On 13-Apr-97, classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu wrote:
The PSU is very similar electrically (although I think
it's 114W, not
135W, or something). Mechanically it's very different.
That's certainly not much to be running everything including the monitor
off of. One would think that with the addition of that CRT that they'd have
upped the power a little.
It's worth doing - 41256's are trivial to
obtain (off old 286 memory
boards if nothing else!), and it takes about 5 minutes. I did it to my
portable the day I got it...
What about the other chip you said needed to be put in...how hard is it to
locate? It doesn't sound like the process would be terribly hard.
No idea, I'm afraid. Does CP/M 86 run on an XT? (I
beleive a few things
wouldn't) - the portable is really an XT (and not a PC) system.
I've since learned that no, CP/M-86 will not run on an XT! Which is too
bad considering I have the full packages of both it and Concurrent CP/M
sitting here and the 5155 is the only machine that's even close to what's
needed to use it. Oh well!
Jeff jeffh(a)eleventh.com
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Sent from an Amiga 3000..the computer for the creative mind!
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Collector of classic home computers:
Amiga 1000, Atari 800, Atari 800XL, Atari Mega-ST/2, Commodore
C-128 & C128D, Commodore Plus/4, Commodore VIC-20, IBM 5155,
Kayro 2X, Osbourne Executive, Radofin Aquarius, Sinclair ZX-81,
TI-99/4A, Timex-Sinclair 1000, TRS-80 Color Computer-3, and a
TRS-80 Model 4. Plus Atari Superpong and 2600VCS game consoles.