On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 09:35:46PM -0600, Paul Anderson wrote:
> I found what I remember to be a DEC10 memory cable . It looks like a BC10K
> in the 1980 cables handbook. It looks to be a 5 footer or so.
>
> Any interest? Please contact me off list.
>
> Thanks, Paul
Didn't Guy Sotomayor look fo
Syd! thanks,,.. is the Toaster Flyer a board inside the Amiga? it may be
there...
Did you save any promotional material etc? Thins like that look good in
a display with the gear.
We also need to scrounge a keyboard and a mouse
.
thanks Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 09:34:55PM -0800, CuriousMarc wrote:
>
> Or view the original full res pictures individually from my DropBox:
>
> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/32371244/Aliens%20Set%20Equipment%20ID/Hypersleep-Ops%20Unkown%20Unit.png
>
It looks a bit like an RK07 in that picture:
On Sun, Jan 01, 2017 at 12:13:05PM +, Rod Smallwood wrote:
>
>
> On 31/12/2016 07:56, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
> >On Fri, Dec 30, 2016 at 11:04:26AM +0100, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
> >>I'll provide examples of some of these. Others can be found online.
> >Here are three panels I could easily get
The keyboard looks like a variant of the keyboard on display at the Victoria
and Albert Museum in London right now attached to the Apple-1. It was a giant
pain to get it working correctly. I didn't have good schematics so had to
create a ton of notes and pseudo schematics using a ohm meter, s
On 12/01/2017 09:36, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
On Sun, Jan 01, 2017 at 12:13:05PM +, Rod Smallwood wrote:
On 31/12/2016 07:56, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
On Fri, Dec 30, 2016 at 11:04:26AM +0100, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
I'll provide examples of some of these. Others can be found online.
Here a
http://www.starringthecomputer.com/feature.html?f=728
Not the system she seems to be looking at but one item noted by some collector
out there were grid compass laptops.
On 2017-01-11 11:45 PM, Mouse wrote:
Good list there, the onlinedebugger looked the most promising but it
doesn't do 8080/8085 either.
I built a disassembler years ago to pick apart captured malware. By
now it handles about a dozen ISAs. While 8080 and 8085 are not on the
list, Z-80 is; addin
> On Jan 11, 2017, at 9:30 PM, william degnan wrote:
>
> On Jan 11, 2017 9:00 PM, "Paul Koning" wrote:
>> ...
>> Mine is: a working PLATO terminal -- orange plasma panel -- skillfully
> restored to full operating condition by Aaron Woolfson. It's connected to
> a PLATO system I brought back to
> On Jan 12, 2017, at 2:02 AM, Lars Brinkhoff wrote:
>
> What about software?
A listing of RSTS-11 V0 (when it was still called BTSS). And a listing for a
program to calculate e and pi, on a Philips PR8000 -- a machine for which
information appears to be entirely absent from the Internet.
On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 11:24 PM, jim stephens wrote:
>
>
> On 1/11/2017 11:02 PM, Lars Brinkhoff wrote:
>
>> What about software?
>>
> BCPL IBM mainframe portability package (original time frame). Common now,
> not so common back in the day.
>
> The kit was used with some efforts to port to mini
The video flyer used external scsi storage for content I believe,
kind of a separate computer inside the Amiga?
It was just an expansion card--controlled by the computer, and yes
because you usually needed some much storage (typical drives back then
were only 9GB for the fast ones) you had to
>> [...disassembler...]
> Does your disassembler do flow analysis?
I doubt it, because none of the meanings I know for the term are
anything my disassembler does.
> At any rate, the best reference for "undocumented" 8085 instructions
> is the Tundra/Calmos datasheet: [...]
That looks like a webp
Here's another little item that I have, though I'm not sure if it's rare. I
can't figure out what it actually came from, but it's a UNIVAC branded
drawer pull (I believe). I imagine it came from something like a console
desk, though I've scoured photos of various UNIVACs and haven't seen
anything e
Original message
From: Corey Cohen
Date: 2017-01-12 3:25 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic Posts"
Cc: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
Subject: Re: Sol Terminal Color Photo, and PROMs
The keyboard looks like a variant of the keyboard o
Syd! thanks,,.. is the Toaster Flyer a board inside the Amiga? it
may be
there...
Did you save any promotional material etc? Thins like that look
good in
a display with the gear.
We also need to scrounge a keyboard and a mouse
It was a card inside, yes.but you didn't typically hav
On 01/11/2017 10:13 PM, dwight wrote:
> Sorry Chuck
>
> It was not you I was talking about. It was the original thinking that
> a 8085 disassembler would make sense out of the original 8041 code.
>
> Maybe I'm confused but I believe the code in question was the 8041.
It's okay--topic drift isn't
On 01/12/2017 07:35 AM, Mouse wrote:
>> Does your disassembler do flow analysis?
>
> I doubt it, because none of the meanings I know for the term are
> anything my disassembler does.
A disassembler that can do flow analysis is a breath of fresh air when
working with larger binaries. Essentiall
On Tuesday, January 10, 2017 4:11 PM, Andy Cloud wrote:
I thought this would be an interesting question to ask around - What's the
rarest or most unusual computer-related item do you own?
An HP9845C, loaded, except missing the PSU. I got it from an HP repair shop
that had used it to rep
Opposite end of the size scale:
Epson RC-20
wristwatch with Z80 equivalent, RAM, ROM, serial port
katakana - not exported to USA
>> While 8080 and 8085 are not on the list, Z-80 is; adding 8080 would
>> be a relatively simple thing.
> Isn't 8080 just a subset of Z80?
I think it is, or at least close; I may add 8080 as a slight tweak to
the Z-80 module instead of as a completely independent module.
>> if someone can point m
> On Jan 12, 2017, at 12:13 AM, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 09:35:46PM -0600, Paul Anderson wrote:
>> I found what I remember to be a DEC10 memory cable . It looks like a BC10K
>> in the 1980 cables handbook. It looks to be a 5 footer or so.
>>
>> Any interest? Please co
>>> Does your disassembler do flow analysis?
>> I doubt it, because none of the meanings I know for the term are
>> anything my disassembler does.
> A disassembler that can do flow analysis is a breath of fresh air
> when working with larger binaries. Essentially, it looks at the code
> and makes
On 12/01/2017 04:50, "dwight" wrote:
> Even so, he said the code was
>
> for the 8741. It is not 8085!
>
Not strictly true, I said I saw the same opcodes in both and it was only
reading a buttload of books yesterday that showed me the errors of my ways
:)
A
>
On 1/12/2017 7:27 AM, Charles Anthony wrote:
On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 11:24 PM, jim stephens wrote:
On 1/11/2017 11:02 PM, Lars Brinkhoff wrote:
What about software?
BCPL IBM mainframe portability package (original time frame). Common now,
not so common back in the day.
The kit was used
We will dig around for come images...ok if you have any links to
good large scans let us know thx Ed#
In a message dated 1/12/2017 8:35:35 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
sbol...@bfree.on.ca writes:
> Syd! thanks,,.. is the Toaster Flyer a board inside the Amiga? it
>
On 1/12/17 10:24 AM, jim stephens wrote:
> the CHM took ownership of the USL archive which would have included any BCPL
> remains.
This came in before my time. I know about the paper archive and index, were
there tapes with it too?
On 1/11/17 11:02 PM, Lars Brinkhoff wrote:
> What about software?
>
tough one.. I've worked on recovering a lot of rare stuff.
Probably the copy of the University of Hawaii BCC-500 backup tapes, since there
was only ever one BCC-500
At CHM, probably the Whirlwind paper and magnetic tapes, or
On 01/12/2017 09:52 AM, Mouse wrote:
> My disassembler defaults to disassembling as instructions, but it
> has support for the user telling it that certain areas are text, or
> integers, or whatever. Clone it and look at the README if you want
> to get an idea how it works from a user's point of
On 1/12/2017 10:35 AM, Al Kossow wrote:
On 1/12/17 10:24 AM, jim stephens wrote:
the CHM took ownership of the USL archive which would have included any BCPL
remains.
This came in before my time. I know about the paper archive and index, were
there tapes with it too?
The Danes brought o
Yes it was an ascii keyboard so if it worked, the interface to the Apple-1 is
easy. It just had a lot of bad chips which were soldered in.
corey cohen
uǝɥoɔ ʎǝɹoɔ
> On Jan 12, 2017, at 11:43 AM, Brad H
> wrote:
>
>
>
> Original message
> From: Corey Cohen
> Date: 2017
It was thus said that the Great Chuck Guzis once stated:
> On 01/12/2017 07:35 AM, Mouse wrote:
>
> >> Does your disassembler do flow analysis?
> >
> > I doubt it, because none of the meanings I know for the term are
> > anything my disassembler does.
>
> A disassembler that can do flow analysi
https://www.flickr.com/photos/85127208@N05/7799377360/in/photostream
Not sure if this URL will share properly but this is one item I'd love to hear
if anyone knows about. Definitely one of my most unusual prices however I
bought it from a fellow collector and he got it from a friend's pawn shop f
From: Lyle Bickley
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2017 8:30 PM
> On Wed, 11 Jan 2017 17:34:51 -0800
> Al Kossow wrote:
>> On 1/11/17 4:45 PM, Brad H wrote:
>>> I wasn't even aware of the LCM until this thread
I'm hurt. :-) :-) :-) :-) :-)
>> You mean "Living Computer: Museum + Labs" ?
>> htt
A selection of some of my more unusual computer-related stuff:
- A Tektronix 4132 Unix workstation using a National 32016 CPU and a 4.2bsd
port called UTek
- A Digital Equipment PDP 8/e system with 2 RK05 drives, high speed paper tape
reader/punch, RX01 Dual 8" floppy drives, 16K of DEC core
On 01/12/2017 11:21 AM, Sean Conner wrote:
>
> But are there disassemblers that can handle somehing like:
>
> jsr puts
> fcc 'Hello, world!',13,0
> clra
> ...
>
> putspulsx
> puts1 lda ,x+
>
From: Lars Brinkhoff
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2017 10:53 PM
> Rich Alderson wrote:
>> Eric's got a KL. If he had a KA, I would have tracked him down and
>> beaten him to a pulp to lay hands on it--and we're friends.
> This is the third time in a few weeks that I've seen people eagerly
> loo
I have an nCube2 with the front-end Sun 4/470, card, cable and software. I
think having a complete system is probably reasonably uncommon.
I have no documentation on the thing at all, though, so I've never
actually powered it up. If anyone has anything, I'd love to hear from you.
Certainly le
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 11:36 AM, Rich Alderson
wrote:
>
> This was part of expanding from a single floor of our three-story building
> onto the 1st (ground) floor, where we have educational labs, exhibits on
> modern developments from the vintage machines on the 2nd, a real gift shop
> and book
Given the topic, I have this rather *unique* punch card reader, if you want
to call it that. It is marked EAI but that's where the trail turns cold.
Perhaps used as a microcode source? All holes are read simultaneously via
individual switches. If someone has seen one before, please speak up. -C
h
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 8:10 PM, Cory Heisterkamp
wrote:
> Given the topic, I have this rather *unique* punch card reader, if you want
> to call it that. It is marked EAI but that's where the trail turns cold.
> Perhaps used as a microcode source? All holes are read simultaneously via
> individual
Hi Everyone!
I know this is a bit of a personal question, so please feel free to ignore
this email!
If you're willing to answer it would also be interesting to know what drove
you to spend as much as you did on that particular computer?
For me, the most I've spent on a single computer is $2,000
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 12:35 PM, Andy Cloud wrote:
> Hi Everyone!
>
> I know this is a bit of a personal question, so please feel free to ignore
> this email!
>
> If you're willing to answer it would also be interesting to know what drove
> you to spend as much as you did on that particular comp
I think the most expensive machine I ever bought (with my own money)
was a VAX-11/725 in 1986. $4000. I did it, in part because DEC was
eliminating free license transferrals with after-market hardware
sales. It looked like my cheapest option to have my own VAX, and for
a time, it was.
https://b
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017, Cory Heisterkamp wrote:
Given the topic, I have this rather *unique* punch card reader, if you want
to call it that. It is marked EAI but that's where the trail turns cold.
Perhaps used as a microcode source? All holes are read simultaneously via
individual switches. If someo
> But are there disassemblers that can handle somehing like:
> jsr puts
> fcc 'Hello, world!',13,0
> clra
Mine can't do that automatically, but it can with a little human
assist; the human would need to tell it that the memory after the jsr
is a
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 3:35 PM, Andy Cloud wrote:
> Hi Everyone!
>
> I know this is a bit of a personal question, so please feel free to ignore
> this email!
>
> If you're willing to answer it would also be interesting to know what drove
> you to spend as much as you did on that particular compu
Haha! Great question - I primed her with shoes before the purchase then
casually told her I had just bought a $2,000 computer, she tried to be
angry but she got she shoes she'd always wanted so it nutralized it :D
_>Andy
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 at 20:46, Charles Anthony
wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 12, 2017
>> Clone [my disassembler] and look at the README if you want to get an
>> idea how it works from a user's point of view.
> I will certainly do that. It'll be interesting how this for 8080/z80
> compares to the 30-odd-year old interactive disassembler for CP/M,
> Dazzlestar.
It will probably come
I've been following this topic, and suddenly realised… that I don't actually
have any particularly rare or unusual items – the nearest I can think of is a
Commodore N-60 navigation calculator, but I also have two early Apple IIs.
If I can mention items that I have owned, the list becomes slightl
Perhaps its for some kind of switch matrix for programming analog computers.
EAI were big into analog and hybrid computers...
Dave
> -Original Message-
> From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Cory
> Heisterkamp
> Sent: 12 January 2017 20:11
> To: General Discus
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 3:51 PM, william degnan wrote:
> I am sure you did not mean to cause offence but I don't that if this is an
> appropriate question to ask here. At least not on classiccmp. But I
> guess we'll find out what others think. I don't want to start a flame war
> either, just s
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 3:56 PM, Ethan Dicks wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 3:51 PM, william degnan wrote:
>> I am sure you did not mean to cause offence but I don't that if this is an
>> appropriate question to ask here.
If someone paid a large sum, especially recently, they might not care
to
jsr puts
fcc 'Hello, world!',13,0
clra
or the classic:
JMP START1
DATA2: DB . . .
DB . . .
START1: MOV DX, OFFSET DATA2
Which was heavily used because
MOV DX, OFFSET DATA3
. . .
DATA3: DB . . .
would
$15,000 for a used Mekel microfiche scanner in the early-2000's
It turned out to be just past prototype stage, was missing the pneumatic fiche
handler
and never really got it working at production volumes. The small number of
fiche scans
on bitsavers from around then was the sum total of the out
My thinking is that it is a cryto device. They used such to
change keys for encoding and decoding.
Although EAI did a lot of analog stuff, it wasn't uncommon
for many different companies to do gov contracts.
As an example, during WWII, Lionel Train company made
ship's compasses. These couldn't
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 4:08 PM, Al Kossow wrote:
> $15,000 for a used Mekel microfiche scanner in the early-2000's
Oof!
> It turned out to be just past prototype stage, was missing the pneumatic
> fiche handler
> and never really got it working at production volumes. The small number of
> fic
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017, Ethan Dicks wrote:
I'm sure there are people who are offended and/or horrified by the
question. The number of responses (or lack thereof) will likely
indicate the size of that pool.
My upper limit has been at $800 surprisingly often.
After I purchased the "Technical Refer
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017, Andy Cloud wrote:
If you're willing to answer it would also be interesting to know what drove
you to spend as much as you did on that particular computer?
I got in a bidding war with someone and ended up paying $330 for six Onyx2
racks from Boeing surplus about ten years
I saved one of the MIT CADR top-of-rack plates (the one with the logo
and a sticker from the lab on it). Me and peter recently discovered
he saved the rest of the box. Will probably reunite at some point :-)
Cheers Leif
On 01/12/2017 11:19 AM, Sam O'nella wrote:
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/85127208@N05/7799377360/in/photostream
> Not sure if this URL will share properly but this is one item I'd
> love to hear if anyone knows about. Definitely one of my most unusual
> prices however I bought it from a fellow c
Anyone ever heard of the GTE IS1000?
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 2:18 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
> On 01/12/2017 11:19 AM, Sam O'nella wrote:
> > https://www.flickr.com/photos/85127208@N05/7799377360/in/photostream
> > Not sure if this URL will share properly but this is one item I'd
> > love to hear if
Given the topic, I have this rather *unique* punch card reader, if you want
to call it that. It is marked EAI but that's where the trail turns cold.
EAI is Electronic Associates Inc. based here on the NJ shore. They made
analog computers.
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 3:08 PM, Al Kossow wrote:
> $15,000 for a used Mekel microfiche scanner in the early-2000's
>
I have a Mekel M565 and an M525, with the greyscale interface card,
sitting in my office. They were a parting gift from my boss when we closed
the old company down. They get
It was thus said that the Great Fred Cisin once stated:
> >>jsr puts
> >>fcc 'Hello, world!',13,0
> >>clra
> or the classic:
>JMP START1
>DATA2: DB . . .
> DB . . .
>START1: MOV DX, OFFSET DATA2
> Which was heavily used beca
On 1/12/2017 12:49 PM, Fred Cisin wrote:
http://www.oldcalculatormuseum.com/a-wang704.pdf
http://www.oldcalculatormuseum.com/wang360.html
I recently picked up a Wang 174 from a list member (via ebay), and also
have a Wang 320K nixie head, no electronics.
thanks
Jim
EAI also made drum memories too I believe...
ANYTHING EAI is cool!
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 1/12/2017 2:26:08 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
cct...@snarc.net writes:
> Given the topic, I have this rather *unique* punch card reader, if you
want
> to
On 01/12/2017 01:30 PM, Sean Conner wrote:
> I've seen the high bit set on the last character, again mostly in
> the 8-bit world.
Prime (in PrimOS) took the approach of setting the high bit on *all*
ASCII data, which does make it stick out in a tape or core dump.
--Chuck
Not all strings are null-terminated. In CP/M, and MS-DOS INT21h Fn9, the
terminating character is '$' !
"If you are ever choosing a termination marker, choose something that
could NEVER occur in normal data!"
Also, strings may, instead of a terminating character, be specified with a
length, or wi
Original message
From: Rick Bensene
Date: 2017-01-12 11:49 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
Subject: Re: What's the rarest or most unusual computer-related item do you
own?
A selection of some of my more unusual computer-related s
I rarely go above $1000.. I spent $1500 for my Mark-8 boards. And I considered
that a bargain considering what they were.
Rarest:
Computer Control Company (3C, later Honeywell) DDP-116 minicomputer (2
complete, 1 missing front panel)
Discrete germanium transistors, first 16-bit minicomputer, first of the
Honeywell "Series 16" line. Provenance of machines is NRAO Green Bank,
controlling the Green Bank Interfe
There are also a couple Xerox Altos in one of the scenes- just the CPU
boxes with the diablos.
As a GRiD collector, it is annoying that most of them have been snapped up
by aliens fans.
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 6:26 AM, Sam O'nella wrote:
> http://www.starringthecomputer.com/feature.html?f=728
>
On 1/12/2017 3:19 PM, William Maddox wrote:
Rarest:
Computer Control Company (3C, later Honeywell) DDP-116 minicomputer (2
complete, 1 missing front panel)
Discrete germanium transistors, first 16-bit minicomputer, first of the Honeywell
"Series 16" line.Provenance of machines is NRAO G
>>> jsr puts
>>> fcc 'Hello, world!',13,0
>>> clra
>> Mine can't do that automatically, but it can with a little human
>> assist; the human would need to tell it that the memory after the
>> jsr is a NUL-terminated string, but that's all it would need to
> From: Leif Johansson
> Me and peter recently discovered he saved the rest of the box.
Is that the one I saw in the 'MIT-MC in Sweden' pictures a while back?
> Paul Koning
> A listing of RSTS-11 V0
If that's not already online in machine-readable form, we should get it
scanne
On Jan 12, 2017, at 4:19 PM, William Maddox wrote:
> Rarest:
> Computer Control Company (3C, later Honeywell) DDP-116 minicomputer (2
> complete, 1 missing front panel)
> Discrete germanium transistors, first 16-bit minicomputer, first of the
> Honeywell "Series 16" line.Provenance of m
I find generally I haven't paid too much for the gear I've got.
However, it's not the initial payment, it's the shipping (huge when your
talking about New Zealand from anywhere), and then the bits and pieces you
might have to buy to repair/restore the said item. These two incidentals
often cost m
Andy Cloud wrote on Tue, 10 Jan 2017 22:09:52 +
> I thought this would be an interesting question to ask around - What's the
> rarest or most unusual computer-related item do you own?
Stuff that I designed and built myself but wasn't produced is rare,
obviously, but it is likely that this wasn
> If you're willing to answer it would also be interesting to know what drove
> you to spend as much as you did on that particular computer?
The most I spent personally was a bit over $10,000 for my personal POWER6
server. I was actually ready to buy a brand new POWER7 (which would probably
have c
Well, in 1986, I paid something like $6700 for a KA630-AA
(UVax-II CPU board).
I got an Andromeda disk controller (MFM hard disk + floppy)
and ran pirated VMS off a 40 MB drive. Slowly upgraded it
all to a VaxStation II, then VaxStation II GPX (color
graphics), added a bunch of tape drives.
Hmmm. Well, in 1985 I spent something like $6500 or $7000 on a complete Mac
512k system. Ok, the box itself was only $2795 or something like that but it
was all of the other stuff like the software, printer, disk drive, modem,
numeric keyboard that added up. I still have the receipt somewhere in
DEC VT14 and a lot of options. Has been on my "to do" list for a few years
now.
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 1:05 PM, Jecel Assumpcao Jr.
wrote:
> Andy Cloud wrote on Tue, 10 Jan 2017 22:09:52 +
> > I thought this would be an interesting question to ask around - What's
> the
> > rarest or most un
I agree with Terry. It's not just the initial cost, but the shipping,
blood, sweat, tears, and pushing my mind, spine, etc to the limits.
I don't usually put over a few thousand into one toy, but have gone way
past that for packages.
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 8:37 PM, Rich Cini wrote:
> Hmmm. Wel
Skickat från min iPhone
13 jan. 2017 kl. 00:45 skrev Noel Chiappa :
>> From: Leif Johansson
>
>> Me and peter recently discovered he saved the rest of the box.
>
> Is that the one I saw in the 'MIT-MC in Sweden' pictures a while back?
Wasn't on the list then but maybe, yes. A lot stuff got
On 01/12/2017 08:55 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
> Well, in 1986, I paid something like $6700 for a KA630-AA (UVax-II CPU
> board).
> I got an Andromeda disk controller (MFM hard disk + floppy) and ran
> pirated VMS off a 40 MB drive. Slowly upgraded it all to a VaxStation
> II, then VaxStation II GPX (co
The famous Brigham Young University 3D graphics program, by Dr. Hank
Christensen.
I am looking for the fortran source, it should be 7 files:
DISPLAY
SECTION
UTILITY
TITLE
COMPOSE
UPDATE
MOSAIC
Any docs related too.
Thanks for letting me beg.
Randy
Leif Johansson wrote:
> Noel Chiappa wrote:
>> Leif Johansson wrote:
>>> Me and peter recently discovered he saved the rest of the box.
Is that Plåth?
>> Is that the one I saw in the 'MIT-MC in Sweden' pictures a while back?
> Wasn't on the list then but maybe, yes.
Is there a list? What's on i
Hello dear listmembers,
sorry for the off-topic request.
I have a chance to get two beautiful optomechanical Mettler lab scales from a
gentleman in Cologne for a very nice price, but the seller states outright that
he won't ship them (which probably wouldn't end nicely for the goods anyway!).
S
Tandy 5000 MC maybe - though it still needs a power supply rebuild and
the infamous missing Reference Disk.
A fully expanded 3B2/1000-80 (5 CPU + 3 MPB) that isn't as rare but it
is quite fun to play with - and I do often.
A few systems that are new in the box, stay in the box climate
contro
> What about software?
I guess the PDP-11 operating system TRANTOR would be my most unusual
piece.
"Trantor was created by Steve Orszag of the MIT Applied Math
department to access the CDC and Cray computers at NCAR for his fluid
dynamics research. NCAR expected people to access the sys
i have something called coss-4 never been able to find anything on it
https://www.flickr.com/photos/1ajs/6109885397/in/photolist-doJhoE-aiUL4F-5ruwb7
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 1:47 AM, Lars Brinkhoff wrote:
> > What about software?
>
> I guess the PDP-11 operating system TRANTOR would be my most u
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