> From: Randy Dawson
> For a while I have collected bits of legacy CAD
> ...
> My question is, did any of the source code for these systems
> .. ever make it out
Well, not quite what you're asking about, I think (it sounds like you're
interested in MechE CAD, not EE, even tho
> On May 21, 2018, at 7:52 AM, Noel Chiappa via cctalk
> wrote:
>
>> From: Randy Dawson
>
>> For a while I have collected bits of legacy CAD
>> ...
>> My question is, did any of the source code for these systems
>> .. ever make it out
>
> Well, not quite what you're asking about, I think (i
Hi,
Waldemar Brodkorb via cctech wrote,
> Hi,
>
> I started to revive an old Micro PDP11/83 I have for over 12 years
> now. It is fully assembled and last time I tried to start the
> machine it some kind of started.
> My biggest issue at the moment is the power supply.
>
> After the machine is r
Fred Cisin wrote:
> d) The TRULY IMPORTANT issues will never be solved through the use of
> armed forces:
> big-endian V little-endian
> vi v emacs
> DEC V IBM
> CDC V IBM
> TRS80 V Apple
> Atari V Commodore
> IBM V Apple
> Android V IOS
> Linux V Windoze V MacOS
> number of buttons on a mouse
On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 03:31:32PM +, Johnny Eriksson via cctalk wrote:
>
> On the other hand, the fight against the X86 architecture might be done
> with the help of arm forces...
Bringing Acorns to a flame war sounds RISCy
:-)
11/35 vs 40, I think there was some attempt to discriminate between
the two, as the /35 with no added boxes was a great little machine
cost and performance wise, I recall the timing being different when
going through the prints for the two machines, got parts for 35 out of
surplux, checked the back
On 5/21/18 6:03 AM, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
> Another old CAD program is NEC2, the antenna (etc.) simulator.
I forgot to post about it here, but NASTRAN is available on github along with a
lot of other NASA code.
https://github.com/nasa/
It is unlikely that the sources ever made it ou
Message: 20
Date: Wed, 16 May 2018 20:40:04 -0700 (PDT)
From: Fred Cisin
>I remember an interview with Lee Felsenstein, in which he was asked how
>much a battery power unit for the upcoming Osborne would weigh. He
>reponded that the external DC connection was currently for use with a car.
>(Lee
Noel Chiappa wrote:
> the original Stanford SUDS is still available, I think.
Yes, it's available from saildart.org.
>From: Al Kossow
> NASTRAN is available
That's a finite element modeling code, isn't it? (I guess it all depends on
what the OP meant by 'CAD'...)
Noel
catching up late to this thread...what is the power supply rating for a
2000, and if it's dead will removing the battery allow a person to fire it
up or do you have to have a working battery to apply power? I forgot I
have one of these buried in my laptop shelf.
b
On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 1:30 PM,
G'day Zane -
I have placed Desktop Generation information for you at:
www.NovasAreForever.org/tmp/014-000751-00__The_Desktop_Generation__1983-Jul.01.pdf
-
Bruce Ray
Wild Hare Computer Systems, Inc.
Boulder, Colorado USA
b...@wildharecomputers.com
...preserving the Data General legacy: ww
EXCELLENT MANUAL!
ED#
In a message dated 5/21/2018 12:22:40 PM US Mountain Standard Time,
cctalk@classiccmp.org writes:
G'day Zane -
I have placed Desktop Generation information for you at:
www.NovasAreForever.org/tmp/014-000751-00__The_Desktop_Generation__1983-Jul.01.pdf
-
Bruce R
Thank you Bruce, I took quick look through, and will need to go back and read
up on the hardware bits, Chapter 4 looks like it goes into the stuff I’m
curious about. I’m normally a software guy, but this is one case, where the
hardware is of more interest.
Thanks,
Zane
> On May 21, 2018, a
G'day Zane -
Like every other computer system created, the Desktop Generation has its
own set of quirks and wonders. It was an interesting evolutionary
repackage of the microEclipse processor, but I never saw a customer or
user site actually using the Model 10's MS-DOS "compatibility feature"
15 matches
Mail list logo