Pretty cool. I've wished more than once for a shift lock key on modern
keyboards, LOL.
Best,
Sean
On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 2:12 AM, Mark J. Blair <nf6x at nf6x.net> wrote:
I brought the System/23 in to the house from my truck
this evening. Now
I'm laying on an ice bag to counteract the inevitable back strain. :)
I can type in a "Hello, World!" type program and run it. Naturally, I used
my standard test program for old BASIC machines first:
10 print "Butts! ";
20 goto 10
It appears to word-wrap automatically when I used the semicolon. It has a
shift lock key rather than a caps lock key, and the shift lock is
disengaged by pressing a shift key rather than pressing the shift lock
again -- i.e., it works like a typewriter, rather than most common
computers do nowadays. That makes sense for a machine's target market, I
think.
Other than that, I haven't figured out how to do other significant things
with it yet. I did dig around inside; there's plenty of dust to clean out,
but it seems to be in good shape overall. It's clearly designed with field
maintenance in mind. I was surprised to find that its hex-head screws use a
3mm metric hex key instead of an inch one, but that single hex key breaks
the unit down into subassemblies pretty easily.
There are various annunciators printed along the bottom of the screen;
some make sense, and some are cryptic. The green text screen can display at
least two levels of brightness. I've been making very frequent use of the
error reset key, but I don't know the meanings of the error numbers yet.
I have't tried sticking in any blank disks yet, since I figure I should
try cleaning the heads first. I haven't examined the drives carefully
enough yet to determine whether they're single-sided or double-sided. For
that matter, I don't know whether the machine uses soft sectored or hard
sectored disks.
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <nf6x at nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/