On 5/5/2019 11:12 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
On 5/4/19 6:13 PM, ben via cctalk wrote:
I was thinking it would be nice if bitsavers could do books.
The Internet Archive is welcome to joust at that lightning rod.
Well I found the 1st edition, I just wanted to check some things
about C
>>But plain old flat straight ribbon cable in a 10" length will do for the
2444; even at 6250, frequencies aren't much higher than 1MH
Sounds like I might be ok. Except mine are 10 feet not inches! I guess I'll
just have to try them out.
Thanks everyone!
While the disk is copying, s/he/it can also type in whatever metadata
is on the labels
On Sun, 5 May 2019, Al Kossow via cctalk wrote:
How much time will it take for s/he/it to learn how to CORRECTLY transcribe a
label?
I gave up and just take a picture of any media I'm recovering, since the l
On 5/5/19 9:40 AM, Fred Cisin via cctalk wrote:
> While the disk is copying, s/he/it can also type in whatever metadata is on
> the labels
How much time will it take for s/he/it to learn how to CORRECTLY transcribe a
label?
I gave up and just take a picture of any media I'm recovering, sinc
On Sun, May 5, 2019, 10:41 AM Fred Cisin via cctalk
wrote:
> >> So I would expect all you need to do is make an image copy of the disk.
>
> On Sat, 4 May 2019, J. Peterson via cctalk wrote:
> > I'm trying to avoid the actual task of loading the CD, waiting for the
> > computer to read all the bit
On 5/4/19 6:13 PM, ben via cctalk wrote:
> I was thinking it would be nice if bitsavers could do books.
The Internet Archive is welcome to joust at that lightning rod.
So I would expect all you need to do is make an image copy of the disk.
On Sat, 4 May 2019, J. Peterson via cctalk wrote:
I'm trying to avoid the actual task of loading the CD, waiting for the
computer to read all the bits, eject the CD, rename the file, load the next
CD, etc.
I want to send a
On Sun, May 05, 2019 at 11:30:49AM +0100, Dave Wade via cctalk wrote:
> Paul,
>
> I assumed you wanted some one else to do the work!
> I suspect that if these are commercial CDs you will run into issues with
> Copyright.
> Commercial services that do Photos to CD etc. will generally want to be
On 04/05/2019 21:36, Dave Wade via cctalk wrote:
Paul,
VAX CD-ROMS generally are not ISO. ISO implies the ISO9660 file system, but
many VAX CD ROMS are in native VMS Files-11 format.
Some Windows utilities don't handle these so you need third party software to
create an image of these CD's.
Gen
Paul,
I assumed you wanted some one else to do the work!
I suspect that if these are commercial CDs you will run into issues with
Copyright.
Commercial services that do Photos to CD etc. will generally want to be
assured that you own the copyright of the material they are copying.
If you turn
> On 5 May 2019, at 03:57, Jason T via cctalk wrote:
>
> On Sun, Dec 16, 2018, 23:43 Jason T wrote:
>
>> One of my few remaining Holy Grail items, I got a Hayes Transet 1000
>> this week. My three-part Hayes stack is now complete.
>>
>
> Another Transet just sold on eBay:
>
> https://www.
Hi,
On 5/3/19 3:22 PM, Pete Turnbull via cctalk wrote:
> Anyone know much about early MIPS workstations? I'm trying to get a
> MIPS RS2030 to boot, without much luck so far. It goes through the
> selftest but stops with the internal LED display at "5" accompanied by
> a continuous beep.
>
> K
Hi Paul,
> So I would expect all you need to do is make an image copy of the disk.
I'm trying to avoid the actual task of loading the CD, waiting for
the computer to read all the bits, eject the CD, rename the file,
load the next CD, etc.
I want to send a stack of disks someplace, have someb
Hi Paul,
> So I would expect all you need to do is make an image copy of the disk.
I'm trying to avoid the actual task of loading the CD, waiting for
the computer to read all the bits, eject the CD, rename the file,
load the next CD, etc.
I want to send a stack of disks someplace, have someb
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