Hi,
Some manuals are available at:
http://electrickery.xs4all.nl/comp/divcomp/doc/index.html
There is a simulator (and more manuals) at:
http://www.theoengel.nl/P800/p800sim.html
Greetings,
Fred Jan
On 2019-10-27 15:56, Christian Corti via cctalk wrote:
On Sat, 26 Oct 2019, jos wrote:
On software side not much : a single cassette with Fortran & manuals.
That is also the problem with our P856, I have a single-density FDC
with floppy drives but no floppy based operating system.
Christi
On Sat, 26 Oct 2019, jos wrote:
On software side not much : a single cassette with Fortran & manuals.
That is also the problem with our P856, I have a single-density FDC with
floppy drives but no floppy based operating system.
Christian
> On Oct 27, 2019, at 6:34 AM, Murray McCullough via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> I came across an old copy of Popular Science on yesterday, forthwith I know
> not how, that had a story of two vintage/old/retro/classic-computers. How
> old? 1983. Coleco ADAM, my favourite, and Atari 600XL, not so much.
> On Oct 27, 2019, at 9:15 AM, nico de jong via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> The Honeywell does not look like a P800, and to the best of my knowledge
> Philips (with one L) did their own development in the mini sector.
>
> However, I do know that for example one of their text processing systems, one
> On Oct 27, 2019, at 9:25 AM, Dennis Boone via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> The Philips P92xx series was the rebadged x16 stuff.
Yes, that's what I understood as well. But others are not. The PR8000 is a
quite distinct design; I hope that at some point more documentation will
materialize. I hav
I came across an old copy of Popular Science on yesterday, forthwith I know
not how, that had a story of two vintage/old/retro/classic-computers. How
old? 1983. Coleco ADAM, my favourite, and Atari 600XL, not so much. I still
have my ADAM. No not why. But isn’t this why we all belong to classiccomp
The Philips P92xx series was the rebadged x16 stuff.
De
The Honeywell does not look like a P800, and to the best of my knowledge
Philips (with one L) did their own development in the mini sector.
However, I do know that for example one of their text processing
systems, one in the P5000 range (the P5001?), was a rebadged Canadiann
system, Alas, the
Yes, I know of Vaxbarn. I have copied many of Camiels manuals, and he
has copied a lot of mine. I visited him and his lovely wife a few years
ago. Very agreeable people (and nice kids...)
I know about the P1000, but I've never seen one "on the flesh". When I
started to work for Philips Data Sy
Yes, exactly.
Do you have the manuals in a mailable version?
Cheers
Nico
On 2019-10-26 21:30, Adrian Stoness via cctalk wrote:
mean like this
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/800x795q90/r/922/b5tczU.jpg
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/800x533q90/r/922/XYBanl.jpg
https://imagizer.imagesh
On 2019-10-26 20:13, jos via cctalk wrote:
On 26.10.19 11:00, nico de jong via cctech wrote:
Hi all,
Back in the 70's and 80's Philips had a quite popular series of mini
computers called P800, which also branched out to the PTS series and
possibly other.
Could I be lucky to find other lis
On 2019-10-26 20:01, Tony Duell via cctalk wrote:
On Sat, Oct 26, 2019 at 6:53 PM nico de jong via cctalk
wrote:
In order to test things, I've developped a simulator and assembler for
the P857, although without floating point and I/O processor, as I have
no documentation for that, so maybe I
No, we are not. The P800 series used a card format, the name of which
escapes me at the momen, but I believe it started with an M. The only
experience with Philips computers, other then the P800 series, is the
P2000. It was marketed by Philips Austria, and was a pre-PC system. I
believe there w
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