Hi Jim,
Data I/O flew down to Texas every month, for sales meetings, we were doing a huge business
for them. We would make joint calls and I remember that our field stuff was always updated
as part of the trip. All our demo units had these cool small suitcase, foam lined cases.
The FAE would go thru our stuff and make sure we were current.
There were always new chips to support for the Unipak, and they wanted to make sure that
as we went on calls we never got stuck, as we were doing so well with the product. My rep
firm, USDATA was Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana for the product. I never recall us going
to visit Hamilton or Avenet, (AKA Hamilton Havenot!) I think they took those sales direct.
We were calling on TI, NASA, Datapoint, and the petrochem guys.
Jim, Did you know these guys? I recall Dennis (sales mgr) and Marty (FAE)?
We had excellent support from these people as we were also users. Our product line
('78-'82 timeframe) was all the top computer graphics, and we constantly had to
update PROMS, EPROMS for the rest of our stuff:
Jupiter and AED graphics terminals;
Printronix and Trilog color printers;
Compucolor 8080 color computers;
Matrix film recorders;
Grinell image processor engine;
I remember after a day of Houston sales calls with them, I am driving them back to the
airport. We did not have lunch that day, so I stop at a tamale truck and hand these guys
a sack of tamales. Front seat is loaded with demo equip, so they are sitting in the back.
"Ever had a tamale?" I ask. "These are great!"
I look in the rear view, and they are eating them, corn husks and all...
Back to Redmond, WA for these guys.
Now that is sales support!
Randy
Subject: Re: Data I/O 29B
To: cctalk at
classiccmp.org
From: jws at
jwsss.com
Date: Fri, 21 Aug 2015 22:24:45 -0700
At microdata we had a support contract with Data I/O and every set of
roms for the base unit and the Unipak came with a new poster up to date
with the latest parts from the manufacturers.
So you don't need to just get a poster or table or list, but you also
need to match it to the firmware set in your 29xx.
I grabbed a stack of the posters at one time which were old and have
them somewhere. I'm not sure what would have happened to them at heavy
user sites, but I know such as the local Avnet, and Hamilton offices
which we mooched programming time from after I left Microdata had quite
a few. I don't know if they got as many updates as Microdata did.
Randy, did you know of such a program? The program I'm talking with may
have gone around rep firms, as Microdata was using the crap out of a lot
of different roms, and then eproms. Of course if you blew up a rom in
the Data I/O the manufacturers also warrantied them back pretty much w/o
any question, or someone came out to find out what you were doing wrong.
Thanks
Jim
On 8/21/2015 8:05 PM, Randy Dawson wrote:
Something must be wrong here, the 29B/unipak is
very easy to use.
I was the rep in Houston (USDATA) and I must have sold 50 of these. It went for $4500
with the unipak.
A typical demo we would plug in a dumb terminal, its a lot more effective demo to select
a device than from the keypad.
One of these I sold to Gateway Technologies, Rod Canion. The demo and sale went down at
a pancake house on the Southwest Freeway.
They used it to suck the BIOS out of the IBM PC, and form Compaq Computer.
Randy
Subject: Re: Data I/O 29B
To: cctalk at
classiccmp.org
From: aek at
bitsavers.org
Date: Fri, 21 Aug 2015 18:45:12 -0700
On 8/21/15 5:33 PM, Billy Pettit wrote:
This is the poorest documentation I've ever
seen on a piece of test equipment.
The problem is they went through at least three generations of
programming packs (individual device, unipak, unipack2/2A/2B)
There is a text file (unipak2.txt) that I sent you that lists
about 1000 devices along with the family and pin adapter.
I gave up on anything earlier than the 2900/3900/Unisite a LONG
time ago. I'd just offer them to people in the bay area and not
even bother testing them. I should have the docs on bitsavers for
them.