I saw a Radio Shack printer- typical black and silver/gray color scheme- at
the WARAC swap today. Didn't get a close look at it due to sharp elbows in
the vicinity. I think the guy was asking $20 for it. What I could see,
looked like it was almost new condition.
*WARAC: West Allis Radio Amateur's Club. Annual swap is 2nd Saturday in
January at the Waukesha (WI) county expo center.
-----
124. [Philosophy] Reisner's Rule of Conceptual Inertia: If you think big
enough, you'll never have to do it.
--... ...-- -.. . -. ----. --.- --.- -...
tpeters at nospam.mixcom.com (remove "nospam") N9QQB (amateur radio)
"HEY YOU" (loud shouting) WEB: http://www.mixcom.com/tpeters
43? 7' 17.2" N by 88? 6' 28.9" W, Elevation 815', Grid Square EN53wc
WAN/LAN/Telcom Analyst, Tech Writer, MCP, CCNA, Registered Linux User 385531
I noticed that there's an article in the december circuit cellar that
talks about emulating an Apple II+ in an FPGA. It was an interesting
article, although I only understood about 20% of it. As a software
guy though, the hardware "code" has me interested. Maybe this would
be an easier and less time-consuming way for me to learn about
hardware.
brian
Decided to dust off an old software project -- at one point I was
working on a Tektronix 4051 emulator, a machine based on the Motorola
6800 CPU.
I've coded up a simple 6800 emulation & disassembler but I'm lacking
some simple 6800 code to test out its accuracy on "real" code. I'd like
to put it through its paces on a simple piece of hardware before
tackling the (mostly) undocumented quirks of the 4051. (It's much
easier to debug a hardware emulation when you're confident the CPU
emulation isn't the culprit...)
I thought the Altair 680 would be a good starting point but I can't for
the life of me find any dumps of the monitor/VTL ROMs on the 'net.
Anyone have any leads for these or other 680 software?
Thanks,
Josh
Joachim writes:
> Finally there is an unknown board, obviously a Apple II clone, but has
> both a 6502 and Z80 on it. Strangely, no ROMs (except for char rom?)
> but I have a unpopulated ROM card that may belong to it. Some
> corrosion on the underside, it probably doesn't work anymore. Still
> all chips are socketed, would be a good place to pull from. (The
> other two are assumed to work, but haven't been switched on for many
> years.)
A Basis 108 maybe? It was a German clone.
I think there was a very late (meaning mid-80's) Far-East clone that looked similar to the VTech Laser 128 but also had a Z80 in it. Funny, isn't it? Franklin clones the II, VTech clones the Franklin, and then somebody clones the VTech :-)
Tim.
Ok, I've been sitting on this stuff for a while now, it was supposed
to go to someone in upstate New York, but I haven't heard from him for
a while. I need to get rid of it to make room, so if someone wants to
take it, it's free to go.
This stuff is in Montreal. Pictures in
http://www.tsp.ece.mcgill.ca/~jthiem/classiccmp/
First is a German Apple IIe, came with a family that immigrated to
Canada in the 80's. Has a serial card, a Microsoft Softcard (CP/M and
possibly 80-col), a printing buffer and floppy. Comes with 2 drives,
bunch of original Apple floppies, documentation (including two books
for the softcard) etc.
Also I have an unlabeled II, probably a plus, likely a clone, built
>from kit it seems. All chips are labeled and socketed (see picture) -
great care was taken to assemble this. With floppy card and two
drives. Also troubleshooting documentation, and some original manuals
for Ultima, Zork, and other games. Also comes with a green mono
monitor - that also has documentation which includes schematics. The
game connector is brought to the back to a DB-9, and there is a
homebrew joystick for it (made from an R/C stick and two pushbutton
switches in a hobby box).
Finally there is an unknown board, obviously a Apple II clone, but has
both a 6502 and Z80 on it. Strangely, no ROMs (except for char rom?)
but I have a unpopulated ROM card that may belong to it. Some
corrosion on the underside, it probably doesn't work anymore. Still
all chips are socketed, would be a good place to pull from. (The
other two are assumed to work, but haven't been switched on for many
years.)
I'd like to give all of this away as one big pile. There are also
boxes of floppies and other miscellany. Too large to ship, but can
fit into a car trunk easily.
Unrelated - but also free to good home - some old TRS-80 docs: Series
I Editor/Assembler, Level II Basic ref, Tiny Pascal User's manual,
"Getting started with TRS-80 Basic", "TRS-80 Graphics", VTOS 3.0
Operator's guide, and a "cheat sheet" for Scripsit. Could conceivably
be shipped.
--
Joachim Thiemann :: http://www.tsp.ece.mcgill.ca/~jthiem
Buddy of mine in Western Massachusetts has a working Telebit Netblazer
with (he believes) a complete set of manuals. He'd like to find it a new
home rather than recycle it, free for cost of shipping from ZIP code
01012. He gave no guidance regarding international shipping, but /might/
be open to it.
Contact me if interested, and I will provide your contact info to him on
a first come, first served basis.
Thanks,
--Steve.
Hi folks,
I'm in the process of resurrecting a Heathkit H-11 (essentially a DEC LSI-11) that
I acquired a few years back. It came with a memory card that, after much creative
research, I've determined is a Chrislin Industries CI-1103 module. It's a 32kw board
with no parity, and it uses 4116 16kx1 dynamic RAM chips. It has two 8-position
DIP switches for configuration.
Would anyone happen to have any details relative to configuring this board? Thx...
Scott
At 12:00 -0600 1/8/10, Teo wrote:
>How many people here do soldering (using lead solder) indoors with no way of
>getting the smoke out of the house?
<hand part way up> Used to, my wife, bless her heart, convinced me to
do it on the balcony hereafter. *Normally* San Antonio is warm enough
to make that practical....
(In my defense, I used to do it in the bathroom with the exhaust fan on.)
At 12:00 -0600 1/8/10, Ian wrote:
>It' snot liek iit can cuase drain bamage.
:-) yeh, wtah he sed.
--
- 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.
Hello,
I came across your post online asking to trade a SGI Iris system and I
wonder if you might have another SGI system called Onyx 10000 laying around
for trade or sale? Or if you have any boards removed from this system,
please let me know.
Thank you & I look forward to hearing from you.
Best Regards,
Winnie Hsiung
CentraTech Corporation
Someone is acquiring and going through old 9-track tapes of chip design
files produced by Atari during their heyday. See http://www.atariage.com/
for the story. Does anyone know anything about what happened to
Commodore's design files?
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
> From: shumaker at att.net
>
> where does one get on the Heathkit Listserver?
It has been a long time since I first got on the listserver. The
information at the bottom of the digest that may help is:
-----------------------------------------------------------
Products bought, sold or traded here is the responsibility of the
parties involved. This list and the City of Tempe are not responsible
for losses or misrepresentations of any kind. Buyer beware!
-----------------------------------------------------------
This list is a public service of the City of Tempe, Arizona
-----------------------------------------------------------
Subscription control - http://www.tempe.gov/lists/control.aspx?list=HEATH
To post - HEATH at LISTS.TEMPE.GOV
Archives - http://lists.tempe.gov/archives/HEATH.html
I have a Videotrax VHS that I am willing to give if somebody is willing to
pay the shipping cost from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
mailto:sourdif.pierre at yahoo.ca
From the Heathkit Listserver:
Subject:
F.S. HERO JR MANUALS
From:
k2sse <k2sse at EMBARQMAIL.COM>
Date:
Wed, 6 Jan 2010 13:23:58 -0500
1 ea Hero Jr Programmers guide
$10 shipped conus.
1 set Hero Jr Programming Language book and 1 ea Hero Jr Owners guide.
$7 shipped conus.
Thank you
Al
Date: Wed, 6 Jan 2010 11:36:30 -0800 (PST)
From: David Griffith <dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu>
Subject: Re: Commodore chip design files
On Wed, 6 Jan 2010, geoffrey oltmans wrote:
> > Someone is acquiring and going through old 9-track tapes of chip
> > design files produced by Atari during their heyday. See
> > http://www.atariage.com/ for the story. Does anyone know anything
> > about what happened to Commodore's design files?
> That's really remarkable. I imagine that the masks are probably
> worthless for today's processes though. :(
>
> It would be a fantastic aid in reverse engineering though.
I'm interested in seeing the guts of the SID. Perhaps newer and more
advanced ones can be made.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
No problem:
http://mail.lipsia.de/~enigma/neu/6581.html#SIDR2
mike
*************************************************************
Flipping through all sorts of thing Amiga, I was wondering how
backwards-compatible the PPC varieties are.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
Was curious if anyone on the list was the person who drove up the price of the
4404 schematics.
I REALLY hate the fact you can no longer tell who you're bidding against.
FWIW, I'm NOT going after the unit itself.
On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 2:21 PM, Brian Lanning <brianlanning at gmail.com> wrote:
> Sounds like the nintendo wii modding scene. ?Nintendo started putting
> epoxy on the key chip the modders were targeting. ?Turns out you can
> heat up the epoxy with a small torch and it pops right off.
Or the epoxy or cut pins, etc., on the iOpener.
Some of the "fixes" did make it difficult to mod the iOpener, but in
the end, none were successful in keeping out the determined geeks.
It did take a while to pick that epoxy out, but it can be done. ;-)
-ethan
Does anyone know what became of Hans Pufal's PDP-8 FPGA core? I've found
quite a few references to it on Google, but no links to it anywhere. I
tried contacting Hans at his gmail address about a week ago and haven't
heard back, but I don't know if that's his current address or not.
-Seth
I thought this might interest some list members.
-Peter
===
KANSAS CITY, MO ? December 22, 2009 ? Mark Simonsen, employee number three and later owner of Beagle Bros, will be the keynote speaker at KansasFest 2010. At Beagle Bros, whose popular software products for the Apple II hobbyist demonstrated the publisher's quirky sense of humor, Mark developed software including Flex Type, Beagle BASIC, Beagle Graphics, Triple-Dump, and Double-Take. In the early 1980s, Mark decided that he "wanted to work with the Apple for the rest of [his] life," a statement that captures the enthusiasm and spirit of Mark, Beagle Bros, and many Apple II users.
Beagle Bros started in 1980 under the direction of Bert Kersey to provide software to casual users of the Apple II. A year and a half after graduating with a degree in computer science from Brigham Young University, Mark "fell in love with the Apple." Mark published Flex Type through Beagle Bros in 1982, joined the company as a programmer in 1983, and bought it in 1987 at the age of 29.
Besides software like Shape Mechanic, GPLE, and DOS Boss for budding programmers, Beagle Bros produced books, posters, and even advertisements full of clever and useful tidbits demonstrating the capabilities of the Apple II. Later, the company produced highly regarded productivity software like Platinum Paint, BeagleWrite GS, and the TimeOut line of AppleWorks add-ons. Beagle Bros earned many loyal followers thanks to the combination of quality products, enthusiasm, and humor.
Mark sold the company's product line in 1991 and 1992 to Quality Computers. Today, Mark helps save memories as the CEO of iPreserve, a company specializing in photo, film, video, and document preservation.
KansasFest 2010, the 21st annual Apple II conference, is set for July 20th through July 25th at Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Missouri. KansasFest was originally hosted by Resource Central and has been brought to you by the KFest Committee since 1995. Any and all Apple II and Macintosh users, fans, and friends are invited to attend this year's "summer camp for geeks." Registration details will be announced on the KansasFest Web site in early 2010. Please heed the warning from Beagle Bros and refrain from feeding your disks to alligators. For photos, schedules, and presentations from past year's events, please visit the event's official Web site at http://www.kansasfest.org/
CONTACT:
KansasFest 2010
http://www.kansasfest.org/http://twitter.com/kansasfest/
Just sending out another call to members of this list for vintage
computing displays at the Midwest Gaming Classic in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
We've taken over the entire Sheraton Four Points hotel and convention
center, and have expanded to 30,000 sq. ft. this year. The convention
covers consoles (past to present), pinball, video coin, and vintage
computing. With about 4,000 in attendance last year and even more
expected this year because of the move closer to the city, your
equipment and display will be enjoyed and appreciated by a lot of
people.
Photos of the entire show from last year are available here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/91071283 at N00/collections/72157622883180931/
I'm, as always, continually interested in expanding the vintage
computing area. Besides items from my archive, we've had members from
the Commodore and TI communities come and do great displays. We want
more! Please contact me direct if you're interested.
Also, computing equipment is always in high demand in the vending hall
as well for anyone that's interested.
Marty
First the TU56 broke, then the Lilith disks goes, and now it is the HP Integral's turn .
The Integral, stored a year ago in working condition, has a display problem.
After switching on the Integral makes all the right noises, but the display remains off.
Anyone has a pinout, or schematic , of the Sharp LJ512U03 EL-display as used in the Integral ?
( there is something, but not much, in the 1985 HP Journal )
a replacement will be hard to find, and far too expensive of course.
I do wonder how those with 100+ computers keep them all runnning, I have maybe 25 classics and find it hard to keep them alive.
Jos Dreesen
In Issue 15's Topics none of these emails had anything to do with their
subject:
"Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested".
I would like to thank Fred for showing how one should change the subject
line when the discussion goes off thread (see Topic 14) and suggest to the
rest of us that this group will work better if we all follow Fred's example.
4. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Tony Duell)
5. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Chuck Guzis)
6. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Josh Dersch)
7. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Dave McGuire)
9. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Chuck Guzis)
11. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Dave McGuire)
13. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Chuck Guzis)
14. Disk change and write cacheing (Was: Compaq Portable II -
(Fred Cisin)
16. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Tony Duell)
18. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Tony Duell)
21. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Josh Dersch)
22. Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
(Dave McGuire)
Tom
Brian Lanning writes:
>On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 5:59 AM, Steven Hirsch <snhirsch at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Does anyone know why the connectors were left off the board in the first
>>> place? ?It seems kind of silly since they went to the effort to route the
>>> signals and have the holes drilled.
>>
>> To save $0.50 per slot, I'd imagine.
>This kind of thing makes me insane. I would have gladly paid another
>$1, or even $10, had they just put the parts on the board. I have a
>hard time believing (i.e. prefer to believe) that this would be purely
>a cost cutting move.
More insane things have happened. Witness the VAXstation II RC, where
RC stood for "reduced configuration". DEC took a perfectly normal Q-bus
Backplane, with installed edge connectors, then filled the edge connectors
with epoxy to prevent users from installing third-party peripherals. All
to sell at a price lower than the normal Microvax II's (about $6K IIRC.)
When DEC found out that folks were taking advantage of them by buying a
VAXStation II RC and swapping out the backplane, the responded by pouring
The epoxy so that it glued the backplane to the chassis, as well. A few folks
Got these and then managed to chisel out the old backplane.
Tim.
I have 2 Portable IIs in fairly good shape, except that both of them, one an
HDD model and one with two FDs. Both run Memory Check and POST but fail to
boot.
During POST they both give a
"162 System Options Not Set - Run Setup" message
but when I continue I get a
"Non-system disk or disk error" message
with several known good original disks (Compaq Setup Disk, PCDOS 3.3 StartUp
disk, MSDOS 2.0 disk)
Sometimes I get the message, "Disk Boot Failure"
I tried replacing the 1987 battery in the HDD Portable II with a fresh
battery purchased recently at Frys and had no change in the failure mode.
I have two HDD/FDD controller cards and tried both in the HDD Portable II
with no change in the failure mode.
If I listen to the boot process, it sounds like it cannot read the boot
sector. That is, I can hear one seek (or maybe a rezero) to a single
location and then no more. As I recall during a DOS boot, you can hear
multiple seeks as, first the boot sector loads and then the boot loader (in
the boot sector) loads MSDOS.SYS, IO.SYS and the FAT. Since I never hear
any seeking I suspect the boot sector cannot be read.
I find it surprising that two machines having very different histories will
fail in the same way. BTW, they are not even the same type FDDs, one is a
"push button" type and the other is a "lidded" type.
I am hoping that I am making some sort of operator error which can easily be
corrected.
Any ideas?
Thanks and Happy New Years.
Tom
Anyone who collects laptops, terminals, or motherboards with memory
backup needs to pay attention to the batteries. If the machine is in
storage it would be a good idea to open it up and remove the battery
(Ni-Cad or non-chargeable Alkaline) before it leaks and destroys the
electronics.
Note that many 1970s and 80s terminals all used rechargeable batteries
to store user info...
We often repair older arcade and pinball games (hey, they have computers
- and they are classic!) where the battery has leaked and damaged or
taken the board to the board graveyard...
If you have some battery leakage you can read up on a possible solution
here:
http://www.flippers.com/battery.html
Along with many other web sites I'm sure...
John :-#)#
--
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
Call (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, VideoGames)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out"
The never-ending house cleanup continues. I have an HP 9826 computer
(http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?c=1068&st=1), in
non-working condition. I picked this up at Boeing Surplus (RIP) a few
years back. At that time, it was working but the built in monitor was
not doing so well, but the machine worked fine otherwise. I powered it
up recently and got nothing out of it aside from some fans spinning. I
have no real desire to get it working again (too many other projects),
but of course I don't want to see it trashed.
It's in worn condition (it clearly got a lot of use at Boeing), but it
doesn't look too bad. The "S" keycap is broken off the keyboard but can
still be typed. It has the HPL ROM set installed, and 192k of memory,
if I'm recalling the amount correctly from when it was running.
If there's no interest by the end of the week, I'll be dropping this off
at RE-PC in Tukwila. They tend to not scrap "cool" stuff like this so
it'll probably end up on sale in their "vintage" department rather than
sent to the scrap heap... (I hope).
This is in the Seattle area. I'd rather not ship this but if you're
willing to foot the bill (it's a heavy machine, HP made some pretty
solid equipment back when the HP Way was still alive) we can work that
out...
- Josh
Hi Everyone. I'm harvesting parts from an old 386 motherboard... a
couple pin headers and a few ISA slots for that 2000 upgrade I
mentioned earlier. I'm having a bit of trouble though. I'm using one
of those bulb-type solder suckers. The problem is that I think I'm
getting 95% of the solder out of there. But the bit of solder that
remains is preventing me from removing the parts from the holes. Can
anyone offer suggestions to make this go more smoothly?
brian
Is there someone here who has built/designed an am/fm radio using
currently manufactured vacuum tubes? If so, please point me in the right
direction.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
Hello group members,
My name is Matt Janeczek and I live in Indianapolis, IN. I'm new to the list but come bearing goodies for all! To give you a little background on myself, I used to collect vintage Apple products from the Apple II all the way to the Power Macintosh G3 and amassed a fairly hefty collection over the years, from the very common to rare prototypes and everything in between. While I had great fun doing this for several years, I've come to the point in my life where I no longer have the time or space to continue the hobby.
I'm trying to find a buyer (or small group of buyers) to purchase most, if not all, of my collection. It would save me a lot of time and effort if I can accomplish this versus listing everything individually on eBay or other sites. I would rate the vast majority of my collection in very good to excellent condition, so this isn't just a random junk pile I'm trying to dump on somebody, hah. I'm simply asking for reasonable, decent offers from buyers who will appreciate the collection for what it's worth. I'm not posting any prices but any serious offers will be considered. Shipping will be extra for any non-local purchases by the carrier of your choice. PayPal or money orders are acceptable forms of payment.
The following address will take you to the Public folder of my iDisk. Click on the Apple folder to download pictures of everything listed below.
http://public.me.com/mjaneczek
-Mac Plus with 40 MB hard disk preloaded with an assortment of pre-OS 6 applications
-Apple magnetic tape drive
-Apple 5.25" external floppy drive
-Apple IIGS keyboard with green and yellow keys
-Apple Set Top Box
-QuickTake 200 cameras (one new in box, one complete in box) and all accessories
-Apple Presentation System (two new in box)
-Apple TV/Video System (new in box)
-Macintosh Portable Battery Recharger (two new in box)
-GeoPort Telecom Adapter Kit (new in box)
-DOS Compatibility Card for Power Macintosh 6100 (complete in box)
-Power Macintosh AV Card (complete in box)
-AudioVision Adapter Kit (new in box)
-PowerBook Duo AC Adapter (new in box)
-Network Server Memory Expansion Kit (two new in box)
-Apple Ethernet NB Card (new in box)
-Apple Ethernet CS Thin Coax Card (new in box)
-Apple Ethernet 10T/5 Workgroup Hub (new in box)
-Apple External Video Connector (new in box)
-System 7.5 CD and manual
-Assortment of Macintosh software titles, all complete in box (see pictures)
-Apple Service Source CD 2003
-Apple Extended Keyboard II with Overlay
-AppleDesign Powered Speakers
-QuickTime Conferencing Kit
-ADB Mouse I
-Design Center 3D
-Quicken 95 (syncs with PocketMoney on the Newton)
-LocalTalk Locking Connector Kit DB-9 (new in box)
-PrintShop and PrintShop Companion for the IIGS (complete in box)
-GeoPort modem, software and manual
-Avid VideoShop (the best video editing software to use with the 6100 AV card)
-Assortment of early Apple II and Mac hardware, software and programming manuals
-Apple II mouse and card
-Echo II speaker and card
-Music Construction Set for Apple II
-20 loose floppy disks containing 150+ Apple II software titles
-The Encyclopedia of Multimedia CD and LaserDisc
-PowerBook Duo 280c with mini dock, floppy drive, extra battery, two power adapters, charging station, original manuals and documentation, preloaded with an assortment of software including MS Office and Adobe titles and compact carrying case to hold everything
-PowerBook Duo 280c extra mini dock
-PowerBook Due 280c replacement keyboard (new in box)
The following items are not pictured but all are in excellent condition as well. Pictures provided upon request.
-Performa 6115CD with OS 7.5, all hardware, accessories and original software bundle (complete in box)
-Color StyleWriter 2400 (complete in box)
-Color StyleWriter Pro (no box or manuals)
-Color OneScanner 1200/30 (complete in box)
-Color OneScanner Document Feeder (two complete in box)
-Color OneScanner Transparent Media Adapter (complete in box)
-PowerMac G3 Minitower and accessories including a scanner, printer, full size Wacom drawing tablet, MIDI interface, CD burner and speakers with OS 9
-Huge collection of MacAddict (with all shareware CDs), MacHome, Macworld and other computing magazines from the 1990s and early 2000s, literally hundreds all in near mint condition
Please let me know if you have any questions. Thanks for looking!
Hi everyone. I'm looking for an isa VGA card, a sound card, and an
ne2000 network board. I have 1 16-bit slot and 2 8-bit slots to play
with. This is for an amiga with a 286 bridge board. If anyone has
any they'd be willing to part with, please let me know.
I have a sound blaster and an ne2000 board, but they're both 16-bit.
The amiga 2000 motherboard is setup for 16 bit slots in place of the 2
8-bit slots. The sockets just aren't there. (Not sure why commodore
thought this was a good idea) I could find a donor board and solder
in the extra connectors I guess.
A more interesting solution though would be a 16-bit isa extender and
an expansion chassis. I could put a passive backplane in another
amiga 2000 case and have more 16-bit isa slots than I could fill.
Alas, these extender cards are ridiculously expensive. If you know
where to get these bus extenders new/used at a reasonable price,
please let me know.
So I guess the best solution for now would be a 16-bit vga card and an
8-bit ne2000 board. I'm not sure if the bridgeboard can emulate a
sound blaster through the amiga's sound system, so maybe that's not
needed at all.
brian
---------------Original Message:
Date: Fri, 1 Jan 2010 21:03:32 -0600
From: Brian Lanning <brianlanning at gmail.com>
Subject: Looking for a few ISA cards
Hi everyone. I'm looking for an isa VGA card, a sound card, and an
ne2000 network board. I have 1 16-bit slot and 2 8-bit slots to play
with. This is for an amiga with a 286 bridge board. If anyone has
any they'd be willing to part with, please let me know.
----------------Reply:
You might have better luck on the Computer Vintage Forum for this
sort of stuff:
http://www.vintage-computer.com/vcforum/
m
******************************************************************************
Date: Sat, 2 Jan 2010 17:09:49 +0000 (GMT)
From: ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell)
Subject: Re: Compaq Portable II - Restoration Problem, Help requested
To: cctalk at classiccmp.org
Message-ID: <m1NR7U8-000J3vC at p850ug1>
Content-Type: text/plain
> Did you put those disks into a windows 2000/xp or newer pc? Possibly as
far
> back as win 98/95 (I don't remember when they started) the boot sector
gets
> overwritten if you put a non write protected disk in the drive in windows.
Pretty sure some of these disks have never seen Windows of any form. At
least one booted a Compaq Portable I owned by a friend
Tom
There was some recent interest in Adam Osborne books.
I have found one each of the following:
"An Introduction to Microcomputers Volume II: Some Real Products, June
1977 Revision"
"6800 Programming for Logic Design"
Make me an offer.
Shipping will be USPS Media Mail from zip 65775.
thanks
Charles
Hi folks,
I took a "new" RK05 disk drive from my heap. After defoaming I powered it up. I soon realized that
the position sensor's glass had fallen off. Can be glued back in place easily. But after that I'll
most probably have a misaligned RK05.
The RK05 manual tells me how easy it is to realign the heads: Just load the alignment pack and...
-- But I don't have an alignment pack :-(
Does anybody (best would be in Europe) have an RK05 alignment pack I could use?
Is there a known trick to do it without alignment pack? I have working drives and formatted disks handy.
Best wishes,
Philipp
--
http://www.hachti.de
Evan Koblentz wrote:
> tell us more about the people who made it. I searched on their site and
> cannot find any biographical information.
http://www.applematters.com/article/the-apple-matters-interview-josh-rizzo/
"What is Welcome to Macintosh?
Welcome to Macintosh is a documentary that mixes history, criticism
and an unapologetic revelry of all things Apple."
There is more in that interview at AppleMatters about their
motivations and approach to the films content.
Well worth watching just to listen to Jim Reekes' cutting comments
about how difficult it can be to engineer great products.
cheers,
nigel
www.retroComputingTasmania.com
Does anyone know where one may find material from the band Deth Specula?
Yes, this is relevant to cctalk.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at cs.csubak.edu
A: Because it fouls the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
Hi,
i want to remember my webpage http://elazzerini.interfree.it
<http://elazzerini.interfree.it/> on which i collected all i can about the
SBC Ferguson BIGBOARD 1 i have.
I wish to buy almost the issues 1-20 of the magazine on object.
Is there anybody who wish to sell or donate it?
This request is ALWAYS valid without expiration date.
Thanks
Enrico - Pisa (ITALY)
On 12/13/09, Pete Turnbull <pete at dunnington.plus.com> wrote:
> On 13/12/2009 18:45, Al Kossow wrote:
>> Livingston Portmaster or Encore Annex/Microannex were commonly used
>> TCP/IP milking machines.
>
> I still use an Annex for consoles on a few of my machines (like some of
> the PDP-11s). They were made by Xylogics, later bought by Bay Networks
> => Nortel and are sometimes to be found rebadged by Sun. They're very
> versatile, and you can use the ports in all sorts of ways.
I am familiar with Annex terminal servers, but only from a user
standpoint. I've never owned one nor set one up (in the day these
were popular, we had large amounts of real ports on our boxes (16-56
each) and no TCP/IP). Is there an annex model with 8-16 ports I
should look for? I really don't need to keep something with 48 ports
powered up.
Thanks,
-ethan
Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2009 14:06:50 -0800
From: Brent Hilpert <hilpert at cs.ubc.ca>
Subject: Re: An introduction to microcomputers books serie
St?phane Tsacas wrote:
>
> Does anyone has the ISBN of the latest edition of these 4 books by any
> chance ? I think I found the first two, but I'm not sure they refer to the
> latest edition:
>
> Author: Adam Osborne
>
> An introduction to microcomputers :
> Vol.0: The Beginner's Book - 093198808X
> Vol.1: Basic concepts - 0931988349
> Vol.2: Some real microprocessors - ?
I don't know when the latest edition was, but the 1976 edition has:
Volume II - Some Real Products
Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 76-374891
I don't see any other catalog numbers anywhere, other than Osborne's
own series number of 3001. There is little in the way of publishing
information.
> Vol.3: Some real support devices - ?
>
> If you want to sell me your copy, drop me a mail.
---------REPLY:----------------------------------------------------------------------------
I've got Volume 0, The Beginner's Book (c) 1977 (#6001) and it doesn't
have an ISBN or Library of Congress numbers either.
Lots of pictures of an IMSAI 8080 though, with "the luxury of a Teletype"...
FWIW, I also have a copy of #4001, 8080 Programming for Logic Design,
(c) 1976, which does have a Library of Congress number, 77-670032.
mike
Enrico Lazzerini wrote:
> Hi,
> i collected all i can in this last 2 years on the mine BigBoard1 at my web site
http://elazzerini.interfree.it
> Please excuse me for my not perfect English. On the website I left some URL from where
you can download other information like its schematic and so on.
> What you mean saying: ?I am just considering divesting myself of a Ferguson Big Board
system that I have never played with.? > You wish to play with it now or you
wish to sell
it? Let me know pls. elazzeriniATinterfree.it (substitute AT with @)
I've been going through a few systems I have here, collecting photos and info,
assessing which ones I wish to let go / get rid of / let somebody else play with
/ etc. The FBB system is one of them. As far as FBB systems go, I also have a homebrew
Xerox-820-based portable (Xerox-820 is an FBB derivative).
Some photos and info, so far; including the FBB and Xerox-820 systems:
http://www3.telus.net/~bhilpert/tmp/ctg/index.html
Two or three list members have expressed some interest in some of these already.
I'm somewhat reluctant to ship this stuff, however; some of it would require
crates or good double boxes.
I had been collecting these, in part, as representative examples in the span
of computer technology developments.
I guess a lot of us here have a little fantasy of having a computer museum,
and I would have liked the radio museum here to expand it's mandate to stay
relevant, but most of these systems have been sitting in my house for some
years now.
I just powered up the FBB system and got it to boot to the monitor.
I also just fixed a video problem with the homebrew Xerox-820, a problem that had
been there since I received it about 9 years ago.
The problem was failing 2114 RAM chips, as was just being discussed on the
list, had to replace 2 of them. It now boots into CP/M from disk.
Thanks (Enrico) for the pages and links about the FBB, the info was helpful in
getting these going.
Of course, once you start playing with them it becomes more difficult to let
them go, damn it. I have enough projects to work on however.
This is old news, but I only just found out about it and I haven't seen it
mentioned here. Apparently back in August, the symbolics.com domain was sold to
a seedy looking investment company that's turned it into a blog about domain
squatting.
I guess it's kind of crazy to have an emotional attachment to a domain name,
but I have to admit I'm a little bummed about it. Symbolics.com was Symbolics
for as long as I've been aware of the Internet, even right up to the end when
it was just David Schmidt doing a bit of support and offering a handful of
spare parts. It's still around at symbolics-dks.com, but it's just not quite
the same, y'know? And what an ignominious ending...
-Seth
Hi
Does anyone has the ISBN of the latest edition of these 4 books by any
chance ? I think I found the first two, but I'm not sure they refer to the
latest edition:
Author: Adam Osborne
An introduction to microcomputers :
Vol.0: The Beginner's Book - 093198808X
Vol.1: Basic concepts - 0931988349
Vol.2: Some real microprocessors - ?
Vol.3: Some real support devices - ?
If you want to sell me your copy, drop me a mail.
Thank you
--
Stephane
http://updatedoften.blogspot.com
off the top of my head, these computers sported the '186:
Tandy TRS-80 model 2000
the Mindset
Burroughs ICON
Televideo Personal Mini
Altos 586 (not sure if *that* one did, but one Altos model did regardless)
Research Machines Nimbus (UK)
odd but still interesting categories:
original Ampro Little Board PC (single board computer)
Radio Electronics RE Robot (could be bought ready built from Vesta Technologies - they kindly provided ROM images) - 80188
AST and Orchid 4-port cards (not really *computers*, yet they are)
Vermont Microsystems PGC clone graphics card (80188)
let me see if I remember this one correctly - Advanced Computer Products of Anaheim, CA produced a box w/a fully compatible 80186 mobo
probably dozens and dozens if not hundreds of industrial embedded systems
*********************************************************
likely there are other worthy additions to this list. But the very last entry is what I'd like to touch on. Where are all these blooming things? I even remember a company in Long Island (can't remember the name, off of Vets highway) that made one. The ability to enumerate every one is a task likely to be carried out as naming all the bizarre and perverse specialty software that (truly) was available for the Tandy 2000 at one time (bizarro scientific apps mostly, but some off the wall accounting packages and whatnot also). But give it a go gurus. Lessee what you can come up with -
oh, hope you all had a Merry Christmas, Happy Hannukah, joyous Kwanzaa. But that's it. The pagans and atheists can go scratch LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL