)? Pulled out of something long ago, and I can only assume that
it is good. Free for shipping, which ought to be about four bucks. First
come first served!
William Donzelli
aw288(a)osfn.org
> >IIRC the MT-32 is a full length card. I'm fairly sure that back in
> the
> >day I picked one up. Can't remember how. The music from it was
> superb,
> >at least for the time -- probably still. I
>
> The MT-32 is a external box by Roland, really a fancy drum syth.
> Since the
> smarts were basically a chip, that chip found its way to sound cards.
> Most
> modern motherboards and sound cards still offer MPU-401 and MT-32
> emulation, even oddly enough if midi itself isn't supported.
My mistake. A quick Google shows that I had a LAPC-1 -- an MT32 on a card.
I picked up a Heathkit H-8 the other day, well... I won an eBay auction but I got it for a good price. It looks to be in good condition and is full of cards but it is missing the red LED display cover. Does anyone know where I might find one? Also, are there any H-8 manuals out on the web? It would be nice to check this thing out a bit before I fire it up. My H-11 manuals were not much help.
Thanks,
Nick Miller
> the MPU-401 and MT-32. Speaking of which. What is an MT-32 like
> compared
> to the MPU-401? I've never seen one.
IIRC the MT-32 is a full length card. I'm fairly sure that back in the day I picked one up. Can't remember how. The music from it was superb, at least for the time -- probably still. I think I played a lot of Wing Commander with it.
Later I got a Sound Canvas, which I on-sold to a musical friend of mine. I think he got the MT-32 too. He used to have a Gravis which I lusted after somewhat, particularly because of the Gravis-only demos of the time.
I should see if he still has any of that old stuff. He's a bit of a pack rat simply because he's always too busy to sort anything out.
Chris J.
How would you go about dumping the SE ROM? Is that a board that plugs into
one of the two expansion slots? Are the ROMs on the board socketed so you
could remove them and read and dump them? Assuming that would be possible,
I wonder what it would take to build a new board with the same functionality
and ROM images.
I have two IPCs, but no SE ROM for either. I have the BASIC ROM daughter
board for the HP-UX ROM board for one of them, but not the other. I was
going to try to come up with a way to dump the BASIC ROM, but never really
got started with that project.
-Glen
>From: Joe <rigdonj(a)cfl.rr.com>
>Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>Subject: Re: HP Integral?
>Date: Sat, 28 Dec 2002 20:03:28
>
> Congradulations on the purchase of the IPC. I have several of them and
>they're intersting machines. No but I'm not selling my SE ROM! If I ever
>get my EPROM programmer working (Anybody got a service manual for the Data
>I/O Unisite?), I may be able to dump the ROM. I also have the ROM for the
>Technical BASIC.
>
> Joe
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Hello Everyone,
Can anyone shed some light onto the possible value of
the following computers:
Tandy 1400LT portable computer (2 floppy drives &
case)
Tandy 1000TX (20MB hard drive)
Both are in excellent working order and would love to
know the collectability and value of them.
Thanks for the help.
- Anthony
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I have a MPU-IPC-T Midi Processing Unit available. I believe this is mpu 401
compatable. I was going to put it up on Ebay but would rather see it go to
someone here on the board. It contains the box, the 8 bit card, original
manual and packaging. The receipt is still in the box and it shows a retail
price of $119. It was used only a couple of times and is in excellent
condition. If you would like more info or pics email me at
trestivo(a)tarinc.com. Make an offer.
thom
Anyone interested in what Duncan has? The Decision Mate V is a Z80-based
machine that typically ran CP/M. I am pretty sure he's talking about an
IBM 5150 and not 5100. At any rate, contact him directly.
Reply-to: <lboyken(a)csapc.com>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2003 12:33:58 -0600
From: Lucas Boyken <lboyken(a)csapc.com>
Subject: NCR Machines
To Whom It May Concern,
I have some NCR machines that may be of interest. 2 PC6 machines which are
8088's. Also, two Decision Mate V machines with Memory Add-on to total 128K
of base memeory and External Hard Drive, FH 10Mb Segate I believe. Further,
I believe I have two old IBM orginal PC's, 5100's sound right. One of them
has an add-on board to upgrade it to an 80386 chip. Beyond that, I have a
mirad of memory boards, IO boards, etc. If any is of interest to you and
your organization, please contact me, as I am thinking of throwing them out.
Respectfully,
Lucas W. Boyken
Account Manager / Technical Representative
Computer Systems Associates
619 Sumner Ave.
Humboldt, IA 50548
Phone: (515) 332-2751
Company Phone: 800-222-7601
Fax: 515-295-5687
lboyken(a)csapc.com
--
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 *
>> We recently purchased an original Apple portable,
>> model #M5120, at a garage
>> sale. It came in the original black carrying case
>> with the Apple logo. We're
>> searching for any information about it, with the
>> goal of selling it
>> eventually. Any suggestions anyone can offer will be
>> greatly appreciated.
I see these on the LEM Swap list from time to time... usually for about
$100 or less. They don't seem to be anywhere near as valuable as one
might think. In most cases they are in working order when offered
(although its not too unusual to see them offered with a dead battery)
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
>With APL you'll probably get $1500-$2000 for the lot, and likely more if you
>sell the pieces separately. I, for one, would bid on the 5114 separately
>as I
>need one, but not the 5110.
Really? I figured it would be worth more as a whole. But I guess it does
make some sense to be willing to part out the 5114, and then just sell
the 5110 with its manuals.
This will definitly be the thought running thru my head for the next
while... to sell or not to sell... how to put a price on the physical
first computer you used.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
Not to beat a dead horse, but the last year a 273 could be had in a
Barracuda was 1967. No ifs, ands, or buts. 1968 was the last year of the
273, period. Amusingly, one of my cars' emissions tests says it has a 283,
stupid emissions testings place... In all the emissions things I have, the
engine size is variously reported as 273, 283, 318, or 340, and yes it
easily passed no matter which one it was thought to be. I guess a 74 with a
318 might be slow, wouldn't know, but I know E-bodies weigh a good deal more
than my A-body. I have a 69 318 in my fastback, which despite having a two
barrel and being backed with an automatic, used to regularly stomp ricers,
well before I started restoring it of course.. I wish I had the 273 still,
but that was replaced before my time, it suffered from an engine rebuild
performed by the automotive equivalent of braindead monkeys. Anyway, if
anyone wants further info about my cudas or whatnot, feel free to e-mail me
offlist..
Will J
_________________________________________________________________
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The subject says it all. I've checked on Google and get the *impression*
that they are both the same at 550 Oersteds. Anyone know if this is
truely the case? Thanks.
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
From: Joe <rigdonj(a)cfl.rr.com>
Subject: RE: TRS-80 fever on ebay?!
Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
At 07:02 PM 1/6/03 -0500, you wrote:
>> I have a '74 Barracuda that's being restored. The original 283 was
tossed
> 283? When did they start putting Ford engines in Plymouths? I think
you mean 318.
283 would be a Chevy engine, Ford would be a 289. Best stick with
computers guys !!!
Rich
Many years ago, I owned an MZ-80K. With it, were a whole stack of
magazines, which (IIRC) were called Sharpsoft User Group, or something
similar to that.
Sadly, I sold that MZ-80K to a friend (along with all the mags), and
they (comp & mags) have long since passed into oblivion.
The thing is, those magazines were worth more than their weight in gold,
in terms of information about the MZ-80 series computers; there was
loads of type-in software, stuff about peeks & pokes, and so on & so
forth. Thing is, I cannot find a single reference on the internet to
Sharpsoft, save for some unrelated stuff, and a couple of references to
cash registers. :(
So, does anyone else remember the Sharpsoft mags (incidentally, they are
unrelated to the UK-based Sharp Users Group), if so does anyone *have*
any, and if so can I either buy/trade/borrow them?
Thanks in advance!
--
Cheers,
Ade.
B-Racing, "B" where the action is!
http://www.b-racing.com
In related news:
<quote>
Norwegian teenager acquitted in DVD film cracking case
Tue Jan 7, 7:26 PM ET
By DOUG MELLGREN, Associated Press Writer
OSLO, Norway - Hollywood didn't get its happy ending when a Norwegian court
acquitted a teenager of digital burglary charges for creating and
circulating online a program that cracks the security codes on DVDs.
Tuesday's ruling, a blow to the entertainment industry's drive to curtail
illegal copying of its movies, was a key test in how far copyright holders
can go in preventing duplication of their intellectual property.
Jon Lech Johansen, who was 15 when he developed and posted the program on
the Internet in late 1999, said he developed the software only to watch DVD
movies he owned on a Linux-based computer that lacked DVD-viewing software.
</quote>
-----Original Message-----
From: John Allain [mailto:allain@panix.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 4:46 PM
To: CCTalk
Subject: DMCA etc.
For those of you nutz about the current efforts to make
digital copyrights overly restrictive,
here's a FUN place to visit, as regards to this problem.
"END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
FOR VIEWING ILLEGAL ART EXHIBIT"
<g>
http://www.illegal-art.org/contract.html
If you allow popups,
go here instead and it will pop the above.
http://www.illegal-art.org
John A.
As per subject; I can't find anything on Google which matches HP 98564...
I'm wondering if it's a typo, as it claims to be a 9000 series (so, either
a 9564, a 9856, a 9854 or a 9864 is my guess), but can anyone shed any light?
Ta.
--
Cheers, Ade.
Be where it's at, B-Racing!
http://b-racing.com
At 08:04 PM 1/7/03 -0800, you wrote:
>
>To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>From: Joe <rigdonj(a)cfl.rr.com>
>Subject: RE: TRS-80 fever on ebay?!
>Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>
>At 07:02 PM 1/6/03 -0500, you wrote:
>>> I have a '74 Barracuda that's being restored. The original 283 was
>tossed
>
>> 283? When did they start putting Ford engines in Plymouths? I think
>you mean 318.
>
>283 would be a Chevy engine, Ford would be a 289. Best stick with
>computers guys !!!
>
> Rich
Argghh! Brain Fart!
Joe
I think if I ever somehow had a drastic increase in cash flow, I would
likely buy nearly every pre-1980 or so mopar I could get my hands on,
especially 67-69 barracudas.. I dunno, 2 1967s just isn't enough... Of
course, I would immediately be shot by my parents but yeah..
Will J
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I have come across an Osborne model OCC1 Serial # 134033. This unit has the
300 baud modem. It also has 5 1/4 disk with it. (SuperCalc, WordStar,
Qbasic) The unit boots up and runs the software but after about 15 to 20
minutes it starts to overheat.(smoke)
My question is - What is the selling price for a unit like this and where
would be the best place to sell it?
Thanks for your help,
Steve Cochrane
Director of Information Technology
SGS Tool Company
PO Box 187
Munroe Falls, OH 44262
(330)686.4194
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This message has been scanned by F-Secure Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange.
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> Do you know if there's any difference in performance between the
> MPU-401
> and MT-32? Or is it simply a difference in implementation.
[See previous comment about MT-32 vs LAPC-1]
IIRC (and I've just proved how reliable my memory is :-\ ) the MPU-401 was a MIDI
interface with no instruments and the MT-32 was an external module that required
either a MIDI or serial interface. You would use the two together.
[Of course, if I'd sent this to the right place first time this wouldn't be redundant now.]
I distinctly remember having to play around with some mapping untilities to get
the LAPC-1 to get even close to general MIDI and I'm fairly sure there were a
bunch of sounds that simply weren't there. However, there were also a heap of
sounds the MT-32/LAPC-1 did that weren't in the general MIDI list. I had
multiple sound cards and I used to have fairly complicated channel and instrument
mapping going on.
I used to have a Miracle Piano Teaching System too, which had some nice sounds.
Never did get all that far with it though.
Anyone else have the optional CMS chips for the original Soundblaster 1.0? I
remember a lot of Seirra games sounding a lot better with the extra channels.
Damn I wish I'd kept that stuff now.
Chris J.
---
Sorry to vance-at-neurotica . com for the dupe, I need to pay more attention to the from: line....
The main pages of the web site have been changed to the new, simple layout.
Go on over to http://www.classiccmp.org/ and check it out. Still to be
updated are the various pages Mailman spits out when subbing, unsubbing, or
changing options.
The FAQ 2.0 is still not up, but I have put up the old 1997 FAQ (and the
appropriate disclaimer :-) ). Remember that much of the information
contained in the old FAQ (especially contact information!) is no longer
applicable. Enjoy!
--
Jeffrey Sharp
>The hard drive for the System 23 was the IBM 5247. I have one (in the
>garage)
>it's a large cabinet-style drive that weighs about 120 lbs., and I have never
>seen another (although I'm sure Sellam has one in storage). It came in two
>varieties, as I recall, 17 or 33 MB. There was no hard drive option for the
>5110 (or for that matter the 5100 or 5120).
Well, I think I might have solved my hard drive mystery. Chalk it up to
me having been too young to remember the hardware clearly. Armed with the
info you gave me above, I did some calling around this morning to people
that might have a clue as to what happened to the hard drive. Near as any
of us can figure, the hard drive was never owned by my company... the
backups were aquired when we bought a software company that developed the
accounting package we used (which we later continued work on in house).
So the hard drive belonged to the software company, and those guys kept
their hardware, we just aquired the software rights.
So now that I know there is no mystery hard drive for my 5110... I have
to give some thought to if I want to sell the system. With this recent
eBay fever over things like a TRS-80, I am pondering if I can get a
pretty penny from my 5110. I could REALLY use the money towards a house
purchase. (I've got the 5110 with both Basic and APL, a large assortment
of manuals, a few tapes with software on them, and the 5114 floppy drive
unit. I should also have a printer around, but I can't say for sure if
the printer is still operational). Time to do some hunting on the
possible value... and if that value is enough for me to part with it (it
holds a bunch of sentimental value to me, as it was one of the first
computers I ever played with... possibly THE first, I'd have to compare
timelines against the Apple II I used in the late 70's)
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
> felt like digging.. Too bad I don't think I've got anything that'll
> read
> those 360K floppies anymore.. (If they're still good.) :-)
I'm just about to get a 5.25" floppy drive up and running in my main PC. I ordered a Catweasel enhanced floppy controller and I recently found a Teac dual 5.25"/3.5" floppy drive which I hope works. (If anyone knows a good source for new 5.25" floppy drive cleaning disks in Perth, Western Australia I'd be most grateful for the heads-up.)
Once I get them all running I'd love to help anyone read, write or image old disks, but I fear Australia is a long way away from most of the people on this list.
Speaking of which, I've salvaged a whole bunch of original 5.25" disks for various programs. I'll post a list when I've sorted through it, if anyone's interested. Some of them have useful things like serial numbers written on the labels.
> > > Minix? Is it the 1000 that has the 186, or is that the 2000?
A quick Google shows that the 2000 was the first with a 186. I love the way that the Tandy used them as a CPU but by the time the 486 was out they were just being used for caching hard drive controllers. (I had a lovely VLB caching controller right up until I walked away from it about 3 years ago -- kicking myself now)
Chris J.
>Date: Tue, 7 Jan 2003 20:40:05 -0500
>From: Chris Hall <chhall(a)vt.edu>
>To: jfoust(a)threedee.com
>Subject: H89, REMark, Sextant
>
>Dear John,
>
>I have an old Heathkit H89 and many back issues of REMark and Sextant
>magazines. I've got to get rid of them. Any interest or pointers to someone
>who might have interst?
>
>Best regards,
>Chris Hall
I have working 360K drives, and could image those disks for future
reference.
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: David Holland [mailto:dholland@woh.rr.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 08, 2003 1:34 PM
> To: Classic Computer Talk
> Subject: Re: Tandy 1000TX and 1400LT
>
>
> Minix will run on the 8088..(If my memory serves correctly) It'll run
> off of a 360K floppy if you feel like swapping disks.. (A couple of
> 1.44 3.5" floppies made a better system tho)
>
> I've got the white binder from Prentice-Hall around here
> somewhere if I
> felt like digging.. Too bad I don't think I've got anything
> that'll read
> those 360K floppies anymore.. (If they're still good.) :-)
>
> Ameoba required the 386 (as did Minix-386 - of course)
>
> David
>
> On Tue, 2003-01-07 at 20:00, Doc Shipley wrote:
> > On Tue, 7 Jan 2003, Ethan Dicks wrote:
> >
> > >
> > > --- Doc Shipley <doc(a)mdrconsult.com> wrote:
> > > > What about the same model - 1000TX - with the
> original box & docs,
> > > > keyboard, touchpad and a blazing Tandy internal 300bps modem?
> > > >
> > > > Assuming the answer is still "< shipping", is there a
> Unix that runs
> > > > on that goober?
> > >
> > > Minix? Is it the 1000 that has the 186, or is that the
> 2000? Need
> > > at lesat a 286 for Venix, IIRC, and a 386 for Linux and
> other "modern"
> > > stuff. The instruction sets aren't all that different,
> but the MMUs
> > > are.
> >
> > I think its an 8088....
> >
> > /me shuffles off to check Minix's requirements....
> >
> > Doc
> >
>
>
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I'm selling an '89 IBM AS400/9404 and I'm trying to find out the appropriate price. Here are the specs. Anyone able to help me out?
IBM AS400/9404
S/N 10-03a9a
PTF Level: C4060230
Software Liscence Type: EUL
OS release level: V2R3
Includes IBM RPG/400 software
Tape Drive is a QIC1000 (includes 1 tape, blank as far as I know)
2 hard drive bays with 2 drives in each bay
1 10BaseT Ethernet adaper with manual
Several misc plugins
Add-on cards: (in the back)
Amount Base number Part Number EC
1 2700
1 2615
1 2641
2 6152
1 6050 56F0392 899322
1 2623
1 2609
2 2641
1 2617 56F0392 899322
2 3122 56F0392 899322/second one is D48180
1 2587 56F0392 899322
It seems to boot up fine, although I don't have a monitor adapter for it so I can't say for sure. Reply via this list or to scair(a)charter.net (email preferred) Thanks!
Hi all,
A while ago I bought a rather unusual C64/VIC20 add-on - a "Quick Data
Drive", presumably made by a company called Phonemark. After thumbing
through the manual I found a few photos of the cartridges. From what I can
gather, it's an early "stringy floppy" device that uses a cartridge filled
with tape that's set in a continuous loop. The cartridges in the photos
carry the branding "Entrepo". Now, the problem is, the manual mentions a
"Master QOS Wafer" that contains the operating system for the drive - my
drive is missing this. Also, I don't have any blank cartridges/wafers. For
curiosity's sake, I removed the cover and noticed that it uses a BSR (what
ever happened to them?) mechanism. After a quick search online, I found out
that the Rotronics Wafadrive (sp?) uses a very similar, if not identical
type of cartridge. Does anyone have a spare QOS cartridge and/or a few
blanks they feel like parting with?
I'm also trying to track down a Commodore 15xx disk drive - 5.25", 3.5",
MFM, GCR, whatever, as long as it uses the Commodore serial bus. I'm also
after any information on the Commodore serial disk drive interface. Ideally
I'd like to use one of these drives for data storage. I was going to use a
WesternDigital controller or a Super I/O chip and a floppy drive, but no-one
seems to sell either "raw" FDCs or Super I/O ICs... MFM, GCR, I don't give a
damn how it records the data on the disk. I've got a Mitsubishi 3.5" drive
lying around gathering dust and I want to get it to do something useful!
Thanks.
--
Phil.
philpem(a)dsl.pipex.com
http://www.philpem.dsl.pipex.com/
I've got a 1983 Heathkit catalog I was thinking about scanning each and every
page and putting on my website. What's the best way to do this? I was
thinking to scan every page in, resample to original size and save as .jpg so
they can be read. Good enough?
--
Antique Computer Virtual Museum
www.nothingtodo.org
> DIBOL? Was there an actual COBOL for the 11?
Cobol-11 and Cobol 81 ran on at least RSTS/E and RSX-11, I'm not sure if
there were versions for RT-11, but I suspect there was, and I'm pretty sure
DIBOL was available for RT-11.
Zane
I have a copy of the manual 5955-4311 / Installation and Service Manual /
High Performance Memory Systems. It covers the 2102E and 2102H Memory
Controllers and the 12741A, 12746H, 12747H, 12779H, and 12780H Memory
Modules. (But not the 12749H).
My 2117F is configured with a 2101E Memory Controller, (3x) 12749H 256KW
Memory Modules, a 12371A Memory Expansion Module, and a 12892B Memory
Protect Module. I can pull the boards out of my system and tell you how the
dip switches are set if that helps.
-Glen
>From: James Willing <jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com>
>Reply-To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
>To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org
>Subject: Config info on HP1000 memory?
>Date: Fri, 3 Jan 2003 09:49:44 -0800 (PST)
>
>In severe HP mode this week... <G>
>
>Does anyone have at hand the information for configuring HP memory boards
>12747H and/or 12749H for use in an HP1000 (2117F) computer???
>
_________________________________________________________________
MSN 8: advanced junk mail protection and 2 months FREE*.
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For those of you nutz about the current efforts to make
digital copyrights overly restrictive,
here's a FUN place to visit, as regards to this problem.
"END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
FOR VIEWING ILLEGAL ART EXHIBIT"
<g>
http://www.illegal-art.org/contract.html
If you allow popups,
go here instead and it will pop the above.
http://www.illegal-art.org
John A.
A VAXserver 3100 is usually the "high" model, with space for 2 5.25"
devices in the lower drive bay (TZ30 and RRD42 come to mind), and
then up to three 3.5" SCSI disks in the upper bay. It was often
equipped with one to three RZ25-E's (400M, Seagate ST1480).
The CPU is KA41 mostly; there are some KA42's out there, too. Console
is usually on MMJ port 1, set to 9600/8/N/1. It *can* be on one of the
other ports - dont ask me why, but I have seen several. :)
These are good, reliable machines. They are a lil on the power-hungry
side, but damn, they never give up. I have two, one running Ultrix 4.5,
and one running OpenBSD 3.2.
--fred
> I saw one at a hamfest - unfortunately She Who Must Be Obeyed
> walked up behind me and said "If you buy that piece of junk,
> you and your 'find' are sleeping outside."
That should not be a problem, methinks. Make sure you use a
double-layer floor in the tent (available from any military
outlet) *and* properly wire the place for AC, so you can play
with the puters. Problem fixed. :)
--fred
Philip,
> type of cartridge. Does anyone have a spare QOS cartridge and/or a few
> blanks they feel like parting with?
I believe I have some of that stuff tucked away... I *did* have
some of the Entrepo drives. And since I'm keeping my Commodore
stuff around for my son (who currently is almost a year old, so,
yes, he's gonna laugh his head of when I show him that "computer"..)
I can probably miss some of the cartridges..
> I'm also trying to track down a Commodore 15xx disk drive
> - 5.25", 3.5", MFM, GCR, whatever, as long as it uses the
Got those, but wanna hang on to them.
There *is* a project out there which lets you connect a C64/128 to
your PC's parallel port, and you can then run a program on the PC
which emulates N CBM 15xx drives.. you can mount/unmount disk
images, and whatnot. I'll find the name of it.
--fred