> I heard that Duracell now has a "bitterant" coating on its 2032
> batteries;
> so that you will spit it out.
Fred,
That's been there for a while. It is aimed at babies swallowing coin
batteries of all sorts. Mine was pure stupidity. I had spent the whole
weekend working on and rebuilding the i
All of them are for various hard drives. None floppy of any sort.
The first 4, 2840, 34, 21, and 09 all look like ones I'd use on a
Western Dynex either 5mb or 10mb (capacity) drive. 100tpi or 200tpi.
The others are progressively higher density, someone else may recognize
them. Epay period
That would make sense, as I picked up 3 RK05 drives in the lot.
Good to know what they go to now, perhaps i can sell some off to others
that need them, and offset the cost of the pickup
Thank you for the quick reply
--Devin D.
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 10:49 PM Rick Murphy via cctalk <
cctalk@c
On 5/30/2023 9:57 PM, devin davison via cctalk wrote:
I picked up boxes of these disk heads when i picked up a warehouse
stockpile of pdp 11 computers.
Any idea what they are to? I want to say floppy? I have 2 different types
of heads, in boxes. Please see pics, and if anyone needs heads, im th
I picked up boxes of these disk heads when i picked up a warehouse
stockpile of pdp 11 computers.
Any idea what they are to? I want to say floppy? I have 2 different types
of heads, in boxes. Please see pics, and if anyone needs heads, im the guy
that has a bunch to part with now.
Let me know wh
No kidding. That 64GB fingernail can easily hide in clothing
On Tue, 30 May 2023, Ali via cctalk wrote:
Or make it easily edible... Say if you were munching on some nuts while
waiting... Ask me how I know *sigh*
I heard that Duracell now has a "bitterant" coating on its 2032 batteries;
> No kidding. That 64GB fingernail can easily hide in clothing
Or make it easily edible... Say if you were munching on some nuts while
waiting... Ask me how I know *sigh*
-Ali
On 5/30/23 11:57, ben via cctalk wrote:
> ... until it gets swallowed by the gold fish.
Or in my case, one of the dogs. I had one of those tiny chips slip
between two panels in my workstation. Haven't retrieved it yet, but
then it was "only" 16GB...
/Look at it from the other side: you need two RL02s for a decent
resolution picture of your dog this days :) /
That's two 10.5" platters to store in decent size digital picture
Each RL02 Platter is:
Sides: 2
Tracks: 512
TPI:
On 2023-05-30 12:43 p.m., emanuel stiebler via cctalk wrote:
On 2023-05-30 13:08, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
"Sneakernet" or whatever, I'm still impressed that I can spend USD$3 for
a 64GB microSD card and store the entire code output of my life
I was looking for some files on my backup ta
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 11:09 AM Paul Koning via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> > On May 30, 2023, at 1:22 PM, Mike Katz via cctalk
> wrote:
> >
> > In 1981 when i got my first 5MB hard disk drive at work (I had to write
> the drivers for the OS myself) I was able to put all or my sou
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 9:37 AM Tony Duell via cctalk
wrote:
> On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 5:09 PM philip--- via cctalk
> wrote:
> >
> > I wasn't trying to solve the whole problem at once!
> >
> > A lot of people have recommended "sneakernet" to connect your modern
>
> That's an expression which alw
On Tue, 30 May 2023 at 19:56, Jeff Woolsey via cctalk
wrote:
>
> I'm also amazed that I can put together a still reasonably impressive
> 14-year-old MacBook Pro for < $100. That's $40 for the empty laptop
> as-is at a flea market, ~$15 for 8GB RAM, ~$45 for 960GB SSD. I lucked
> out in that ther
On 2023-05-30 11:08 a.m., Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
"Sneakernet" or whatever, I'm still impressed that I can spend USD$3 for
a 64GB microSD card and store the entire code output of my life and
still have lots of room left over for photos of my dogs.
--Chuck
... until it gets swallowed by
On 5/30/23 10:08 AM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
"Sneakernet" or whatever, I'm still impressed that I can spend USD$3 for
a 64GB microSD card and store the entire code output of my life and
still have lots of room left over for photos of my dogs.
--Chuck
No kidding. That 64GB fingernail can
On 2023-05-30 13:08, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
"Sneakernet" or whatever, I'm still impressed that I can spend USD$3 for
a 64GB microSD card and store the entire code output of my life
I was looking for some files on my backup tapes, wondering if I have
enough space on my drives to simply
No to mention the 32K 12 bit word (48k Byte) DF-32 fixed head hard disk.
16 Data tracks, 4 control tracks.
2048 bytes/track
10" disk (1/4" thick)
1100 BPI
50 LBS
On 5/30/2023 1:09 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
On May 30, 2023, at 1:22 PM, Mike Katz via cctalk wrote:
In 1981 when i got my first 5
On 5/15/2023 12:36 PM, Brent Hilpert via cctalk wrote:
If it's of any help though, on my 2748 connector (the cord-plug-in end) the male pin
diameter is 0.061 ~ 0.062" (measured with a cheap micrometer, perhaps the
actual spec is 1/16=0.0625).
I understand the confusion - I have on hand 3 d
> On May 30, 2023, at 1:22 PM, Mike Katz via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> In 1981 when i got my first 5MB hard disk drive at work (I had to write the
> drivers for the OS myself) I was able to put all or my source code, binaries,
> executable, applications and the operating system and not fill half
In 1981 when i got my first 5MB hard disk drive at work (I had to write
the drivers for the OS myself) I was able to put all or my source code,
binaries, executable, applications and the operating system and not fill
half of that disk.
A single .raw file from my camera can be over 20MB now.
I
"Sneakernet" or whatever, I'm still impressed that I can spend USD$3 for
a 64GB microSD card and store the entire code output of my life and
still have lots of room left over for photos of my dogs.
--Chuck
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 5:09 PM philip--- via cctalk
wrote:
>
> I wasn't trying to solve the whole problem at once!
>
> A lot of people have recommended "sneakernet" to connect your modern
That's an expression which always sounds odd to me. The footwear known
as 'sneakers' across the Pond is, I b
Tony, I don't recall what became of the AT with 486 replacement
processor that used to be your main home machine. ISTR it had loads of
different floppy drives hung off it. Is it still functional / repairable?
Still works, or at least it did when I last powered it up. But no easy
way to read
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 12:22 PM Adrian Godwin via cctalk
wrote:
>
> There was an isolation transformer followed by a variac. The procedure was
> to slowly bring up the variac until the control circuit was functioning,
> check the waveforms around that, and then increase the supply voltage while
>
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 11:30 AM Christian Corti via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> SMPUs don't like that, and don't even try a variable transformers.
>
>
In the 80s, i worked for a company making just-pre-PC 8086 machines. We
manufactured the SMPSU in-house, designed by a specialist c
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 11:33 AM Hans-Ulrich Hölscher via cctalk
wrote:
>
> What can/will go wrong in either case, and why?
The normally-given reason is that an SMPSU approximates to being a
constant power load and draws more current if the input voltage is
reduced. This can cause the chopper tra
What can/will go wrong in either case, and why?
Ulli
Am Di., 30. Mai 2023 um 12:30 Uhr schrieb Christian Corti via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org>:
> On Thu, 25 May 2023, Rob Jarratt wrote:
> > I am thinking I may put it back together and test with a light bulb in
> > series.
>
> SMPUs don't lik
On Thu, 25 May 2023, Rob Jarratt wrote:
I am thinking I may put it back together and test with a light bulb in
series.
SMPUs don't like that, and don't even try a variable transformers.
Christian
We have some tapedrives on our conversion system. M4 and Qualstar.
Please mail me directly if you are interested
Regards
Nico de Jong
www.datamuseum.dk
On 2023-05-30 00:48, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
List,
I'd rather not put a customer through the throes of sending a 10.5" reel
of tape writ
If you find someone within Europe let me know. I have some VSE 9track
tapes, which can not be read with HP 7978B
On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 1:49 AM Chuck Guzis via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> List,
>
> I'd rather not put a customer through the throes of sending a 10.5" reel
> of tape wr
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