Whilst sifting through the loft I came across this brochure
https://1drv.ms/b/s!Ag4BJfE5B3onmNYe9v2yiv2abf2Afg?e=0EjFbM
for the Compaq Security Enhancements for Microsoft Windows 2000, which
evolved from the Digital product "Secure NT"
I wonder if any one actually used these products and can talk about them?
Dave Wade
(Al feel free to take a copy for Bitsavers)
At the risk of upsetting people who are perhaps hoping for a bargain can I
send a link to this thread..
http://www.vcfed.org/forum/showthread.php?76560-Basement-full-of-DEC-parts-P
DP-5-PDP-8-DEC-55-and-more/page2
I notice that there are card desks and an 029 that might interest folks. He
says he "must sell" but may be amenable to donating such things.
Dave Wade
G4UGM & EA7KAE
I have been working on a project for some time to connect a IBM3270
compatible Alfaskop terminal with its IBM 3274 compatible cluster
controller to the Hercules mainframe emulator.
Yesterday I eventually succeeded. I was able to login to TSO on my Hercules
system that ran MVS 3.8j.
Here are a couple quick video clips:
https://youtu.be/H1Sxt7xjn4Yhttps://youtu.be/CFfB3yCN9OI
To achieve this I created a small piece of hardware I called SyncDongle,
essentially it's just a few level converters, connectors and a STM32F103
blue pill.
On the hardware I run a small piece of firmware, BSCBridge. It bridges
between the sync serial BSC used by the Alfaskop cluster controller and the
BSC variant that the 2703 emulation inside Hercules is using.
More information here: https://github.com/MattisLind/alfaskop_emu
and here http://www.datormuseum.se/peripherals/terminals/alfaskop
There are good chances that the SyncDongle/BSCBridge combo could work with
a 3274 or 3174 controller as well but I haven't tested since I don't have
one. But no guarantees given, though. If someone has a spare 3174-51R,
-61R, -81R or -91R I would be very interested in it.
Actually there is a good chance that it could work with general BSC use.
Maybe for NJE between Hercules and a real IBM machine? Or 2780/3780 RJE
terminals? Or other third party 3270 terminals using BSC.
The BSCBridge firmware only supports non transparent mode at this point, it
works fine with Alfaskop since it does not support anything else. Maybe a
showstopper for 3174 with 3279 terminals? SHouldn't be that difficult to
add transparent mode if needed.
/Mattis
I have a Sunblade 100, got it on ebay for $103.00, landed on my
doorstep. I hacked the nvram chip with a pair of AA batteries, which
should keep the thing going for a hundred years.
I really wanted a STOP key, and found an ad on Ebay for new Type 7 usb
keyboard/mouse, bought the set.
I used a plain jane USB keyboard to install OPENBSD and that works just
fine. The type 7 keyboard works great on a pea sea, and, if the Sun is
booted, running an operating system, it works fine there too.
If the type 7 keyboard is plugged in at any time prior to booting from
media, any time the OpenBoot prom is in charge, the prom reports no
keyboard detected and defaults to a serial console. This happens even
if the type 7 keyboard is plugged in ALONG WITH the generic USB
keyboard I am using successfully with the machine right now.
An advertisement for the type 7 keyboard gave me a clue that this is a
known problem with some early SunBlade machines and that I would need a
Firmware upgrade. I've looked on Oraclle's site for Sunblade 100
firmware upgrades and not found them.
Can someone link me to the latest firmware for the SunBlade 100 so I
can get it to recognize this keyboard?
At present I've got OpenBSD 6.7 running with X and a light window
manager. Got Dillo running as well, so I can surf. Woot woot! I miss
my SParcstation 4/330 though.
Thanks!
Jeff
The OpenBoot Prom utility however, does not see this keyboard at all.
I
It is apparently true. He had heart troubles, but this was unexpected
and certainly a shock to his family.
I met Curt here, on Classiccmp, about twenty years ago. We are both
hardcore Atari 8-bit computer geeks, but we met in this forum.
He is missed by many as he touched many. Please pray for his soul and
for peace for his wife and children.
Jeff
Folks,
I first heard this last night (UK time) but from an unconfirmed source so I waited until this morning and woke to find a tweet from AtariAge confirming it. Seems that Curt Vendel of the Atari History Museum amongst others passed away unexpectedly yesterday.
Sending condolences to his family and everyone who knew him. Taken far too soon. RIP Curt.
https://twitter.com/AtariAge/status/1300547070034620417
--
Adrian Graham
Owner of Binary Dinosaurs, the UK's biggest private home computer collection?
t: @binarydinosaurs f: facebook.com/binarydinosaurs
w: www.binarydinosaurs.co.uk
Hello,
Early Zork source and binary files have been found on ITS backup tapes.
MIT previously released some December 1977 files here:
https://github.com/MITDDC/zork
Recently discovered files from January 1978 will appear soon.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Tom Hunter <ccth6600 at gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 2:17 PM
Subject: Re: Factory Rodent Urine, was Re: Sun SPARCstation LX boot from
CDROM?
To: Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com>
Thanks Chuck,
Unfortunately it is well past cleaning.
The lead/tin alloy has corroded into a hard oxide with very high melting
temperature.
Lead oxide melts at 800+ degrees C and tin oxide at 1300+ degrees C.
This is well past the 300 degrees C a soldering iron produces.
Most importantly the copper pads below and some of the tracks are gone
completely.
About 70% of the board is pristine. Only the section which has been exposed
to the liquid is corroded.
I can't say for sure that it is rodent urine, but when I tried to reflow
the corroded solder joints it faintly smelled like my firewood where rats
nested one winter.
Of course there is no chance for a rat or even the tiniest mouse to get
into a fully assembled Sun/Sony CDROM with the affected PCB side facing
down and somehow urinate upwards towards the PCB.
As the drive was never before disassembled it could only have happened
during manufacturing.
20 years ago when I put the drive and other SPARX LX gear into my display
cabinet I could have easily found a replacement. Now it won't be easy.
The sad thing about it is that everything was pristine when I put it in my
cabinet.
Cheers
Tom Hunter
On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 1:41 PM Chuck Guzis <cclist at sydex.com> wrote:
> On 8/31/20 7:25 PM, Tom Hunter wrote:
> > Not funny if your prized treasures fall victim to it.
> >
>
> I found that oven cleaner can loosen layers of the stuff without too
> much damage to the electronics underneath. Soap and water won't cut it.
>
> --Chuck
>
>
After having a run of almost half a dozen IDE hard drive failures recently in
a short period of time (on my older desktops which use them, I've decided that
I should see if there's an IDE emulator (using SD cards) available I could
switch to. (I'm not sure why I had so many failures in such a short period; I
can only conclude that they're too old now, and reaching the end of their
service lives.
So soes anyone have one (or more) they can recommend? (IDE simulators only; I
don't want to have to mess around changing anything more than I _absolutely_
have to)? I did find these guys:
http://store.mesanet.com/index.php?route=product/category&path=74_64
in an online search - the CFADPTHD seems like it's close to what I'd want,
except it's Compact Flash; I'd have preferred SD but I guess converting
their interface to IDE is more work.
Noel
?I archived the entire website in the summer of 2019, shortly before it went offline in the Fall of 2019. When it became clear that SWTPC.COM was not coming back on line, I chose to host the content at https://deramp.com/swtpc.com/ so hobbyists could still have access to the excellent material Michael pulled together. Mike Evenson also hosts a copy of the website at http://www.swtpcemu.com/mholley/.
Anything you can do to preserve and host the material at swtpc.* is much appreciated!
Mike
What happened to www.bitsavers.org?
It has been down for at least the past 24 hours.
I can still ping the website, but http requests time out.
The bitsaver domain name here in Australia resolves to 208.77.18.144.
Thanks
Tom Hunter
Sorry, I did not see your post that there was no concern of losing Michael?s SWTPC content. I simply did not want to see more great material disappear from the internet as our peers age and become unable to maintain their web presence. I?ve seen that happen over and over now.
I?ll remove my mirror of Michael?s SWTPC content. You can contact Michael Evenson and let him know his assistance in preserving the content for the benefit of the hobby community is also ?unauthorized.?
I presently pay for 150Gb of bandwidth on deramp.com to host material for vintage computing hobbyists. I?m surprised the swtpc.org bandwidth requirements are high enough to be an issue that requires your ?grace? to allow us to view its content.
Mike
Before I ebay buy a monitor, original IBM 5135, will it match the scan rates of the IBM of the IBM Professional Graphics Controller?
I wanted to keep this system looking all original IBM.
Will I need a different monitor, Princeton or something like that?
Your recommendations appreciated.
Thanks,
Randy
Contacts have been made to secure disposition of Bill Dawson and Mike
Holley's site/contents. As part of that effort, I pointed swtpc.org to what
used to be swtpc.com (and also swtpc.org). So if you go to swtpc.org you can
traverse both sites. But that is not why I'm posting..
So in doing this and fixing a few links, I noticed there was a lot of
pictures and info on "first computer store in..." information, apparently
written by Mike Holley and we were just talking about that topic here. Some
may want to go hunting for the computer store that was an adult movie place
heh
J
Hello all, apparently I've been in this group now for weeks but my
spam filter thinks it's all spam. Fixed that, I hope.
Does anyone have any leads on a MIPS Magnum R4000 or Jazz-compatible
machine? I've been working for a while on trying to round out my
collection of alt-arch WinNT machines, and the Magnum has proven to be
the most elusive.
Thanks
I need advice on a path forward then. From emails I got from Michael, Bill
Dawson gave him authority over both swtpc.com and swtpc.org.
Originally, Bill Dawson had swtpc.com but Michael was managing/uploading
much of the content there under the mholley subdirectory
(www.swtpc.com/mholley). Michael registered swtpc.org and I set that as a
redirect to the subdirectory on swtpc.com. Michael stated that at some point
the sites would be merged and he would be the sole site maintainer.
So now I am hosting swtpc.com and swtpc.org, and ownership of the site is up
in the air. Whoever owns swtpc.com doesn't have an A record, which
effectively kills off swtpc.org (redirect fails) as well. All that good
content (and there's a fair amount) is no longer accessible. I see herb
johnson ripped the site and has a copy over at deramp, but no clue if that
is a complete copy that descended from Bill or Mikes wishes.
My initial plan - since I have no registrar access to swtpc.com and it
doesn't point to my name servers, nothing I can do. But swtpc.org at least
still, is pointing to my nameservers. I will change the apache config from a
redirect to the real contents (but not sure if it should bring up the
content that was swtpc.com or swtpc.org). At least a real site will be up.
That being said, I am moving the sites I host free from one server to
another. That project is ongoing the past few days. I would like to move
swtpc.* as well, but see above.
If someone has a reasonably cogent claim to the content I would hand the
site (both) to them. If it's long been gone and other copies are complete
and commonly used, then I could just delete it but hesitant to do so. I
would like to decommission the old server but this should be resolved first.
Feel free to send me advice/thoughts/claims/rants off-list.
J
Finally found it:
https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-Poptronics/70s/1977/Poptronics-1977-03
.pdf
Bottom of page 116 (PDF page 108)
From: William Sudbrink [mailto:wh.sudbrink at verizon.net]
Sent: Wednesday, August 26, 2020 5:53 PM
To: 'General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts'
Subject: CYCLOID faceplate for Altair computer...
I seem to remember this being discussed many years ago, but I can't find it.
Anyway, there's an Altair on epay right now with a CYCLOID faceplate.
If I remember correctly, this is just a replacement plastic insert that was
sold simply to "freshen up" an Altair where the original had worn badly,
as so many did. I've done a fair amount of searching but I can't find an
ad or other reference to the product. Does anyone recall the time period?
I would assume it was at least a couple of years after the introduction of
the Altair. 78 or 79? A pointer to an advertisement or one of those "new
product" paragraphs that many of the magazines did back then would be
most helpful.
Thanks,
Bill S.
--
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
All;
SMS made disk controller systems that used their own device driver,
seemed to be an enhanced DY (RX02) driver.? Does anyone have the
driver/formatting software?
The model I have is FWD 0106 and is described in bitsavers:
http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/sms/brochures/SMS_FWD0106,1106_Flyer_Aug82.pdf
Doug
I decided to get a tvga8900 for mine, as fiddling with 15khz ttl is
just too flaky and problemmatic. Having a real cga/ega monitor would
be cool if I could justify the cost and the space, but a native fix is
an isa vga card so that's my solution. I'm refurbing a 5170 for use as
an imaging tool, ISA tester, etc.
Best,
Jeff
Message: 23
Date: Wed, 26 Aug 2020 10:20:13 -0400 (EDT)
From: Ethan O'Toole <ethan at 757.org>
To: Bill Degnan <billdegnan at gmail.com>, "General Discussion: On-Topic
and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: Buying and running an IBM PC-XT in 2020
Message-ID: <alpine.LRH.2.21.2008261019540.26445 at users.757.org>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
> I delivered in a truck to the set up in Quebec the 20 IBM XTs that
you see
> in the movie Xmen the Apocalypse. I retrieved them after the
filming. I
> could set up an office or classroom of XTs. A funny if not
impractical
> practical joke
> B
That is awesome!
--
: Ethan O'Toole
A wild guess that maybe some on the group may have these files.
I bought the books from abe books, a few dollar's each. They are (vintage 80-90's) but of course the code floppy disks are not there.
Did anybody keep these files?
The Art of C
The Craft of C
C Power Users Guide
I hope you say no, because I will probably learn more by keying in the code in the text, and finding my errors.
Randy
I seem to remember this being discussed many years ago, but I can't find it.
Anyway, there's an Altair on epay right now with a CYCLOID faceplate.
If I remember correctly, this is just a replacement plastic insert that was
sold simply to "freshen up" an Altair where the original had worn badly,
as so many did. I've done a fair amount of searching but I can't find an
ad or other reference to the product. Does anyone recall the time period?
I would assume it was at least a couple of years after the introduction of
the Altair. 78 or 79? A pointer to an advertisement or one of those "new
product" paragraphs that many of the magazines did back then would be
most helpful.
Thanks,
Bill S.
--
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
I found this blog post quite interesting. I've left what I hope is an
informative, helpful comment. I wonder if anyone else here would have
more to add?
https://www.forsure.dev/-/2020/05/19/640-kilobytes-of-ram-and-why-i-bought-…
--
Liam Proven ? Profile: https://about.me/liamproven
Email: lproven at cix.co.uk ? gMail/gTalk/gHangouts: lproven at gmail.com
Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn/Flickr: lproven ? Skype: liamproven
UK: +44 7939-087884 ? ?R (+ WhatsApp/Telegram/Signal): +420 702 829 053
On 8/22/20 8:52 AM, Murray McCullough via cctalk wrote:
> 45 yrs. ago last month, mid-July, Dick Heiser started a new industry,
> the retail computer store. It opened in West L.A. under the name
> Arrow Head Computer Company. aka, The Computer Store. This began the
> direct marketing of microcomputers to hobbyists, later to the masses
> of the middle class.
Slight correction: The name was Arrowhead (one word, not two) Computer
Company.
I remember this very well. I was living in Santa Monica at the time,
and drove down Pico Boulevard almost every day. Needless to say, I
immediately noticed the "Computer Store" sign and stopped in, soon
becoming one of the regular "hangers on".
Dick Heiser and his wife Lois were taking a big chance, but it
proved to be a good bet. Initially, their business consisted of
buying Altair 8800 kits and assembling them in the back of the
store. A lot of people were happy to pay extra to not have to
solder all those hundreds of connections.
Dick was a regular fixture at meetings of the Southern California
Computer Society (SCCS), often making deliveries and taking orders
there. In those days, SCCS monthly meetings were *the* place for
computer geeks to get together and exchange news and get help.
A few months later, two guys named Steve showed up at a meeting
with a kit they called the "Apple I", for the grand price of
$666.66. I wish I had had the foresight to buy one! Instead,
I wound up joining the SCCS group purchase of DEC LSI-11 systems.
I still have that system, with a case and power supply from a
TRW surplus sale. It isn't worth nearly as much as an original
Apple I, though! :-)
Alan "Hindsight is 20-20" Frisbie
Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 25 Aug 2020, Alan Frisbie via cctalk wrote:
> > A few months later, two guys named Steve showed up at a meeting
> > with a kit they called the "Apple I", for the grand price of
> > $666.66. I wish I had had the foresight to buy one!
> Q: although WE call it "Apple I", did the Steves call it "Apple I" or
> "Apple Computer"? The answer tells us whether they were explicitly
> planning on making other models later!
I honestly do not recall if they used the "I" or not. This was,
after all, 45 years ago!
At that time there were many tiny startup companies trying to get
our attention, most of which sank without a trace. If I had been
asked back then which ones I thought would survive, I probably
would not have picked Apple. Not my first mistake, and certainly
not my last. :-)
Those *were* exciting days, with new products and developments
happening every month. I looked forward to every SCCS meeting,
with people showing off their latest homebrew project, swapping
tips, and buying parts & boards. For a while, there was even
a large wheel of cheese which we eagerly devoured. :-)
Alan Frisbie
I have a Mac mini os-x 10.15/16 11.
I?m Really trying to find a working Iscsi Initiator
Software. Yeah looked at atto 200 bucks
GlobalSan broken.
Who is using their Mac with an iScsi drive
Attached storage ?
Help appreciated.
K.
"That might be true for discussions where people don't care to do any
research, or where words like "first" are uses more for hyperbolic
emphasis, but suggesting someone started an industry on a list like this,
I think, doesn't seem out of place."
I agree that using ?*first**?* has a certain connotation. However, until it
is proven otherwise it?s quite appropriate. If this word were not used, by
me or anyone else, on this website then we never get to learn anything ?
*new*?. Even in historical writing, of which I?ve done some as a historian,
one has to acknowledge a source, but I for the life of me can?t remember as
I didn?t have the source on my electronic-research rolodex. In such an
occasion, as the note I sent to cctalk, should have stated this. My
apologies.
Happy computing!
Murray ?
<http://www.avg.com/email-signature?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_cam…>
Virus-free.
www.avg.com
<http://www.avg.com/email-signature?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_cam…>
<#DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2>
Hi,
I have a VAXstation 4000/60 with an internal disk but no CD drive. I'd
like to install VMS (7.3), but I'm new to VMS.
I have a SIMH VAX instance running on the same LAN with VMS installed
(mounting the VMS images is easy, of course). Can anyone point me to a
HOW-TO which explains how to use one VMS system to MOP / netboot another
system to install VMS?
Thanks,
John
> I was going to comment that the only way I could see a 1U VAX was if
> someone rack mounted a 4000/VLC. Is that the stock VLC power supply?
> My cluster doesn?t even have that much space.
>
> What do you use to go from SATA to SCSI (SCSI-1 even)?
It's a standard 1U power supply with a custom adapter. You can see it
better here:
https://twitter.com/AnachronistJohn/status/1294725819038752768
I use a SATA to IDE adapter, then an IDE to UW-SCSI adapter, then an
UW-SCSI cable and terminator, then finally a 68 to 50 pin adapter.
The previous drive was a Samsung SSD, but I think that constant, non-stop
swap use wore it out. This was the smallest new spinning rust drive I
could find.
SCSI2SD would work for a while, but, again, swap usage would wear out an
SD card in no time, I'm sure.
John
> When dozens or hundreds start up within weeks or months of each other,
> every one is important, and most are interesting, but "FIRST" or
> "STARTED THE TREND" (implying being the "first") cease to really mean
> anything.
>
> It's generally better to never use the word "FIRST"; there is almost
> always a lesser known one that was earlier.
That might be true for discussions where people don't care to do any
research, or where words like "first" are uses more for hyperbolic
emphasis, but suggesting someone started an industry on a list like this,
I think, doesn't seem out of place.
If someone has examples of this being wrong, he / she will say so, and
we'll all learn. If not, the original message has conveyed useful
information.
Relatedly, I have what I think is the only 1U VAX in the world. I've
mentioned this in many places, but if someone says I'm wrong and shows me
an example of another, it would please me, not upset me. I'll have learned
of another :)
John
We would live this photos. Force archive here.? Your? pay pal. Address For postage costs? please? Thanks Ed Sharpe Archivist? for SMECC museum project
On Monday, August 24, 2020 Marvin Johnston via cctalk <marvin at west.net; cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
? Spoken for.
> I sent an email to Al asking if he wanted them, and no response which I took to mean no :).
>
> There are about 40 photos of the fronts of computer stores circa 1977-1978, and were taken by a friend of mine who was a computer salesman at the time. Most (all) are date stamped and have the store location written on the back.
>
> None for Santa Barbara :), so I'll pass them along to whoever wants them. And Al still has first shot at them if he missed my original email.
>
> $1000 with free postage, or free if you pay postage :). Priority mail should run about $8.00.
Spoken for.
> I sent an email to Al asking if he wanted them, and no response which I took to mean no :).
>
> There are about 40 photos of the fronts of computer stores circa 1977-1978, and were taken by a friend of mine who was a computer salesman at the time. Most (all) are date stamped and have the store location written on the back.
>
> None for Santa Barbara :), so I'll pass them along to whoever wants them. And Al still has first shot at them if he missed my original email.
>
> $1000 with free postage, or free if you pay postage :). Priority mail should run about $8.00.
I sent an email to Al asking if he wanted them, and no response which I
took to mean no :).
There are about 40 photos of the fronts of computer stores circa
1977-1978, and were taken by a friend of mine who was a computer
salesman at the time. Most (all) are date stamped and have the store
location written on the back.
None for Santa Barbara :), so I'll pass them along to whoever wants
them. And Al still has first shot at them if he missed my original email.
$1000 with free postage, or free if you pay postage :). Priority mail
should run about $8.00.
Ed asks: Sure,Stan can add to our Burroughs? collection Ed!
Ok, it's yours. Email me your snail mail address please (sieler at allegro.com
).
And, I'll scan it first, per some offline requests (I knew I should have
already done that :)
Stan
Sure,Stan can add to our Burroughs? collection Ed!
On Sunday, August 23, 2020 Stan Sieler via cctalk <sieler at allegro.com; cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
Hi,
Anyone want a Burroughs 1975 Annual Report?
(Free mailing to U.S. address, otherwise PayPal the cost of mailing.)
Nice condition.? 44 pages.
thanks,
Stan
The LA Times called it the first computer store in a story in December
1975. The first ad for the store ran in July of that year. I've put
scans of the article and the ad here:
https://photos.app.goo.gl/S53vBGs6irzqoLR37
> Message: 7
> Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2020 22:02:53 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com>
> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
> Subject: Re: Computer stores
> Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.64.2008222156370.19726 at shell.lmi.net>
> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
>
> When dozens or hundreds start up within weeks or months of each
> other,
> every one is important, and most are interesting, but "FIRST" or
> "STARTED
> THE TREND" (implying being the "first") cease to really mean
anything.
>
> It's generally better to never use the word "FIRST"; there is almost
> always a lesser known one that was earlier.
>
> The trend from being a sideline within a business, to becoming the
> primary focus of the business can seem anticlimactic, but is what
marks
> the core of the transition.
> Think of Fry's, NLS, etc.
>
>
> On Sat, 22 Aug 2020, jim stephens via cctalk wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > On 8/22/2020 9:53 AM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
> >> On 8/22/20 8:52 AM, Murray McCullough via cctalk wrote:
> >>> 45 yrs. ago last month, mid-July, Dick Heiser started a new
> industry, the
> >>> retail computer store. It opened in West L.A. under the name
> Arrow Head
> >>> COmputer Company. aka, The Computer Store. This began the
> direct marketing
> >>> of microcomputers to hobbyists, later to the masses of the
middle
> class,
> >>> albeit a small market 45 yrs. ago.
> >>>
> >>> Happy computing.
> >>>
> >>> Murray ?
> >> Does this precede Paul Terrell's Byte Shop #1 in Mountain View,
> CA?
> >>
> >> --Chuck
> >>
> > Not soon after, Dave and Tom Freeman, Advanced Computer
> Products in Santa
> > Ana, CA.
> > thanks
> > JIm
>
Hi,
Anyone want a Burroughs 1975 Annual Report?
(Free mailing to U.S. address, otherwise PayPal the cost of mailing.)
Nice condition. 44 pages.
thanks,
Stan
I just made some small changes to the DECnet/E event logger application to fix a Y2K problem. (More precisely, a Y2K.003 problem).
https://github.com/pkoning2/decstuff
This is for RSTS V10.1. Just drop the new evtlog.tsk into [0,16].
paul
I'm trying to reduce the amount of "stuff" I have and I've been carrying around a significant number
of old data books. My plan has always been to have all of the resources I need in my retirement
(assuming I get there) to work on and repair the various vintage computing hardware I've also
collected over time and have been storing.
My question is if I this information is all now available online or if I need to keep these data
books. My guess is that it is some of both.
Also, if I decide to part with these, should I create a list and make them available for the cost of
shipping or just recycle them? Maybe someone collects them?
--tom
Hi guys,
I have three Dolch Logic Analyzers, the two bigger ones are Palas
<someting> Analyzers, one of them with an highspeed option, the third is
an Compact 100 Analyzer. For the bigger ones I have Disassemblers for
8080/8085 and Z80 as far as I know. I want to use the C100 with a Z80
disassembler, but the ROM images are different it seems, the roms don't
work in the C100.
Has anyone the rom images for the C100 Z80 disassembler?
Kind Regards,
Holm
--
Technik Service u. Handel Tiffe, www.tsht.de, Holm Tiffe,
Goethestrasse 15, 09569 Oederran, USt-Id: DE253710583
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45 yrs. ago last month, mid-July, Dick Heiser started a new industry, the
retail computer store. It opened in West L.A. under the name Arrow Head
COmputer Company. aka, The Computer Store. This began the direct marketing
of microcomputers to hobbyists, later to the masses of the middle class,
albeit a small market 45 yrs. ago.
Happy computing.
Murray ?
I have 2 2010 macbook pro's. Each have 8GB of Ram and both have a 2 TB hybrid seagate hard drives. Running Windows via Parallels. 15 inch system have reasonable perfomance. 17 inch system just crawls running windows. With RAM maxed out what else should I be looking for?
>From the incompatible department of classic computement: A rather
complete full dump of the MIT-AI PDP-10 from 1971 has been found. It
includes full source code and documentation for the system, including
ITS version 671, DDT, TECO, MIDAS, (MAC)LISP, CHESS (MacHack), MUDDLE,
LOGO, MACSYMA, etc.
Has SIMH been ported to a low overhead (instant-on) platform?
I ask the question because the startup time of Linux is distracting when
powering on a PiDP-11/70 or similar clone systems based on SIMH.
Thanks
Tom Hunter
Would anyone be able to identify the 19 pin connector used on the Alto II keyset?
Shown in the second photo on https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/X124.82C
The Xerox engineering doc (209962B_Alto_II_Assembly_Keyset.pdf) has it as P/N DE51218-1 if I interpret it correctly.
I've looked for a while and the closest I can find appears to be Mouser p/n 2DEF19P
The cost of 136 USD (each!) is more than I (and perhaps everyone else) would really like to pay, and that's only for
the male end.
Ideally I would like a datasheet on this original connector if possible, to know the pin-pin spacing and the pressed metal
surround dimensions.
I've just ordered small trial quantities of screws, microswitches, e-clips, nutserts, rods and so on for my keyset
lookalikes/workalikes. Also about to start the key mapping to F5-F9 using a popular small SOC board, which is small enough
to be inside a custom printed shell that the keyset plugs into.
That is, the 3-row 19-pin female connector side which goes through to USB.
I was thinking there's no reason it shouldn't be able to work using the original connector with a real keyset-less Alto,
should any such animal be lurking out there. Hence looking at the feasibility of placing in a 19 pin male-female
connector arrangement rather than the fallback of straight-through to USB.
The whole thing is still at prototype stage so even if it doesn't work out, well I will at least have a bunch of additions
to my nuts/bolts/fasteners/switches stash.
Thanks for any help,
Steve.