On 1/10/19 6:47 PM, ben via cctalk wrote:
> Or emulated with a 39 cent part not counting connectors.
You could certainly beat that 39 cent MCU with CH554 for 25 cents.
But getting too cheap on this one-off sort of stuff gets silly after awhile.
--Chuck
Well now I feel stupid. But I must have put in about 20 different search terms
with google and nothing from harte came up. Only when I specifically googled
hartechnologies netronics did it show.
Funny enough, I had been in that site before. Just forgot about it as it was a
long time ago.
--
On 1/10/2019 7:41 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
On 1/10/19 5:16 PM, Chris Pye via cctalk wrote:
There is a 13 sector version of ADTPro. All you need is a working
Apple II or IIe with a floppy drive and serial card (or ethernet
card). It can even bootstrap the Apple into 13 sector DOS 3.2 mo
On 1/10/19 5:16 PM, Chris Pye via cctalk wrote:
> There is a 13 sector version of ADTPro. All you need is a working
> Apple II or IIe with a floppy drive and serial card (or ethernet
> card). It can even bootstrap the Apple into 13 sector DOS 3.2 mode
> and then you can read and transfer disk imag
Looked...
Hartetechnologies.com
Look in Netronics folder.
Phoned this in!
On Jan 10, 2019, at 8:55 PM, Allison Parent wrote:
Seriously?
You haven’t looked. Start with bitsavers, then Dave dunfelds old computers.
That’s from memory as I’m on the phone.
iPhoned this in!
On Jan 10, 2019,
Seriously?
You haven’t looked. Start with bitsavers, then Dave dunfelds old computers.
That’s from memory as I’m on the phone.
iPhoned this in!
On Jan 10, 2019, at 6:25 PM, Brad H via cctalk wrote:
Wondering if anyone has any EPROM dumps of Netronics' BASIC for the
Explorer/85. I'd like
On Fri, 11 Jan 2019, Chris Pye via cctalk wrote:
There is a 13 sector version of ADTPro. All you need is a working Apple II or
IIe with a floppy drive and serial card (or ethernet card).
It can even bootstrap the Apple into 13 sector DOS 3.2 mode and then you can
read and transfer disk images t
> On 11 Jan 2019, at 10:33 am, Guy Dunphy via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> That's a very good point, thanks. Hadn't occured to me, but of course the
> vast majority of Apple IIs ever sold used the 16 sector format. So that was
> the target market.
> Since almost all my A2 disks are DOS 3.2 13 sector, s
At 12:03 PM 10/01/2019 -0800, you wrote:
>On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Guy Dunphy wrote:
>> All my Apple II disks are DOS 3.2. When 3.3 came out, it was a) too much
>> trouble
>> to convert everything up, and b) ... read that 'missing the wave' story.
>> It gave me a sour feeling about 3.3. Totally my own
Wondering if anyone has any EPROM dumps of Netronics' BASIC for the
Explorer/85. I'd like to set up my own EX/85 for that but also have this
little Atlantis 8085 board that I was hoping to experiment with. I've
looked all over the interwebs and have had no luck finding a dump, although
I have fou
Hi Peter,
Bitsavers has an example for each of 16 & 32 bit Eclipse:
http://bitsavers.org/pdf/dg/eclipse/014-50-00_Eclipse_WCS_microPgmg_Nov74.pdf
http://bitsavers.org/pdf/dg/mv1/014-701003_MV1_microgramming_May83.pdf
Did you work in this area much yourself?
Rgds Evan
Not my thing (I'm into earlier stuff):
https://www.ebay.com/itm/392212420626?
but I thought I'd post it since it's filed in an unusual place.
Noel
> From: Fritz Mueller fritzm at fritzm.org
> I'm assuming that if I had to release the media from the hub in order
> to true it, its value as an alignment cartridge would be lost anyway.
Yes and no The RK05 alignment pack is mostly to make sure that the fine
lateral track adjustm
On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Guy Dunphy wrote:
All my Apple II disks are DOS 3.2. When 3.3 came out, it was a) too much trouble
to convert everything up, and b) ... read that 'missing the wave' story.
It gave me a sour feeling about 3.3. Totally my own fault, but still.
If you get any of the existing c
> On Jan 10, 2019, at 11:23 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> http://rescue1130.blogspot.com/2017/11/resolved-copy-and-burn-of-264x-terminal.html
Oh, thanks — I’ll check that out as well!
http://rescue1130.blogspot.com/2017/11/resolved-copy-and-burn-of-264x-terminal.html
On 1/10/19 11:19 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
>
>
> On 1/9/19 7:50 PM, Fritz Mueller via cctalk wrote:
>> So, one of the things I have along with my 11/45 is an RK05 alignment
>> cartridge. Unfortunately, it
On 1/9/19 7:50 PM, Fritz Mueller via cctalk wrote:
> So, one of the things I have along with my 11/45 is an RK05 alignment
> cartridge. Unfortunately, its seems warped
I think Curious Marc and the Alto restoration crew ran into this same problem
that turned out to be mechanical
attachment fa
> On Jan 10, 2019, at 12:47 AM, Christian Corti via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> I don't think it's the platter but perhaps a dirty hub ring or centering
> cone. Try cleaning the ring and the cone of your disk pack.
Ah, thanks — I’ll take a look!
Early on, I had a telephone call where they told me that their testing showed
that my computer had a virus. They would fix it for me for only $50. At the
time, I didn't even have a computer connected to the web at home ( lived in the
mountains ).
Dwight
From: cc
In early 1984 I was in discussion with Jim Toreson of Xebec about selling
them Shugart Corp's SA700 drive mechanics for use in the Owl. He went his
own way and I'm pretty sure the Owl embedded the controller into the drive
eliminating the ST-506 style interface. That would account for the
additio
Anyone here, owning a Xebec Owl and/or its documentation?
The Owl is a SASI-disk-drive from 1984. One could say that it's mostly a
Xebec S1410A mounted on a drive, thus eliminating the ST-506-interface.
The one I had my hands on seems to be a late version, called the Owl II
(20MB instead of 10MB).
FWIW, I use a password manager (Keepass/Keepass2, tho there are other
good ones). It's another step or two in my workflow, but let's me
have a unique, very strong password for everything I log into.
Greatly reduces the impact of password dump attacks.
On 01/10/2019 01:19 AM, Dave Wade via cctalk wrote:
I was going to say that permanent blocks on IP addresses seems fruitless.
I assume that BotNets are compromised end user machines, and that the end
users that have them are on standard dynamic IP address, so when some one
gets one of your blo
At 09:07 AM 10/01/2019 -0400, you wrote:
>One problem you may encounter reading LIF format diskettes on a PC using
>these tools is many LIF diskettes are formatted 256 bytes/sector and
>there is lots of PC diskette controller out there that cannot deal with
>that including all USB diskette drive
On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Paul Berger wrote:
One problem you may encounter reading LIF format diskettes on a PC using
these tools is many LIF diskettes are formatted 256 bytes/sector and there is
lots of PC diskette controller out there that cannot deal with that including
*All* standard PC floppy
On 2019-01-10 4:43 a.m., Christian Corti via cctalk wrote:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Guy Dunphy wrote:
* Also I have some old HP equipment that uses HP-format floppies.
LIF? They're not DOS compatible.
A HP 1630G logic analyzer with 9121 GPIB dual floppy drive, and a HP
8 data generator. For
On Jan 9, 2019, at 12:12 PM, Al Kossow via cctech wrote:
> Universal joy through the reinvention of the wheel (badly)
Alan Kay called this "reinventing the flat tire", a turn of phrase I rather
fancy.
ok
bear.
--
until further notice
IBM's APL/PC v1.0 crashes if you try to run it on a PC with more than 512 KB
RAM.
I learned today that there was a patch published to make it work on systems
with 640 KB. Of course, I can't seem to find any trace of it.
Anyone save a copy or know where it might be found today?
ok
bear.
--
u
At 09:43 AM 10/01/2019 +0100, you wrote:
>On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Guy Dunphy wrote:
>> * Also I have some old HP equipment that uses HP-format floppies. LIF?
>Now that is as easy as it can be. There's lif_utils from Tony Duell
>(http://www.hpcc.org/datafile/hpil/lif_utils.html), or the HP LIF
>Uti
On Wed, 9 Jan 2019, Fritz Mueller wrote:
So, one of the things I have along with my 11/45 is an RK05 alignment
cartridge. Unfortunately, its seems warped -- rides up an down a few
millimeters in each direction as you turn it in an RK05 drive. :-(
I don't think it's the platter but perhaps a d
At 07:34 PM 9/01/2019 -0800, you wrote:
>On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Guy Dunphy via cctalk wrote:
>> ...
>> What other all-formats floppy R/W and data recovery tools do people here
>> know of?
>> Comments of their functionality?
>
>A couple of questions to discuss. Believe it or not, they are not
>rhe
On Thu, 10 Jan 2019, Guy Dunphy wrote:
* Also I have some old HP equipment that uses HP-format floppies. LIF?
They're not DOS compatible.
A HP 1630G logic analyzer with 9121 GPIB dual floppy drive, and a HP
8 data generator. For both machines I have old floppies containing
critical utilit
32 matches
Mail list logo