On 11/09/2016 09:36 PM, Tony Duell wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 5:31 AM, Chuck Guzis
> wrote:
>
>> Was a Dataproducts interface ever offered for the MX-80? Back in
>> the day, it was almost as popular as Centronics on mid-sized
>> systems.
>
> Was that the one that was fairly similar to Cent
On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 5:31 AM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
> Was a Dataproducts interface ever offered for the MX-80? Back in the
> day, it was almost as popular as Centronics on mid-sized systems.
Was that the one that was fairly similar to Centronics but with some
signals inverted?
I have never hear
On 11/09/2016 09:19 PM, Tony Duell wrote:
> Other intefaces used the Centronics interface in a more conventional
> way. There was an RS232 board with its own microcontroller and buffer
> RAM that didn't use the bit-banging functions of the printer
> microcontroller. There was an IEEE-488 interfa
On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 5:28 AM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
> Similarly, the Diablo 630 was often the default daisy-wheel printer,
> even though it was far from the cheapest--but they were *everywhere* in
> the business world.
>
To the extent that (IIRC) there was a DIP switch setting for some early
Appl
On 11/09/2016 08:59 PM, Eric Smith wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 9:41 PM, Chuck Guzis
> wrote:
>
>> The MX-80 (and FX-80) were among the least expensive of widely
>> available dot-matrix printers that could also do graphics. Hence
>> the wide appeal.
>>
>
> Though it actually was extremely p
Talk of the MX-80 has reminded me of a couple of more obscure models...
The first is the TX80. This, I think is a little older. The mechanism
is strange,
it has one DC motor (and no steppers). The motor drives a dual-pitch scroll
thing (sort of a coarse leadscrew) that as it turns in one direction
Sigh. Again. Lost two days of messages this time.
'Excessive bounces'. I have a gmail address. It's not like google will
disappear, what's the point of disabling list members on a gmail
address? Presumably there was another general network-wide ddos attack
which affected the network as a whole (it'
> IIRC, the MX-80 had serial (RS232) as an option with Centronics
> standard. The interesting thing was that the only thing the option
> really gave you was the EIA-to-TTL level shifting logic. I recall
> cobbling an adapter up using a couple of 2N transistors and a 9V
> battery.
These Epso
So would the BMC BX-80 be a clone of the MX-80 or FX-80? Anyone have a
sense of it?
On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 10:59 PM, Eric Smith wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 9:41 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
>
> > The MX-80 (and FX-80) were among the least expensive of widely available
> > dot-matrix printers that
On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 9:41 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
> The MX-80 (and FX-80) were among the least expensive of widely available
> dot-matrix printers that could also do graphics. Hence the wide appeal.
>
Though it actually was extremely popular *before* they offered graphics for
it. The original
On 11/09/2016 06:47 AM, dwight wrote:
> It is interesting that the MX-80 was copied by several other
>
> printer manufactures. For a while, the term MX-80 compatible
>
> was an important selling feature.
The MX-80 (and FX-80) were among the least expensive of widely available
dot-matrix printers
"It is interesting that the MX-80 was copied by several other printer
manufactures."
The first printer I owned, ca. 1983, was a BMC BX-80. This printer was
marketed as an "Epson Compatible", and for my purposes, it most certainly
was. Driven by C-64 via the Cardco Card/?+G interface, it was capabl
On 11/9/16 6:18 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
On Nov 9, 2016, at 5:57 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
...
A quick update -- I ran the ZTCD diagnostics and they do fail, despite my
recollection (this is what I get for not taking notes at the end of
yesterday, and yesterday seems so far away now...). The first
I made some silly noise about a Sun-1 owner's manual recently (and I still
haven't sent it out). Today, while browsing in the morgue I found
an apparantly unused CDC Lark cartridge with a factory label declaring
it to be Unix 1.1 boot media.
Is there a functional CDC Lark surviving some place?
So last week there was some conversation about lisp compilers and an
expressed interest in old VAX lisp comilers. Co-incidently, I was rooting
through the morgue at work on semi legitimate business and found
VAXlisp 2.2 copyright 1987. Sadly, it is on a TK50 and is the Ultrix
version.
Since it
> On Nov 9, 2016, at 5:57 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
>
> ...
> A quick update -- I ran the ZTCD diagnostics and they do fail, despite my
> recollection (this is what I get for not taking notes at the end of
> yesterday, and yesterday seems so far away now...). The first test (a
> forward WALL, foll
Cindy as in electronic plus?
Original message From: "Tapley, Mark"
I'm trying to help Cindy find homes for some of what's left from her
warehouse. I can hold them only temporarily ( :-) )
On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 1:43 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 1:05 PM, Paul Koning
> wrote:
>
>>
>> > On Nov 9, 2016, at 3:32 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
>> >
>> > ...
>> >
>> > Now that I've gotten the full suite of diagnostics to run, the problem
>> > seems to be that the TC11 is
On 11/9/16 1:50 PM, jim stephens wrote:
>
> Are
> there two such stations on the drive for reading?
Nope. DECtape only has one set of heads, so it writes blind.
On 11/9/2016 1:43 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
t's clear from running the diagnostics (ZTCC, not
ZTCD, sorry for the important typo) that a Read in a reverse direction
fails (but writes seem to be OK in either direction -- the tests that do
forward reads, regardless of the write direction of the data
On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 1:05 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
>
> > On Nov 9, 2016, at 3:32 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
> >
> > ...
> >
> > Now that I've gotten the full suite of diagnostics to run, the problem
> > seems to be that the TC11 isn't reading properly in reverse -- Tests
> > 15,16,21,22,26,27 and 34
On Nov 9, 2016 4:39 AM, "Marc Howard" wrote:
> Just going from memory but I had all the 432 data books at the time and I
> seem to remember that they actually had a 432 to bubble memory interface
> chip as well.
I don't think so.
At an early stage of 432 development, there was to be a 432 I/O Pr
> On Nov 9, 2016, at 3:32 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
>
> ...
>
> Now that I've gotten the full suite of diagnostics to run, the problem
> seems to be that the TC11 isn't reading properly in reverse -- Tests
> 15,16,21,22,26,27 and 34 of ZTCD fail, all others pass (modulo a marginal
> block on the t
> From: Josh Dersch
>> The UNIX V6 distro includes a standalone program, tcf.s, to format
>> DECtapes.
> I could probably get a V6 distribution running if I need to, but if you
> have the means to do so easily, that would be handy so I can at least
> have another tool to t
On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 12:59 AM, Christian Corti <
c...@informatik.uni-stuttgart.de> wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Josh Dersch wrote:
>
>> with the TC11 system," and I haven't managed to find it. I *have* found
>> this:
>> http://mirrors.pdp-11.ru/inf.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdp11/dtf.mac
>>
>
And what about this one?
https://github.com/Rhialto/macro11 (forked from shattered/macro11 it
appears...)
So which one of the three versions (at least, maybe more) is the 'preferred' ?
On 11/9/2016 7:52 AM, Jörg Hoppe wrote:
Hi,
I was notified that my fork of R. Krebiehls code was already
Hi,
I was notified that my fork of R. Krebiehls code was already put into
GitHub without notifying me, apparently in 2009.
See github.com/shattered/macro11
"shattered" made a few changes too, to remove compiler warnings and
improve commandline option check.
I merged the changes there back
> On Nov 9, 2016, at 3:59 AM, Christian Corti
> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Josh Dersch wrote:
>> with the TC11 system," and I haven't managed to find it. I *have* found
>> this:
>> http://mirrors.pdp-11.ru/inf.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdp11/dtf.mac
>
> ... which is simply a mirror of ou
It is interesting that the MX-80 was copied by several other
printer manufactures. For a while, the term MX-80 compatible
was an important selling feature.
The Canon Cat had configurations for many different Canon printers
built in, from daisy wheel to bubble jet. It had one extra configuration
Just going from memory but I had all the 432 data books at the time and I
seem to remember that they actually had a 432 to bubble memory interface
chip as well.
Marc
On Tue, Nov 8, 2016 at 8:21 PM, dwight wrote:
> For a 432 board, I'm not all that surprised.
>
> It only needs the 43203 board to
On Tue, Nov 8, 2016 at 9:21 PM, dwight wrote:
> For a 432 board, I'm not all that surprised.
> It only needs the 43203 board to be a system.
>
The iSBC 432/100 doesn't actually need a 43203, nor can it work with one.
The iSBC 432/100 was an evaluation board that only ran OPL-432 ("Object
Progra
On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Josh Dersch wrote:
with the TC11 system," and I haven't managed to find it. I *have* found
this:
http://mirrors.pdp-11.ru/inf.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdp11/dtf.mac
... which is simply a mirror of our FTP server at
ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/cm/...
I enhan
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