On Fri, Jun 25, 2021 at 3:53 PM Grant Taylor via cctalk
wrote:
>
> From my naive point of view, I wonder if it would be possible to build
> some sort of USB device that has a traditional UART that has supporting
> circuitry to connect to the host over USB. -- I say this because it
> sounds like
On 6/25/21 2:48 AM, Peter Corlett via cctalk wrote:
USB-serial dongles tend to be a wretched experience for a couple
of reasons. The first is at the electrical layer: USB only has 5V
available and generating RICH CHUNKY VOLTS in such a small dongle
is difficult and expensive, so doesn't happen
On 6/25/21 2:07 AM, Adrian Graham via cctalk wrote:
Hello folks,
Hi,
A random conversation on twitter yesterday lead me to discovering
an old 1980s LAN technology called INFAPLUG.
Would you mind sharing link(s) to said conversation? It sounds like one
I'd like to learn from / maybe be par
On 6/25/21 3:31 AM, Kelly Fergason via cctalk wrote:
>> On Jun 25, 2021, at 4:54 AM, Gordon Henderson via cctalk
>> wrote:
>>
>> http://www.6502.org/source/interpreters/sweet16.htm#When_is_an_RTS_really_a_JSR_
>>
>> I initialiy used this "trick" in my own little bytecode VM but it's somewhat
>
> On Jun 25, 2021, at 4:54 AM, Gordon Henderson via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 23 Jun 2021, Van Snyder via cctalk wrote:
>
>>> On Wed, 2021-06-23 at 13:36 -0400, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
>>> Typical FORTH implementations are neat in that respect, since they
>>> use a threaded code enc
On Jun 25, 2021, at 6:07 AM, Paul Koning via cctalk
wrote:
> A possible issue is that a lot of applications, including many Apple ones,
> don't offer an adequate selection of scaling options. This is one of the
> very few places where Windows is better, in that it offers ways to scale the
> t
> On Jun 25, 2021, at 10:24 AM, ben via cctalk wrote:
> ...
> Well you can find mother boards with real COM port, but they are rare.
One place you can find them easily is on industrial computers. My firewall
machine is one, because I wanted it to be fanless. It has the usual pile of
USB po
On 2021-06-25 2:48 a.m., Peter Corlett via cctalk wrote:
USB-serial dongles tend to be a wretched experience for a couple of reasons.
The first is at the electrical layer: USB only has 5V available and
generating RICH CHUNKY VOLTS in such a small dongle is difficult and
expensive, so doesn't hap
> On Jun 25, 2021, at 4:48 AM, Peter Corlett via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Jun 24, 2021 at 06:46:41PM -0600, Grant Taylor via cctalk wrote:
> [...]
>> The 4k monitors that I've worked with have been ultra high DPI. This means
>> that things that don't have DPI settings end up being tiny on
I just wanted to say thank you for sending us the link, they are great
On Wed, 23 Jun 2021, Van Snyder via cctalk wrote:
On Wed, 2021-06-23 at 13:36 -0400, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
Typical FORTH implementations are neat in that respect, since they
use a threaded code encoding that allows for fast and efficient
switching between threaded code (subroutine calls
On Thu, Jun 24, 2021 at 06:46:41PM -0600, Grant Taylor via cctalk wrote:
[...]
> The 4k monitors that I've worked with have been ultra high DPI. This means
> that things that don't have DPI settings end up being tiny on the screen.
It works fine on MacOS, except for various garbage ports from Wind
Hello folks,
A random conversation on twitter yesterday lead me to discovering an old 1980s
LAN technology called INFAPLUG. This was a serial LAN hooked up via a PC serial
port at 9600 baud to a ’smart plug’ the size of a wall wart. This plug
contained all the smarts and hooked into the coax ba
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