Goodwill Industries rehabs computers and sells computer parts, at
least in Austin, Texas. The Goodwill Computer Museum is a natural
outgrowth of that effort. In this video, museum curator Lisa Worley
takes Slashdot's Timothy Lord on a tour of the museum. Remember that
TRS-80 you threw away in 1982? Well, they saved several of them to
stimulate your nostalgia-based pleasure nodules. Ditto many other
devices both common and rare, including a pre-Dell computer made and
signed by Texas computer celebrity Michael Dell. So sit back and enjoy
the ride, as Timothy does the walking and Lisa does the talking, kind
of like Night at the Museum -- but without CGI dinosaurs and other
life forms getting between you and the classic computers.
http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/13/10/29/1823212/welcome-to-the-goodwill…
--
Liam Proven ? Profile: http://lproven.livejournal.com/profile
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk ? GMail/G+/Twitter/Flickr/Facebook: lproven
MSN: lproven at hotmail.com ? Skype/AIM/Yahoo/LinkedIn: liamproven
Tel: +44 20-8685-0498 ? Cell: +44 7939-087884
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 11:36 AM, Zane H. Healy <healyzh at aracnet.com> wrote:
> Does anyone have any experience with replacing aging 50-pin (or even 68-pin
> and SCA) SCSI drives with a SCSI-to-CF bridge? I'm thinking specifically
> for DEC hardware (PDP-11, VAX or Alpha).
I have an SCM PCD-50B which I bought from a4000t.com (that site does
not appear to be accessible now). I have used that connected through
a CMD CQD-220 to boot a PDP-11. It's a multiple slot multiple LUN
device so you need a controller which can support multiple LUNs if you
want to access anything other than LUN 0, which is the PCMCIA slot
(which of course can be used for a CF card in an adapter instead of
using the CF slot directly). The PCD-50B doesn't appear to be too
easily available now, nor the PCD-60B.
I have heard of people using the CF PowerMonster / CF AztecMonster
which typically go for around $130 on eBay. I haven't used one of
those myself.
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 1:36 PM, Zane H. Healy <healyzh at aracnet.com> wrote:
> Does anyone have any experience with replacing aging 50-pin (or even 68-pin
> and SCA) SCSI drives with a SCSI-to-CF bridge? I'm thinking specifically
> for DEC hardware (PDP-11, VAX or Alpha).
I'm very interested in this, too. The SGI guys at nekochan love the
SCA->SATA bridges out there, and use SSDs. Even a 128M compact flash
card in my uVAX2 would be awesome, both for power consumption reasons
and speed.
After sitting on literally several tons of equipment for the last 16+ years,
I am selling it off.
Next Saturday, November 9th, the warehouse will be open from 9AM to 5PM.
All are welcome, cash and carry, and no, I don't want to ship anything else.
EISA, ISA, VLB cards, IO, sound, video, etc.
Old Sun, IBM, etc.
Old laptops, starting with 8088 thru PII or PII, complete and incomplete
Old Apple laptops, complete and incomplete
Ruggedized Panasonic Toughbooks, incomplete
Several hundred old modems, some new in the box, 300 baud on up
Network equipment, NIC cards, baluns
Terminals, keyboards
Complete computers 80386 and up
Cindy Croxton
Electronics Plus
1613 Water Street
Kerrville, TX 78028
(830)792-3400 phone (830)792-3404 fax
AOL IM elcpls
_____
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2014.0.4158 / Virus Database: 3615/6803 - Release Date: 11/02/13
Hi. I'm interested in buying a working Dec VT 2xx or 3xx terminal and
keyboard (if possible). Shipping from anywhere in the U.S. is fine or I
can pick up in the Los Angeles area. These are the last pieces I need
for my MicroVAX 2000 system, which includes an expansion box with TK50Z
tape drive. Thanks.
-W
eBay item 310788841663
I've been looking for more documentation for the NRI 832 kit (the
archived documentation on Bitsavers and elsewhere is incomplete) and
this set just showed up on eBay last night but it's looking fairly
pricey already. If anyone here is going for them, let me know as I'd
love to get a scan of a couple of the manual sets to help finish up the
partial kit that I have.
Thanks,
Josh
> Date: Wed, 6 Nov 2013 01:43:12 -0500
> From: John Wilson <wilson at dbit.com>
> Subject: Re: TU58 capstan solutions anyone ?
>
> On Wed, Nov 06, 2013 at 12:38:06AM -0500, rescue wrote:
>>Anyone done a T58 here ? Can you let me know what materials I need
>>and process to replace "goo precursor" with tubing/etc ?
>
> This is stale information and doesn't address your exact question, but
> I think at one point Keyways was selling replacements for the whole thing
> (including the hub I mean). I don't know if Mitch Miller is still doing
> that, but there must be *some* reason for his owning the tu58.com domain name!
>
> I forget the price -- non-trivial but worth it, is what I remember.
>
> Otherwise ... do you mean to imply that people *have* been doing this on
> a lathe? I'd be surprised to see rubber cooperate with that ... but I do
> have one (antique Sheldon BM-1026) and would be up for experimentation.
>
> Any idea how RTV silicone stands up? It might be possible to cast new
> (fake) rubber on that way, although keeping it centered would be a
> challenge.
>
> John Wilson
> D Bit
You can freeze the rubber material before turning it on a lathe,
probably with a sharp tool. I've not done it myself at home, but some
of our Machinists have done it here at work.
Of course, you need to choose the correct durometer rubber for the
intended purpose -- TU58 capstans in this case....
Bob
Checked my VT103... one capstan is a train wreck... the other doesn't
look to bad, but I bet that if it was attempted to be used it would die
quick.
I've read about the use on different drives about tubing, etc to fix
capstans....
Anyone done a T58 here ? Can you let me know what materials I need and
process to replace "goo precursor" with tubing/etc ?
I don't have a lathe, machine tools, etc available to me (beyond files,
a dremel, etc).
Thanks,
-- Curt
Landed a truckload of VM stuff last weekend.
Amongst the items, and near-complete set of VM/SP manuals.
Anyone interested in these? They're hereby (preferably) for trade for IBM gear/other docs, or for sale. I'll give it a few weeks, then they hit eBay. All are in superb condition, and I even have a few genuine IBM binders to go with them!
Details below...
Here's the docs I have:
SC24-5219-2 EXEC 2 Reference Release 3
SC24-5247-03 VM/SP Application Development Guide for FORTRAN and Cobol
SC24-5368-00 VM/SP Release 6 Guide
SC24-5284-01 VM/SP Application Development Reference for CMS
SC24-5378-00 VM/SP Connectivity Planning, Administration, and Operation
SC24-5285-01 VM/SP Administration
LY20-0892-05 VM/SP Diagnostics Reference
SC19-6211-05 VM/SP CP General User Command Reference
SC24-5402-00 VM/SP CP System Command Reference
SC19-6201-06 VM/SP Planning Guide and Reference
SC24-5239-03 VM/SP System Product Interpreter Reference
LY24-5221-03 VM/SP CMS Data Areas and Control Blocks
SC24-5367-00 VM/SP CMS Shared File System Administration
SC19-6210-05 VM/SP CMS User's Guide
SC24-5260-01 VM/SP Interactive Problem Control System Guide and Reference
SC24-5288-01 VM System Facilities for Programming
SC24-5238-04 VM/SP System Product Interpreter User's Guide
SC24-5250-02 VM/SP Group Control System Command and Macro Reference
LY20-0893-05 VM/SP CMS Diagnosis Reference
SC24-5366-00 VM/SP Application Migration Guide for CMS
SC19-6209/05 VM/SP CMS Command Reference
LY24-5220-04 VM/SP CP Data Areas and Control Blocks
SC24-5377-00 VM/SP Connectivity Programming Guide and Reference
SC24-5220-04 VM/SP System Product Editor User's Guide
GC24-5417-00 VM/SP Directory Of Programming Interfaces for Customers
GC19-6207-05 VM/SP Library Guide and Master Index
GC19-6206-05 VM/SP Terminal Reference
SC24-5291-02 VM/SP Programmer's Guide to the Server-Requester Programming Interface for VM/System Product
SC24-5286-01 VM/SP Application Development Guide for CMS
GH24-5055-03 Virtual Machine Remote Spooling Communications Subsystem Networking General Information Version 2 Release 3
SC19-6202-05 VM/SP Operator's Guide
GC19-6200-05 VM/SP Introduction
LY24-5240-1 Virtual Machine Remote Spooling Communications Subsystem Networking Version 2 Exit Customization Release 2
SC26-4399-01 VM/SP SAA Common Programming Interface Communications Reference
GH24-5055-03 RSCS General Information
SH24-5197-00 RSCS Exit Customization
LY24-5228-02 RSCS Diagnosis Reference
SH24-5058-03 RSCS Operation and Use
SH24-5057-03 RSCS Planning and Installation
SH24-5196-00 RSCS Messages and Codes
Here's the docs I'm missing:
SC19-6204-05 VM/SP System Messages and Codes
GC19-6212-05 VM/SP Running Guest Operating Systems
GC20-1838-07 VM/SP General Information
SC24-5221-05 VM/SP System Product Editor Command and Macro Reference
SC24-5236-04 VM/SP CMS Primer
SC24-5237-04 VM/SP Installation Guide
SC24-5242-03 VM/SP CMS Primer for Line-Oriented Terminals
SC24-5264-02 VM/SP System Messages Cross-Reference
SC24-5316-01 VM/SP Introduction to Security
SC24-5389-00 VM/SP Service Guide
SC24-5379 VM/SP Glossary
SX20-4400 VM/SP Quick Reference
LY20-0890 VM/SP Service Routines Program Logic
LY24-5241 VM/SP Diagnosis Guide
SX24-5225 VM/SP VM CP Trace Table (poster)
SX24-5224 VM/SP Problem Determination Summary
SX24-5122 VM/SP SP Editor Command Language Reference Summary
SX24-5124 EXEC 2 Language Reference Summary
SX24-5151 CMS Primer Summary of Commands
SX24-5126 SP Interpreter Reference Summary
SX24-5159 CMS Primer for Line-Oriented Terminals Summary of Commands
SX24-5221 HELP Facility Introduction
SX24-5219 CP General User Command Reference Summary
SX24-5222 CP System Command Reference Summary
SX24-6220 CMS Command Reference Summary
SX24-5173 VM Summary of End Use Tasks and Commands (poster)
SC23-0111 VTAM Installation and Resource Definition
SC23-0112 VTAM Customization
SC23-0113 VTAM Operation
SC23-0114 VTAM Messages and Codes
SC23-0115 VTAM Programming
LY30-5601 VTAM Diagnosis Guide
SC30-3400 VTAM Programming for LU 6.2
LY30-5593 VTAM Data Areas (VM)
LY30-5600 VTAM Reference Summary
GC24-5373 VM/Passthrough Facility Overview
SC24-5374 VM/Passthrough Facility: Managing and Using
SX24-5135 RSCS Reference Summary
Industrial Micro Systems Floppy Disk Conroller (FDC 400)
This is the controller used in the IMS 8000 series computer and is meant for 8" drives
If anyone out there is willing to part with an IMS FDC 400, please send me a note.
new_castle_j at yahoo.com
Jonathan
Hi folks,
Has anyone had any success creating a DLT tape leader - I bought a very
cheap DLT V80 off eBay which came missing a leader and I don't really
want to spend any money on one. I have a TK50 leader which I can use as
a pattern part, I wondered if anyone had come across any material that
had similar properties? It feels like 35mm film wouldn't be a bad
substitute for a replacement for example?
Regards, Mark.
--
http://www.wickensonline.co.ukhttp://hecnet.euhttp://declegacy.org.ukhttp://retrochallenge.nethttps://twitter.com/#!/%40urbancamo
Hi!? We are at 15 of the necessary 20 boards for an order of S-100 bus
extender PCBs. Please send me your pre-orders and once we get to 20 boards
I will make the manufacturing order for the group.
I would like to get this going for the builders so if you are considering an
S-100 bus extender or even want to stash one away for future use. These are
very useful boards and sometimes they just get stuck in a project and stay
there for extended periods of time. It is handy to have more than one at
least in my experience.
Here is a link to S100computers.com website with information on the updated
S-100 Bus Extender board:
http://www.s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/Extender%20Board/Extender%2
0Board.htm
The PCBs will be $20 each as per the usual arrangement.? Shipping in the US
is $3 for a single PCB and $2 for each additional PCB.? Shipping
internationally is $10 for a single PCB and $3 for each additional PCB.?
This is for the bare basics USPS first class postage with no tracking or
insurance.? The builder assumes all risk of delivery as per usual
arrangement.
Please send a PayPal to LYNCHAJ at YAHOO.COM with the subject ?S-100 Bus
Extender? and I will reserve your board(s).?
Thanks and have a nice day!
Andrew Lynch
PS,? We are still doing another order for S-100 Buffered Prototyping board
bus and have 6 boards in the queue.? If you would like one or more S-100
Buffered Prototyping boards please let me know.? The pre-order arrangements
are identical to the others but please send them in a separate email with
subject "S-100 buffered prototyping board" so I can keep things straight on
this end. This seems to have stalled out so I am considering issuing
refunds and waiting until there is more builder demand. At the moment we
have 7 pre-orders and need another 13 to get to 20 board pre-orders. Thanks
and have a nice day!
I have one Amiga 2000 and one Amiga 3000 computers,
they were working, and have been in storage.
I have no monitors to test them with, but they do seem to power up.
I'll take best offer, and I'm in toronto Canada.
BTW I still have a bunch of suns (mostly sparc 5s), vaxstation 4000s (no drives), and an Octane.
Though I have one sun sparc 10 ultra with the 486 board
This stuff has to go.
Over the next few months I'll probably be getting rid of more odds and ends,
need to clean out the garage, and I'm broke, usual story.
Dan.
Curt,
I can send you a small piece.
Contact me off-list.
-Rik
-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: "rescue" <rescue at hawkmountain.net>
Verzonden: ?6-?11-?2013 16:21
Aan: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Onderwerp: RE: TU58 capstan solutions anyone ?
On 2013-11-06 07:15, Rik Bos wrote:
>> -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
>> Van: cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org
>> [mailto:cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org]
>> Namens TeoZ
>> Verzonden: woensdag 6 november 2013 8:46
>> Aan: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
>> Onderwerp: Re: TU58 capstan solutions anyone ?
>>
>> Would the rollers from a tape deck work? You can buy new
>> replacements for
>> those in different sizes.
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: rescue
>> Sent: Wednesday, November 06, 2013 12:38 AM
>> To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
>> Subject: TU58 capstan solutions anyone ?
>>
>>
>> Checked my VT103... one capstan is a train wreck... the other
>> doesn't
>> look to bad, but I bet that if it was attempted to be used it would
>> die
>> quick.
>>
>> I've read about the use on different drives about tubing, etc to fix
>> capstans....
>>
>> Anyone done a T58 here ? Can you let me know what materials I need
>> and
>> process to replace "goo precursor" with tubing/etc ?
>>
>> I don't have a lathe, machine tools, etc available to me (beyond
>> files,
>> a dremel, etc).
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> -- Curt
>
> I've made several new ones, if you use a product called precision
> tube.
> You can cut it the right length, after gluing it to the capstan,
> place the capstand on a small motor which runs on a lab supply, you
> can grind it to the right size.
> At http://www.flickr.com/photos/hp-fix you can see the results of my
> actions.
>
> -Rik
Would you happen to have a link for this precision tube ?
googling found me lots of companies (tube bending, manufacturing,
etc)... but I haven't located a product called that.
What glue did you use ?
What kind of tool(s) did you use to grind it to the right OD ?
Also, anyone know the right OD for this TU58 part ?
-- Curt
For fun, I'm trying to build an e11 standalone setup. I built a little
freedos 1.1 guest under esxi, ran the e11 install, and tried to run the
sys command on drive C: as documented. Sys complains "invalid target
drive".
Clues as to what constitutes a valid target would be appreciated.
De
Cctalk'ers,
VCF East "9.1" is April 4-6, 2014, at the InfoAge Science Center, in
Wall, New Jersey. But you already knew that. :) Now it's time to
announce some of the guest speakers.
Days/times are all TBD/subject to change:
- Paul Lasewicz (IBM's corporate archivist)
- Maris Graube (founder of IEEE 802 LAN/MAN committee -- April 6 @ noon)
- Dave Haynie (Commodore Amiga executive)
- Bill Cheswick (Bell Labs firewall pioneer)
There will be much more! We're working on a Scelbi activity, a couple of
film screenings, a fun AT&T presentation, a really awesome technical
workshop, and one more keynote speaker who is MIND-BLOWINGLY FAMOUS.
Stay tuned for frequent updates at http://www.vintage.org/2014/east/ and
http://www.facebook.com/vcfeast.
At 12:00 -0600 11/5/13, <Cory> wrote:
>After further investigation: The PSU does seem to be giving 12V and -12V
>where it should, and on the board there is continuity between 12V on the
>power commector and 12V on the molex...so nothing went completely open
>there.
Cory,
Caution, wild-ass debugging guesses based on insufficient
data follow. Fred's was the correct response, "what is it doing?"
That said, I had trouble with one of these machines, and
finally traced it to the power-on-reset mechanism. There are a
capacitor and resistor in parallel, holding the CPU in reset long
enough for power to get up and stable. The resistor was fine, the
surface-mount capacitor was intermittent (grr!) short. So the machine
would run for an indeterminate period before the capacitor would
short, pulling it back to reset state.
Replacing the cap fixed the problem, though I have not played
with the machine much since. I think at least some of this story is
in the archives, not sure.
YMMV of course, but this sounds like a possible analog to
your trouble; if your equivalent cap is dead short, the CPU would
never get out of reset and the machine would look "dead" even with
power. Let me know if you need more info, I can pull the box out of
storage and try to look it over and test again.
Good luck!
--
- Mark 210-379-4635
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Asteroids headed toward planets
inhabited by beings that don't have
technology adequate to stop them:
Think of it as Evolution in Fast-Forward.
Hi all,
I've created a .TAP file using E11 which contains a bootable RT-11 image. I
wrote this using st.exe to a DAT tape via my Adaptec 2940UW. E11 boots this
fine, no matter the type of the MU0 device within the simulator.
But if I try booting it using a CQD220A/M/T in /T mode, I get a
"?BOOT-U-I/O error" which seems RT-11 enough to make me think it is
actually trying to boot MSBOOT.BOT.
The .TAP file was creating using E11's TU81 emulation and MUB.COM within
RT-11 V05.06.
A console log follows:
KDF11B-BE ROM V0.9
1024KB MEMORY
9 STEP MEMORY TEST
STEP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
TOTAL MEMORY ERRORS = 0
CLOCK ENABLED
1024KB MEMORY KDF11B-BE ROM V0.9 CLOCK
ENABLED
ERR 12 NON-EXISTENT CONTROLLER
Use CTRL/Z to return to MAIN MENU
173402
@17760406/005500 123456
@/001000 100
@5000g
SCSI UTILITY PROGRAM 2.0
DISK TAPE
1 = 772150 A = 774500
2 = 760334 B = 760404
3 = 760354 C = 760444
4 = 760374 D = 760504HELP
5 = 760340 E = 760544
6 = 760344 F = 760410 ARROW" or "DOWN ARROW" to select function
7 = 760350 G = 760450
8 = 760360 H = 760454u
SELECT CSR ADDRESS b
MAIN MENU: CSR = 760404
1 = BOOT DRIVE
7 = ADDITIONAL SCSI COMMANDS
SELECT OPTION : 1
BOOT DRIVE NUMBER <0 TO 7>: 0
BOOT MU0 . ARE YOU SURE? y
WAIT...
?BOOT-U-I/O error
?
With DEV0 being:
DEV0: MU0 SCSI ID 0 LUN 0 HP C1537A L708
Disc ON,Sync ON,3-Density ON,Buffer ON,
Anyone have an idea what I could do to further this along?
regards,
Sander Reiche
Hello!
Anyoen have a VAXstation 4000/VLC ROM set and NVRAM available? Got one
here that was billed as "not working" so I tried reseating everything.
Now it doesn't do anything and the likely culprit is these.
--
Cory Smelosky
http://gewt.net Personal stuff
http://gimme-sympathy.org Projects
On 11/3/2013 1:25 PM, Win Heagy wrote:
> I misplaced this card and cannot figure out which machine it goes
> with. There are no markings on the board beyond what is on the chips.
> Any ideas what this might be? That's a DB25 in the lower left of the
> full board pic.
>
> There are 2 pictures int this imgur set.
>
> http://imgur.com/3QcLnlZ
>
> Thanks,
>
> Win
>
>
The 9901/9902 combo is a bit of a giveaway.
Find a copy of the 9900 Family Systems Design Guide for more info e.g. at
https://archive.org/details/9900MicroprocessorSeriesFamilySystemsDesignData…
There, you will learn that the TI 9900 family (whose processor chips included the 9900,
9989, 9995 (?), and others) was a bit of an oddity in various ways (though that particular
manual was first class).
One oddity was its IO mechanism, using a single-bit-wide serial IO bus called the CRU.
IO chips designed for the CRU bus (including the 9901 "system controller", and the 9902
UART, and many others, were realistically only usable with other 9900-family chips.
The 9900 architecture was used in the 990 family of "minicomputers" including the 990/4
and its bigger brother the 990/10. TXDS was the "OS" (being generous again here) on
the /4; something called AMPL ran on the /10.
There are some pictures around the net, and a few writeups.
I can't tell from the one picture (where is the other?) if that's what you've got, and I can't
remember whether the /4 we had at work used the 9901 and/or 9902 on its serial cards.
There is a 990/4 Maintenance Guide (and other 990-family stuff) on bitsavers which might be
worth a look, at or near
http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/ti/990/990-4/
The TI99/4 and related home computer boxes are very different physically although likely use
chips from the same family. Apparently there was a range of external peripherals.
You'll work it out.
Have a lot of fun,
John
----- Original Message -----
> Date: Sun, 03 Nov 2013 18:14:46 +0000
> From: Dave <dave.g4ugm at gmail.com>
> On 03/11/2013 16:49, Chuck Guzis wrote:
...
>> I'm guessing that the primary consumer of this device will be the DEC
>> community. The personal computer community has had various devices
>> (such as IDE or flash drive) as replacements.
>>
>> --Chuck
>>
> I think there are lots of folks with odd-ball systems with MFM drives. I
> have IBM3174 screen controllers....
>
> Dave
>
Cromemco (10kB 'sectors')...
The email below came up on the Rescue list.
-----Original Message-----
From: rescue-bounces at sunhelp.org [mailto:rescue-bounces at sunhelp.org] On
Behalf Of Ten Yen
Sent: 03 November 2013 22:38
To: rescue at sunhelp.org
Subject: [rescue] DEC kit available in London, UK, if your quick.
Heya,
so there is this stuff:
BA213 skunk box containing many cards
including a ?3500? and a II (don't power it up until you've configured the
system you want!) and a MicroVax 2000 client / server pair with a TK50.
safe in a basement. . .
and under a tarp since this evening (its raining hard ;/ but we needed to
compromise for a weeks grace) :
PMAX DECstations (3100 and 5100) and other random crap (3100 style storage
expansion boxes, LAT terminal servers etc. G3 mac)
till tuesday when it will be thrown out. you'd make some old hoarders happy
(and save a trip to the dump) if you can pick them up ASAP.
some photos:
http://tenyen.net/womble/
werd,
--
http://tenyen.net/
_______________________________________________
rescue list - http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
While reading the wikipedia article on the ILLIAC IV there's a curious
excerpt relating to the disk media:
"They also provided a Burroughs B6500 mainframe to act as a front-end
controller. Connected to the B6500 was a laser optical recording medium, a
write-once system that stored up to 1 Tbit on a plastic disk covered with
a thin metal film."
Anyone know what this device was?
Cheers;
- JP
Hampton, Iowa
Dear Classiccmp community,
After a long time of searching on myself with only minimal results on the "CPT Phoenix Start" - system, I would like to tap the collective knowledge.
The system (powersupply + mainbox (3.5"floppy) + keyboard (with an interesting shape) + portrait full page screen) itself is fine, tries to boot, has a daisy-wheel printer and is only missing the 3.5" boot media.
I have only the bare hardware and a couple of cables, assume it was used in professional word-processing.
Appreciate any pointer.
Mit freundlichen Gr??en,
With kind Regards,
Bernhard Wulf
>
> From: David Riley <fraveydank at gmail.com>
> Date: Sat, 2 Nov 2013 21:07:35 -0400
> Subject: Re: Looking for a MicroController Recommedation
> On Nov 2, 2013, at 17:13, John Wilson <wilson at dbit.com> wrote:
>
> You could probably pair it with a small CPLD or FPGA to help
> with the shifting (if, as Chuck pointed out, the SPI hardware won't
> do the trick). That could add as little as $5 to your BOM, even in
> single-unit quantities.
>
>
> - Dave
>
I used an Actel SmartFusion FPGA to connect to the I/O bus in a PDP-8 and
emulate a paper tape reader. The time sensitive bus interface logic was
programmed into the FPGA. The built in ARM Cortex M3 runs uC Linux with a
device driver to talk to the FPGA logic and a small application to supply
the paper tape image.
You could do the same and put the disk controller logic in the FPGA and
have an application running under Linux to supply the read/write data
functions. You could use the same disk image that the emulators use and
store it in flash.
--
Michael Thompson
> You really want some hardware to preprocess the signals somewhat.
Has anyone considered using a DSP?
> Also keep in mind that those ARM SOCs as used on the RPi
> or Beaglebone Black have some rather sophisticated DMA
> capable SPI, PWM, ... peripherals.
It's more expensive that something like a Beagleboard, but TI has a line of
ARM processor + TMS320 DSP chips (like the TMS320C66x series) that seem
like a perfect fit for this application. Use the DSP portion to
capture/pre-process the bitstream and the ARM to interpret, structure and
store it.
Just a thought.
KJ
I misplaced this card and cannot figure out which machine it goes
with. There are no markings on the board beyond what is on the chips.
Any ideas what this might be? That's a DB25 in the lower left of the
full board pic.
There are 2 pictures int this imgur set.
http://imgur.com/3QcLnlZ
Thanks,
Win
A long time ago I used to repeatedly threaten to have the Vintage Computer
Super Sale of the Century.
That day has arrived.
The following units are up for offer. Assume all are in emminently
respectable condition unless specifically noted.
I am taking offers indefinitely and will select the best offer for each
based on no particular criteria, however, the higher offers will generally
be the ones I accept as I am parlaying my investment in vintage computers
into other pursuits. If you don't know what to offer let me know and I'll
give you what I think it's worth.
Sphere 1
Friden 132
Commodore PET 2001-8
Hazeltine 1500 terminal
Canon Cat
LNW Research LNW80 + System Expansion II
Osborne Vixen
Olivetti Programma 101
GRI 909
SWTPC 6800
Polymorphic Systems Poly-88 w/custom keyboard
Computer Power & Light Compal 80
Byt-8
Intel Intellec 4/40
Intel Intellec 8
Kennedy 1600 7-track tape drive
Xerox 8010 "Star" - complete system, fully functional, boots to desktop
Heathkit H11 + H27 dual 8" floppy
I am also offering the following big iron:
http://vintagetech.com/photos/bigiron/
Photos and details upon request. To those whom I've previously
communicated, you are still in queue, and I'll get those photos and
details to you. I appreciate your patience.
Please contact me directly through private e-mail as I do not read the
list.
More to come.
Thanks!
--
Sellam ibn Abraham VintageTech
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintagetech.com
Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. The truth is always simple.
* * * NOTICE * * *
No statement made in this message can be considered reliable for any
purpose either express or implied due to the insecure nature of the
medium over which it has been transmitted. The contents of this
message are deemed appropriate for entertainment purposes only.
On 1 November 2013 21:43, Zane H. Healy <healyzh at aracnet.com> wrote:
> At 12:05 PM -0400 11/1/13, John Wilson wrote:
>>
>> On Fri, Nov 01, 2013 at 11:10:46AM -0400, Paul Koning wrote:
>>>>
>>>> There's a *lot* of new code. If that means there's going to have to
>>>> be a quick update it's going to be hard to resist calling it "V7.0-07".
>>>
>>>
>>> I got that one. :-)
>>
>>
>> You may be the only one that would! I remember ages ago being asked if my
>> PDP-11 (24/7 at the time) ran version 7. Why yes! Not what people mean,
>> it turns out.
>>
>> John Wilson
>> D Bit
>
>
> No, I got it immediately.
>
> Zane
>
I really don't get the joke. Someone care to enlighten me?
Is the urge to not name E11 "V7.0-07" something to do with RSTS/E or
UNIX, or something else entirely?
Cheers,
Christian
Ersatz-11 V7.0 is done. This is the 20th anniversary release (development
began on 31-Oct-1993), and it's got a bunch of new goodies. The free demo
versions (for DOS, Linux, OS/2, Stand-alone, and Windows) can be downloaded
>from www.dbit.com.
There's a *lot* of new code. If that means there's going to have to
be a quick update it's going to be hard to resist calling it "V7.0-07".
There's no one huge new feature, but lots of little ones:
- CR11/CD11 punched card readers
- DMR11/DMC11 network ports (speaks real DDCMP to DECnet/RSX's software DDCMP)
- DN11 autodialer
- KG11A CRC boards
- DU11/DUV11 sync SLUs proof-of-concept (but Z85230 driver needs finishing)
- SCC: driver for Sealevel sync boards (see above -- at least async works)
- Ridiculously improved VT100 emulation. Smooth-scroll and blink on OS/2
and Windows. Also SET-UP mode. Try pressing SET-UP (default = Shift/Esc)
and then 0 on OS/2 or Windows for a good laugh, if you remember the real
thing. VT100 w/o AVO, VT101, and VT102 emulations are now included (the
autowrap behavior differs on all three -- thank you Will Kranz for the
VT102 for testing). This was motivated by finding that the VT100 emulation
was failing the VTTEST suite, but further investigation showed that a real
DEC VT100 "fails" too, in a fairly similar way (virtually identical now).
- ASSIGN ... /TTSYNC switch adds driver-level XON/XOFF flow control for
output to most serial device types (and is enabled temporarily during all
commands -- you really need it if smooth-scroll is turned on).
- Scrollback buffer in VT100 sessions -- finally
- HAYES: filter driver for data-leads-only modems with Hayes AT command set
(turns commands/responses into modem control/status leads, and connects to
the DN11 emulation) -- yes this would have been more useful in 1993
- OSPRINT: driver (emulates dumb line printer using OS-supplied printer
drivers in OS/2 and Windows). Optionally adds green-bar-paper underlay,
which seems silly until you see how nice it looks in CutePDF. OK it's silly.
- Unit number ranges in ASSIGN/DEASSIGN, MOUNT/DISMOUNT, and SHOW --
Tries to be clever about incrementing unit numbers for the PC device:
ASSIGN YZ0-3: COM1: (or /dev/ttyS0) gives you 4 DZ lines using 4 COM ports
MOUNT DU0-1: rsx0.dsk gives you two disks using rsx0.dsk and rsx1.dsk
*But* if there's nothing to increment then you get identical devices:
ASSIGN YV0-15: TELNET: gives you 16 DHU lines on the same Telnet server
MOUNT DC0-3: RAM: gives you a fully fleshed out RC11 (four RAM disks)
- Generic host-OS-independent names for several kinds of ports that can
be autodetected. SHOW ASYNCPORTS, SHOW PRINTERPORTS, SHOW SYNCPORTS,
SHOW DIGPORTS, SHOW GPIBPORTS gives you a list of what ASYNCn: etc.
will get you right now. This is supposed to make E11.INI files a little
more portable (so you don't have to change COM1: to /dev/ttyS0 etc.).
- Host-OS-independent NULL: devices for most device types.
- IEU11/IEQ11 dual GPIB port bare framework (proof of concept: works only
with NULL: device, does no actual I/O, but accepts many commands and LOGs
their behavior)
- RAMdisks now take their default size from the drive type (which may
itself be defaulted)
- "Short" disk images have the missing part emulated as a null area
(so it's OK if the bad-block track wasn't included in the image --
you don't get errors if you touch it anyway)
- DB:/DR: (Massbus moving-head disks) now enabled in Demo version;
also OA:/XA: (DR11C/DR11W), used as Ethernet IPL, internal mP IPL,
or simple LPT port interface
- Raw floppies (PC formats, for now) on Linux, OS/2, and Windows
- /CYL/HEAD/SECTORS switches work on all C/H/S disks
- Disk logs now calculate the starting block number on C/H/S disks;
LOG /PC includes PC in log files
- SET ddcu: READONLY / READWRITE can write-lock or write-enable most
disks and tapes w/o re-mounting them
- SET IDLE DELAY=n adds a n-millisecond delay during WAITs
- More use of helper threads (keeps long searches in .TAP files from
interfering with PDP-11 execution -- and incidentally means that more
of the PC devices are mP-safe even on the DOS and Stand-alone versions,
since in that case "helper threads" means migrating DOS calls to CPA where
it's safe -- not that mP is officially supported of course)
- LoadModule, GetSymbol, and UnloadModule DLL calls (OS/2 and Windows)
- Many, many, many bug fixes -- hopefully more than were introduced by
the new code
- The update disks will be CDs this time -- yes finally entering the 1990s
John Wilson
D Bit
HP 16700 series are known to be very picky about keyboards. If you use a ps2 Hp or IBM-M keyboard it should work fine.
-Rik
-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: "Pat Fitzpatrick" <pjfitzpatrick207 at gmail.com>
Verzonden: ?2-?11-?2013 05:29
Aan: "cctech at classiccmp.org" <cctech at classiccmp.org>
Onderwerp: Somewhat OT. 16702B Logic Analyzer Woes
Hi Folks,
It's only somewhat OT, because I really want to use this thing to fix a
floppy controller (Northstar hard sectored all discrete logic type
controller) in a classic computer :) Anyhow... I'm having issues with a
(new to me) Agilent 16702B Logic Analyzer mainframe and this seems like the
best place I can think of to ask.. It seems to work fine except the PS2
keyboard and mouse don't work quite right.
Well, actually, the mouse does work -- if I use a Logitech USB mouse with a
USB/PS2 adapter, it works fine. Any "real" PS2 mouse I own doesn't respond
at all -- though the LED in the mouse is on. A Microsoft USB mouse with the
USB/PS2 adapter doesn't work either. Seems strange.
The keyboard on the other hand doesn't seem to work at all. The three LEDs
(num lock, caps lock, scroll lock) blink during boot (like they're supposed
to) and there are no warnings or errors I can see reported during boot, but
the keyboard is totally dead. I've tried several keyboards, on one of them,
the lights don't blink either. Even on the ones that blink, pressing keys
during boot (to interrupt the boot process) has no effect.
All mice and keyboards work (of course) on a PC.
Any ideas on where to look? Or where to find good servicing information?
Thanks,
Pat
Hi Folks,
It's only somewhat OT, because I really want to use this thing to fix a
floppy controller (Northstar hard sectored all discrete logic type
controller) in a classic computer :) Anyhow... I'm having issues with a
(new to me) Agilent 16702B Logic Analyzer mainframe and this seems like the
best place I can think of to ask.. It seems to work fine except the PS2
keyboard and mouse don't work quite right.
Well, actually, the mouse does work -- if I use a Logitech USB mouse with a
USB/PS2 adapter, it works fine. Any "real" PS2 mouse I own doesn't respond
at all -- though the LED in the mouse is on. A Microsoft USB mouse with the
USB/PS2 adapter doesn't work either. Seems strange.
The keyboard on the other hand doesn't seem to work at all. The three LEDs
(num lock, caps lock, scroll lock) blink during boot (like they're supposed
to) and there are no warnings or errors I can see reported during boot, but
the keyboard is totally dead. I've tried several keyboards, on one of them,
the lights don't blink either. Even on the ones that blink, pressing keys
during boot (to interrupt the boot process) has no effect.
All mice and keyboards work (of course) on a PC.
Any ideas on where to look? Or where to find good servicing information?
Thanks,
Pat
As you may know, Radio Shack sold the Sharp PC1211 under the name 'Pocket
Computer 1' (or PC1). They also sold pre-recorded tapes of programs for
it (AFAIK, these were not Sharp products).
Anyway, I've got the rpgorams from the 4 'Engineering Math' tapes and the
'Electrical Engineering 1' tape as plain ASCII files (BASIC progam
source). Does anyone know of a website which archives such things, if so,
I would be happy to provide them.
Anyone interested?
-tony
> Date: Sat, 26 Oct 2013 20:16:09 -0400 (EDT)
> Subject: HP IIISi "55 SERVICE"?
>
> I have an HP IIISi printer. It was working fine. Then it sat idle for
> quite a while (some small number of years, I think); then it was moved
> (the movers picked it, and a bunch of other stuff, up and held it for a
> few months before bringing it to the new place).
>
> Now, the printer doesn't work. I turn it on and the front panel does a
> brief lamp-test (each lamp in turn turns on briefly), the display says
> "05 SELF TEST", then "SWITCHING TO PS", then "55 SERVICE" with the 55
> flashing.
>
> I did a little noodling around and found hints that this indicates some
> kind of internal communication failure - and, indeed, I don't hear the
> brief motor-and-solenoid noises that (admittedly hazy) memory says
> normally accompany selftest; after the clunk of the power switch as I
> turn it on, the next sound is the clunk of the power switch as I turn
> it off in exasperation at seeing "55 SERVICE" again. (It's possible
> there are fan noises, but there are enough fans in the room that it
> would be had to tell unless they're fairly noisy fans.)
>
> I found a PDF on www.lbrty.com which purports to be a IIISi/4Si manual,
> probably a service manual from the context and the "sm" in the
> filename. But every page just gives me "**** ERROR: Unable to process
> JPXDecode data. Page will be missing data." and an empty page. I am
> looking into other possible ways to get its content, but, in the
> meantime, does anyone have anything to suggest? I'm not afraid of
> voltmeters and soldering irons, but my test equipment is limited - I
> don't, for example, have a 'scope or logic analyzer I can use here. I
> do have a pretty good multimeter - a Fluke 87 - though.
>
> I took the printer apart to some degree. I've had it apart before;
> there was a power filtering cap that went and arced enough to eat away
> some of the PC board under it. I cleaned it up and replaced it and
> it's worked fine ever since...until now.
>
> Any thoughts, anyone?
>
> /~\ The ASCII Mouse
> \ / Ribbon Campaign
> X Against HTML mouse at rodents-montreal.org
> / \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39 4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B
The Service Manual at www.lbrty.com says:
"55 SERVICE" Initialization Error
The "55 Service" error indicates that the printer failed to initialize
correctly at power ON. This means that the Formatter cannot
communicate with the engine in order to establish the initial
condition of the engine. This problem can be caused by a bad
Formatter, bad cable, or by problems with the line voltage. Check and
reseat connectors J4 and J5 on the DC Power Supply, and J8, J9, and
JIO on the DC Controller PCA. Cycle the power several times to clear
the error or to get another error that may better indicate the cause
of the problem. If this clears the error, run an engine test print. If
the error persists, replace the Paper Pickup PCA, the DC Controller
PCA, the DC Power Supply PCA, the Formatter PCA. Finally, replace the
Paper Input Unit. If these fail to correct the problem, check all
associated cahles for damage and replace if required. Any 57.1 Main
Motor problem can also cause this error.
I can copy & paste the manuals info on any other error messages you
see if you'd like. Or convert the PDF to a TIFF file or similar if
that would help.
Bob
Does anyone here have an example of C code to play AIFF audio files in
16-bit DOS to a Soundblaster audio board?
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
Hi all --
Grabbed this as it triggered both my "interesting numerical display
device" and "old computer" reflexes:
http://yahozna.dyndns.org/scratch/misc/univac.jpg
It's labeled on the back (roughly, as things don't line up particularly
well):
Magtrol, Inc.
DYNAMOMETER HDE-500
MODEL HD-705
SERIAL NO 511B341
TACHOMETER 811E342
MODEL
SERIAL NO
And riveted to the back is a placard reading "SER 2U02-2"
Inside it's completely tube-based, no solid state electronics at all.
Not counting the Dekatrons, there are 9 tubes in this thing, one branded
"UNIVAC" on the base, the rest appear to be RCA. It looks like it
contains an electronic tachometer of some sort. I can't seem to find a
date code on anything. Any ideas on what this might have been used for,
and how it would relate to UNIVAC?
I can provide more pictures later if anyone's interested, once I get a
chance to disassemble it a bit...
Thanks,
Josh
it has the portfolio and softshell case with 3 memory cards, one has
games on it. Also the serial and parallel (with cable) interfaces.
Manuals for everything, even the warranty cards, not that they are any
good, but it's all in perfect shape, I'm the original owner. Make me an
offer.
Best,
Shawn
Includes the dock, case, a belt clip caes, the 'eyemodule' camera and
Targus folding keyboard. Still works perfectly, but missing the stylus.
Make me an offer.
Best,
Shawn
> From: wh.sudbrink at verizon.net
>
> dwight elvey wrote:
> > > From: bfranchuk at jetnet.ab.ca
> >
> > >
> > > On 10/30/2013 9:24 PM, dwight elvey wrote:
> > > > Hi
> > > > For those in the San Jose area.
> > > > I was by Anchor Electronics and they had some transformers in
> > > > their free box.
> > >
> > > Well better than some kittens for free?
> > > What do you plan to run with that?
> >
> > Not sure what.
>
> > > > They have outputs of 30VAC and 9.5VAC.
> > > > No C.T. Just the 6 wires.
> > > > Cores are 2.25 by 2.75 inches.
>
> Sounds to me like the beginnings of an S-100 linear PS. Maybe the
> 9.5 is a little low?
>
They are a little small for a S100. They have a 6 pins post molex connector.Anchor often finds old scrap from Atari. I'm thinking they may have beenused in a video game cabinet .Surely for a linear supply though.Tinker Dwight
I'm taking a quick weekend trip to the SF Bay Area to pick up a few things.
Hoping to make the most of the trip, anyone in the area have any IBM gear they'd like to trade for a 3B2/400 or money? :)
Also, they're not not exactly "classic", but I also have an HP blade chassis with 5 or so blades, a Google search appliance, and a near-complete set of Progress v9 manuals that I'd be willing to part with...
-Ben
I'm doing a bit of cleaning out of my collections (making space for a
Data Point 2200) and one thing I found was an early IDE interface. I
can't find out anything about where it came from and the silk screen
says "Rev 0.0" and the pal program version is V1.0
Date codes on the IC:s points to an early 1990 date for manufacturing.
I tried to find out some more about the development of the IDE interface
and the two dates I found was Compaq introduced the first computers with
IDE controllers in 1986 and the first standard was finalized in 1994,
putting my card in the middle of that span.
I put it on eBay to see if there is any interest for it and to show some
pictures of it.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=111203086292
Any one recognizing it? Is it just a generic card or does it belong to a
specific computer?
/G?ran
> Date: Tue, 29 Oct 2013 18:41:41 +0000
> From: Jarratt RMA <robert.jarratt at ntlworld.com>
>
> What country is Jeff in?
>
> Regards
>
> Rob
>
>
> On 28 October 2013 14:15, Bob Vines <bobvines00 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Jeff Monasch has just found about 30 boxes of DEC Rainbow and Pro350
>> software while cleaning out his garage. Any takers? Email Jeff at
>> jcm_temp at comcast.net
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Bob
>>
>
Rob,
Oops. Jeff is in the U.S. -- he's in New Jersey.
I _believe_ that he will give the software away for the cost of
packing & shipping.
Bob
Datavue Spark (one of the earlier laptops made) available in Maryland.
Please contact the person below directly if interested.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sarah Flynn <SarahFlynn at comcast.net>
Date: Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 10:31 AM
Subject: SPARK computer
To: doug at blinkenlights.com
Dear Doug?
My husband, David Prosten, and I were recently clearing out some old stuff
and came across his SPARK (by Datavue), ?first world?s first truly personal
computer,? complete with Operations Manual (quote from manual) and
diskettes, as well as a SPARK printer. The manual is copyright 1986, so I
guess it would not be of interest to you (I gather you are only interested
in pre-1981 stuff). But if you have any ideas where we might find a good
home for it, we?d appreciate it. It seems too historic to just dispose of
it.
Many thanks,
Sarah
Sarah Flynn
3120 Munz Drive
Annapolis, MD 21403
Landline: 410-268-2966
Mobile: 410-703-3990
SarahFlynn at comcast.net
I scanned the module label and backplane wiring from an 1148-RL that I have
that has been modified for 22 bit addressing (it is 18 bit). CD is present
only on slots 2 and 3 for an RLV11 and bus grant skips 2CD and 3CD.
The scans will be up at http://bitsavers.org/pdf/netcom/pictures as soon as
the mirrors pick them up.