> -Original Message-
> From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Jason
> Howe
> Sent: 15 October 2016 03:32
> To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
>
> Subject: Re: IBM 370 Hard Drive
>
> On 10/14/2016 04:03 PM, Dave Wade wrote:
> >> -Original M
On Oct 15, 2016 1:06 AM, "drlegendre ." wrote:
>
> >
> > There are still plenty of enthusiastic, younger folks who are most
> >> definitely into running the "genuine old hardware" - it's just that
> >>
> > this
>
> > list hasn't traditionally offered much of a draw for these users. As
> >>
> > not
> From: Rick Bensene
> Some of the machines in the series had a very powerful (for the time)
> floating point unit (known as the IPU) that operated in tandem with the
> main CPU
I wonder if the machines in the auction had this?
Noel
On 15 October 2016 at 03:29, Tony Aiuto wrote:
> I used most of the SEL/Gould/Encore machines. The 32/77 was an original
> SEL design, from before Gould bought them. It ran MPX-32, their real-time
> OS. TTL based. The 32/87 was ECL, in a much bigger cabinet. They made
> slight hardware changes t
I can only think of one, the AED WINC-08 RL02 system, but that used 8" drives
Good luck finding one, and the matching interface card. I don't think Qualogy
Emulex or Dilog ever made MFM for Unibus. MFM controllers were mainly a QBus
market. I suppose some day I should make a list of all of the Unib
I may have scanned other versions, no time to look right now.
and.. people are STILL trying to find a good copy of the Sun Microsystems
68000 boot prom, as far as I know.
On 10/14/16 10:05 PM, Richard Loken wrote:
> the one above is the previous version to the manual I have. According
> to the
scanned.. no time to post-process right now
If someone REALLY needs this, LMK
For the couple of people that have been to my new
office, there is a 3ft high 4ft long pile of paper
in front of the scanner right now that I haven't had
time to even look at.
On 10/14/16 10:21 PM, Richard Loken wrote:
FYI
www.ebay.com/itm/112167073659
This guy was the second listing he's put up. I suspect he has more.
I tried the two sets he put up the first time, and they work fine on the 6085.
They are hard enough to find at that price, I thought I'd let people know.
He also has the Fujitsu MB8266A nibble-mo
On Sat, 15 Oct 2016, Al Kossow wrote:
scanned.. no time to post-process right now
If someone REALLY needs this, LMK
My read of this is that have all the Sun-1 and DECwriter II and III docs
that matter so I will pass on all this paper to somebody else without
thinking furter about scanning them
- Original Message -
> From: "David Brownlee"
>
> We had a PN9080 and PN6040 at City University as the main systems in the
> late 90's
Ah, yes, "The Magic Roundabout" - was three 6040s and one 9080. I still
possess the Gould nameplate from the 9000.
They were the last machines we had t
-Original Message-
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Tony Aiuto
Sent: Friday, October 14, 2016 7:29 PM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: Re: Gould 32/77 (was: NWA auctions)
I used most of the SEL/Gould/Encore machines. The 32/77
Yes. The 8 & 9 machines were ECL, the rest were TTL. IIRC, those were the
32/87, 9780, PN9600.
David mentioned disks on the PN (Unix) series. Those were formatted with
multiple of 512 byte sectors. The RTM/MPX machines used 768 byte sectors,
which was super optimal for the disks they happened to
I have an opportunity to make a "reasonable offer" on a fairly complete SOL-20
system. It would include a floppy drive cabinet and some software, but no
monitor. It's a "working when retired" system, so I assume that the keyboard
has died of old age and some capacitors might have dried out; none
SOL-20s have been all over the map. Ive seen similar units diverge by as much
as $500 for nothing obvious I can see. The average for unknown, complete,
decent cosmetic condition seems to be around $900. With extras probably $1300?
Sent from my Samsung device
Original message
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 12:04, Brad H wrote:
>
>
>
> SOL-20s have been all over the map. Ive seen similar units diverge by as
> much as $500 for nothing obvious I can see. The average for unknown,
> complete, decent cosmetic condition seems to be around $900. With extras
> probably $1300?
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 3:08 PM, Mark J. Blair wrote:
>
>
>> On Oct 15, 2016, at 12:04, Brad H
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> SOL-20s have been all over the map. Ive seen similar units diverge by as
>> much as $500 for nothing obvious I can see. The average for unknown,
>> complete, decent cosmet
On 10/14/2016 10:06 PM, drlegendre . wrote:
> If my previous observations on the genesis of the list don't match
> reality, I'm perfectly willing to be corrected - in fact, I like what
> I've been hearing about the origins of the list. That said, the vast
> majority of list traffic seems to focus
On Oct 13, 2016, at 9:33 AM, William Maddox wrote:
> This looks like a GP-4, though I am suspicious that parts of it have been
> modernized. The GP-4 had a drum memory.
>
> https://grafeauction.proxibid.com/aspr/Genal-Precision-Systems-2-door-avionics-cabinets/32464723/LotDetail.asp?lid=32464
On Sat, 15 Oct 2016, Corey Cohen wrote:
A few more things to note. Assume the keyboard needs new foam, no big
deal. Check the wood to make sure it's not cracked. And make sure you
have the personality module included.
Does the disk system include a boot disk? Minus a few hundred, if not!
On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 2:31 PM, Fred Cisin wrote:
> But then, the college tried to FIRE him for, among other things,
> retrieving computers from college dumpsters and having too much old
> computer stuff. The judge of the arbitration reversed the firing, but the
> college had already dumpstered
On Sat, 15 Oct 2016, Ian S. King wrote:
Please tell me that said institution has since been burned to the ground.
"That junk", indeed.
WHEN they burn to the ground (there are four campuses and a small complex
of administration buildings), I will lose my retirement health benefits.
But, my pen
corey cohen
uǝɥoɔ ʎǝɹoɔ
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 5:31 PM, Fred Cisin wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 15 Oct 2016, Corey Cohen wrote:
>> A few more things to note. Assume the keyboard needs new foam, no big deal.
>> Check the wood to make sure it's not cracked. And make sure you have the
>> personality
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 7:33 AM, Al Kossow wrote:
>
>
>
> I hope someone gets a Q/Unibus non-mscp small disk emulator PCB built
> some day. I wonder if Guy has had any time to work on his.
>
No, I haven’t had any time to work on stuff. I still have the prototype
MEM11A only half built.
>
>
On Sun, Oct 16, 2016 at 3:33 AM, Al Kossow wrote:
> I can only think of one, the AED WINC-08 RL02 system, but that used 8" drives
> Good luck finding one, and the matching interface card. I don't think Qualogy
> Emulex or Dilog ever made MFM for Unibus. MFM controllers were mainly a QBus
> market.
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 12:42, Corey Cohen wrote:
>
> The disk drive can really affect value. If it's a Northstar system, then
> maybe add 400 bucks the most. If it's a Helios. A working drive can be
> priceless if the drive is still the original Persci one.
I believe that it has a Morrow Di
On 10/15/16 12:49, Chuck Guzis wrote:
>
> I can read about using arsphenamine
> to treat syphilis, for example (historically important), without
> contracting the disease and treating it myself just for "the experience".
Well, thanks for not drawing a *direct* comparison between those of us
still
As promised, I have an update: The seller and I have finished haggling, with
the deal to be completed in a little over a week, for an undisclosed sum to be
paid in small, unmarked bills. Thanks for the help, folks!
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X
http://www.nf6x.net/
I picked up a bit of an odball power macintosh 6100 a while back. It has a
486 cpu at 66 mhz in it as well, so you can run dos on it or something.
Overall looks to be in somewhat working shape, but does not boot. I do not
hear the hard drive spinning, I am guessing it is bad.I can get it to power
o
Congratulations! Fun to find some of the wooden generation of computers. Keep
us posted on the restoration efforts (if any) :-)
Original message From: "Mark J. Blair"
》the deal to be completed in a little over a week
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 19:02, Sam O'nella wrote:
>
> Congratulations! Fun to find some of the wooden generation of computers. Keep
> us posted on the restoration efforts (if any) :-)
I don't think I have any other wooden computers yet. The seller had an
interesting tale about the origin of the
> > I can read about using arsphenamine
> > to treat syphilis, for example (historically important), without
> > contracting the disease and treating it myself just for "the experience".
>
> Well, thanks for not drawing a *direct* comparison between those of us
> still more engaged in collecting a
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 19:33, Cameron Kaiser wrote:
>
> I treat syphilis, in case anyone on this list requires that.
Just wait until the hipsters discover syphilis, and the prices go through the
roof on eBay thanks to opportunistic syphilis flippers.
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X
http://www.nf6x.ne
On 10/15/2016 05:49 PM, Steven M Jones wrote:
> On 10/15/16 12:49, Chuck Guzis wrote:
>>
>> I can read about using arsphenamine to treat syphilis, for example
>> (historically important), without contracting the disease and
>> treating it myself just for "the experience".
>
> Well, thanks for not
> Just wait until the hipsters discover syphilis, and the prices go
> through the roof on eBay thanks to opportunistic syphilis flippers.
I don't know about the price of syphilis but the price of treating syphilis
has gone through the roof. But I digress... :)
" I can read about using arsphenamine
to treat syphilis, for example (historically important), without
contracting the disease and treating it myself just for "the experience"."
Thanks for that, Chuck.. while it makes the point, it's still one of the
screwiest analogies ever.
Love it. Gotta pull
On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 6:55 PM, devin davison wrote:
> I picked up a bit of an odball power macintosh 6100 a while back. It has a
> 486 cpu at 66 mhz in it as well, so you can run dos on it or something.
> Overall looks to be in somewhat working shape, but does not boot. I do not
> hear the hard
On 10/15/2016 08:06 PM, drlegendre . wrote:
> " I can read about using arsphenamine to treat syphilis, for example
> (historically important), without contracting the disease and
> treating it myself just for "the experience"."
>
> Thanks for that, Chuck.. while it makes the point, it's still one
Or Atlanta perhaps?
Todd Killingsworth
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 15, 2016, at 11:28 PM, Paxton Hoag wrote:
>
>> On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 6:55 PM, devin davison wrote:
>>
>> I picked up a bit of an odball power macintosh 6100 a while back. It has a
>> 486 cpu at 66 mhz in it as well, so you
On 10/15/2016 19:39, Chuck Guzis wrote:
>
> My point blew right past you, apparently--yet I stated it as clearly as
> I could.
I got your point, Chuck, one hundred percent. It's a depressing
perspective, but I acknowledge the truth of it in my own life. Almost
every day I'm reminded that nothing
Located in Vero Beach Florida, 32967
Sorry, forgot to mention location
--Devin
On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 11:43 PM, wrote:
> Or Atlanta perhaps?
> Todd Killingsworth
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> > On Oct 15, 2016, at 11:28 PM, Paxton Hoag
> wrote:
> >
> >> On Sat, Oct 15, 2016 at 6:55 PM, devin d
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