I just acquired a PS/2 Model 25, the one with an integrated monitor and
8086. The reason it was being thrown away was that while it starts up
fine, the MCGA monitor eventually becomes tinted red and blurry. If I
turn it off and let it sit for a few minutes, then turn it on, it will
work fine again. What is the problem? Can I solve it without the risk of
shorting
capacitors and blowing myself halfway across the room?
My understading is that this machine needs no reference disks, but
can I use a hard drive > 20MB? It never mentions it on IBM's site.
Lastly, does anyone have any of the original stuff for it, ie software,
manuals, etc.
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
At 03:33 PM 1/28/98 +1100, you wrote:
>To add some "on-topic" content to this e-mail:
>
>One of the seminal articles I remember reading in Byte (in the good old
>days :-)
>was one by Carl Helmers talking about setting up an Apple II to run UCSD
>Pascal. I'm slowly assembling all the necessary bits but I seem to remember
>that to run UCSD Pascal you needed the "Euro+" Apple II. Can anyone confirm
>this? Preferably someone running UCSD Pascal on an Apple II...
>
> Huw Davies | e-mail: Huw.Davies(a)latrobe.edu.au
If you know which issue it was, I may be able to look it up.
Joe
>
Don't laugh. I'm getting complaints around here about one of my computers
the SMS-1000 (PDP-11/73) smelling of mold and mildew, and have been asked
to either remove it, or spray it down with Lysol. How safe is it to spray
a computer down with Lysol? Obviously I'd not run it for a while if I do.
Zane
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Adminstrator |
| healyzh(a)ix.netcom.com (primary) | Linux Enthusiast |
| healyzh(a)holonet.net (alternate) | Classic Computer Collector |
+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
| For Empire of the Petal Throne and Traveller Role Playing, |
| see http://www.dragonfire.net/~healyzh/ |
| For the collecting of Classic Computers with info on them. |
| see http://www.dragonfire.net/~healyzh/museum.html |
On Wed, 28 Jan 1998 02:03:21 -0600 (CST), Uncle Roger
<sinasohn(a)ricochet.net> wrote:
> It's a shame...but it seems to me that DEC should have seen it coming.
>>Can't disagree there...
Well, I should clarify. I'm sure that they did see it coming. A buyout
of some form was headed for DEC like a Conrail freight train traveling at
100 mph. I'm not too well-versed with DEC's current product line, but I get
the impression that, while good quality and adequate performers, there is
nothing very distinguishing.
>Death comes to the last of the old-line computer companies.
>>Huh? What about HP? Still going strong with the HP3000 (ca. 1972?).
I probably shouldn't have said "last" either. Wasn't DEC part of the
original "seven dwarfs" of early computing? I think that IBM was "Snow
White" and there were seven other mini/main companies right behind it. When
I said "old line," I was thinking along the lines of Sperry and Burroughs
and not HP or IBM.
-------------------------------------------------
Rich Cini/WUGNET
<nospam_rcini(a)msn.com> (remove nospam_ to use)
- ClubWin Charter Member (6)
- MCP Windows 95/Windows Networking
At 06:33 PM 1/26/98 -0500, you wrote:
> It's a shame...but it seems to me that DEC should have seen it coming.
Can't disagree there...
>Death comes to the last of the old-line computer companies.
Huh? What about HP? Still going strong with the HP3000 (ca. 1972?).
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
At 15:33 1/28/98 +1100, Huw Davies wrote:
>....I seem to remember
>that to run UCSD Pascal you needed the "Euro+" Apple II. Can anyone confirm
>this?
Well, that's not a combo I've run, but if a Europlus will do it, any ][+
should do it, the implication being that you need 48K RAM. (32K mainboard
and the Language Card?? Help me out here....)
__________________________________________
Kip Crosby engine(a)chac.org
http://www.chac.org/index.html
Computer History Association of California
I'll take it!
-----Original Message-----
From: Sam Ismail <dastar(a)wco.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Tuesday, January 27, 1998 10:05 PM
Subject: Re: Apple II GS
>On Tue, 27 Jan 1998, PG Manney wrote:
>
>> I've been offered and Apple II GS. Anyone interested? I doubt it'll ever
be
>> rare...
>
>Doesn't matter. Its a fun computer to play with and hack on. Someone
>should take PG up on this.
>
>Sam Alternate e-mail:
dastar(a)siconic.com
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
>Computer Historian, Programmer, Musician, Philosopher, Athlete, Writer,
Jackass
>
> Coming Soon...Vintage Computer Festival 2.0
> See http://www.siconic.com/vcf for details!
>
At 06:29 PM 1/26/98 PST, you wrote:
>Another thing: CP/M was run on just about everything, usually with
>about 64K ram. How is it that MS-DOS blew up to about 384K? What
>did they put in there?
The MicroSloth License Agreement. 8^)
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
At 03:01 PM 1/26/98 -0600, you wrote:
>FastLynx: A program from RUPP corporation, alot like LapLink, except
>with a much simpler (and easier to use) user interface (IMHO). The
>program died off though, as Lap Link became more popular (I still
>don't understand why). If you used the serial link, it could upload
>itself to the target machine. I still use it.
I think it died out because of the gawdawful color of their cables. 8^)
(Some horrid shade of Red, iirc?) Actually, I had both, and preferred
LapLink. Haven't used FastLynx in about 10 years.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
I think I have 2 of these somewhere, but called PC7000's. One with a HDD and
the other with 2 FDD's. No Docs unfortunately.
I think they have some unusual distinction, the first backlit LCD screen
maybe (from memory).
-----Original Message-----
From: Cliff Gregory <cgregory(a)lrbcg.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 1998 10:24
Subject: Interesting Find
>Found an interesting (at least to me) luggable/portable at the local thrift
>the other day. It's a Sharp PC-7100. Very compact and sharp (no pun)
>design. About half the size and weight of an old Compaq, with a
detatchable
>keyboard, tiltable LCD screen, 5.25 floppy, 20 meg hard drive. It booted
>fine from the hard drive (MSDOS 3.2).
>
>I haven't taken the time to open it up and look inside, but I ran MSD from
a
>floppy, and it reported the computer to be a Sharp/ERSO, 8088 or 8086
>processor, 704k RAM. When I browsed the ROM memory, the result was:
>aVADEM-SHARP Personal Computer System Firmware Version 3.0B copyright 1985
>Vadem Inc.
>
>I did a cursory search on the net for more information but came up empty,
so
>if anyone can help with more info or docs for this one, I would appreciate
>it. BTW, the screen has a blue/purple sort of tint to it. Kind of
>attractive in a psychodelic sort of way ( oh please, no more drug-related
>threads <g>).
>
>Cliff Gregory
>cgregory(a)lrbcg.com
>
>
>