On 05/19/2019 09:46 AM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
> There's a switch labeled "IRIG" which stands for Inter Range
> Instrumentation Group, and refers to a standard for
> telemetry encoding. There is a standard for time code, a
> standard for modulating analog signas onto a bunch of FM
> car
I do not think this is correct. The IRIG almost certainly refers to the Apollo
Inertial Reference Integrating Gyro, which you can see in this video along with
one of the PSA trays Adrian’s contraption is supposed to be testing:
https://youtu.be/lXe2OS4nwnQ
BTW I got my Apollo IRIG at the same a
First, congratulations from us :-)
Reading your blog, I'm glad that we did not win the auction. We simply do
not have the time and space (and money) to handle this, especially the
effort needed to get everything out of the house. I and Klemens both have
jobs that require us to do other things
On Mon, 20 May 2019, Patrick Finnegan wrote:
I guess it would look right for the era, but I'd never build a data center
with raised flooring after my experiences with them. It's such a pain to
work with compared to a sealed concrete floor and overhead cable trays.
My experience is that overhea
OK Marc.. guess, patent ran out. this was eons ago I was involved initally...
so thus my dated "who had and not list"... remember the leitz episcopic..
phase contrast? system... ighhh...!, have,an otholux set up like that...
another fun one is the Wild m20 with episcopic... bright field
On Mon, 20 May 2019 at 23:10, Adrian Stoness via cctalk
wrote:
>
> anyone figured out what these were being used for in that building?
Puma, the sportswear company, I think. Related to Adidas -- I believe
the companies were run by 2 brothers who fell out.
Puma was founded in Nuremberg. You can s
The logo is sort of wrong for the era. I think it is just a sticker
that was applied.
And I do not think Puma would have been running on just a model 20,
and especially in such an "interesting" datacenter. By the 60s, they
were already a good sized company.
--
Will
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 6:26 A
On 05/20/2019 05:38 PM, Carl Claunch via cctalk wrote:
On 05/19/2019 09:46 AM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
There's a switch labeled "IRIG" which stands for Inter Range
Instrumentation Group, and refers to a standard for
telemetry encoding. There is a standard for time code, a
standard for
Adrian Stoness wrote:
> had to crawl 300feet under raised floor cause it was carpeted runing
> 48pair fiber line took a good hour and half to get it over to the room with
> the rack in it from the building raise
When I interned with the Social Security Administration, I was tasked with
crawlin
I have an empty PDP-11 rack that must be gone by Thursday, 5/30. I am
asking $90 OBO. I also have a UNIBUS SMD disk controller (asking 150). I
will ship the controller, but not the rack.
I am located in Houston, TX.
Thomas Raguso
832 374-2803
On 5/21/19 2:13 AM, Christian Corti via cctalk wrote:
You definitely need a raised floor for a data center.
I think Google and their YAWNs will disagree with you on an actual
/need/ for a raised floor in a data center.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die
Hi Thomas,
I tried to call but couldn't reach you. I think I can have it picked up
before then, but have a few questions.
Thanks, Paul
217
766
7690
On Tue, May 21, 2019, 04:13 Christian Corti via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> You definitely need a raised floor
> for a data center. You need it for forced air cooling and for running the
> water and condensate pipes.
Ductwork doesn't have to be below the floor. Modern co-lo faciliti
On Mon, May 20, 2019 at 10:58 PM Tapley, Mark via cctalk
wrote:
> >> Subject: Things to do in Australia & New Zealand?
> >> From: Patrick Finnegan
>
> Were I in Sydney, I would spend the ~4 hours to drive to a little West of
> Canberra:
>
> https://deepspace.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/
> https://deeps
pritty much lol
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 9:50 AM Jon Elson via cctalk
wrote:
> On 05/20/2019 05:38 PM, Carl Claunch via cctalk wrote:
> > On 05/19/2019 09:46 AM, Jon Elson via cctalk wrote:
> >> There's a switch labeled "IRIG" which stands for Inter Range
> >> Instrumentation Group, and refers to
all systems have their advantages disadvantages it all depends on what your
doing and designs u choose. personaly i think raised floor and tray above
are best then u keep all ur power below away from ur data lines plus but
then ur setup is only as good as the lazyest tech u get comming in running
s
"1 in the elvator takes you to the data center.
B in the elvator takes you to the tall enough to walk in raised floor.
M or 2 in the elevator takes you to the overhead ca ble area."
>BTW I got my Apollo IRIG at the same auction that Adrian got the Apollo PSA
>tester from.
Wow, didn't know that NASA had testers for prostate specific antigen!
BTW I got my Apollo IRIG at the same auction that Adrian got the Apollo PSA
tester from.
On Tue, 21 May 2019, W2HX via cctalk wrote:
Wow, didn't know that NASA had testers for prostate specific antigen!
Sure!
Didn't you see the Public Service Announcement?
No modern datacenter that I have seen still uses a raised floor *OTHER THAN*
about 3 inches for a ground plane. There is a reason for that... the old idea
of forced cooling under the floor and mixing power & data cables there has been
found to be a truly bad idea.
Power in most any modern datac
> On May 21, 2019 at 12:31 PM W2HX via cctalk wrote:
>
>
> >BTW I got my Apollo IRIG at the same auction that Adrian got the Apollo PSA
> >tester from.
>
> Wow, didn't know that NASA had testers for prostate specific antigen!
They use them when exploring Uranus.
It was thus said that the Great Jay West via cctalk once stated:
> No modern datacenter that I have seen still uses a raised floor *OTHER
> THAN* about 3 inches for a ground plane. There is a reason for that... the
> old idea of forced cooling under the floor and mixing power & data cables
> there
On 5/21/2019 11:03 AM, Adrian Stoness via cctalk wrote:
all systems have their advantages disadvantages it all depends on what your
doing and designs u choose. personaly i think raised floor and tray above
are best then u keep all ur power below away from ur data lines plus but
then ur setup is o
I might think far more "obsolete" than "bad idea". It worked very well
for the mainframe folks.
--
Will
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 1:50 PM Jay West via cctalk
wrote:
>
> No modern datacenter that I have seen still uses a raised floor *OTHER THAN*
> about 3 inches for a ground plane. There is a rea
On 5/21/19 12:34 PM, William Donzelli via cctalk wrote:
> I might think far more "obsolete" than "bad idea". It worked very well
> for the mainframe folks.
...except when it didn't. On more than one occasion, I recall watching
some poor soul with a cart balanced with long (3 foot) trays full of
You can't blame anyone but they idiot using a 3 wheel cart while
moving decks of cards. No sympathy from me.
--
Will
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 3:51 PM Chuck Guzis via cctalk
wrote:
>
> On 5/21/19 12:34 PM, William Donzelli via cctalk wrote:
> > I might think far more "obsolete" than "bad idea". It
On 5/21/19 12:55 PM, William Donzelli wrote:
> You can't blame anyone but they idiot using a 3 wheel cart while
> moving decks of cards. No sympathy from me.
They were using what was available. I&R bought their own four-wheel cart
(looked like a standard gray industrial shop cart that you can purc
On 5/21/19 1:51 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
...except when it didn't. On more than one occasion, I recall watching
some poor soul with a cart balanced with long (3 foot) trays full of
cards, hitting a lifted separator strip in the raised floor. Over goes
the cart, the cards spread in e
On 5/21/19 1:17 PM, Grant Taylor via cctalk wrote:
> I'm sure that was /a/ problem. But I'm not comfortable attributing that
> problem to the raised floor.
>
> I expect that the same problem would be effected by an elevator that
> doesn't stop perfectly level with the floor, or has too wide a ga
On 5/21/19 3:33 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
How well sealed were the raised floors? I ask this because i recall an
episode or two where a disk drive would spring a leak and make a beautiful
slippery pool on the floor, just waiting for the next operator to dash
by. I always wondered how m
It's been taken.
> Hi,
>
> I got a stash of documentation yesterday. Found a book "WANG 370
> calculating system, program library volume 1" which I don't have any use
> for. Looks to be almost unread, it has become a bit yellow and it has a
> small sticker on the front page. Printed in 1968.
>
> I
Chuck Guzis wrote:
> How well sealed were the raised floors?
If you mean "when properly installed", pretty well.
If you mean "as actually used", not at all.
With the exception of the very small raised floor under
the HP-3000 in my high school, every place I've encountered
raised floors there wer
-Original Message-
> From: cctalk On Behalf Of Chuck Guzis via
> cctalk
> Sent: 21 May 2019 22:33
> To: Grant Taylor via cctalk
> Subject: Re: Pleas ID this IBM system
>
> On 5/21/19 1:17 PM, Grant Taylor via cctalk wrote:
>
> > I'm sure that was /a/ problem. But I'm not comfortab
> From: Mister PDP
Well, I verified that the LSI-11/2 should work in a Q22 backplane -
in the sense that the only pins it tries to talk to are standard
QBUS pins, and AF1/AH1 for SRUN. It doesn't drive BREF, which might
cause issues in later QBUS systems.
Although it's a different board from
I liked raised flooring you can clean the room up fast by stashing
stuff in the non critical to airflow areas! see
we were lucky when comshare of an arbor division on phx moved out
where they designed IBM channel interfaces for xerox sigma 9s
We got their
On 05/21/2019 04:33 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
How well sealed were the raised floors?
Not at all. They were 2 foot squares sitting on adjustable
pillars. Each pillar supported 4 tiles where they all met
at the corners. You could easily slip a punch card (or
credit card) between most
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 4:56 PM Noel Chiappa via cctalk
wrote:
>
> Well, I verified that the LSI-11/2 should work in a Q22 backplane -
> in the sense that the only pins it tries to talk to are standard
> QBUS pins, and AF1/AH1 for SRUN. It doesn't drive BREF, which might
> cause issues in later QB
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 5:34 PM Glen Slick wrote:
>
> On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 4:56 PM Noel Chiappa via cctalk
> wrote:
> >
> > Well, I verified that the LSI-11/2 should work in a Q22 backplane -
> > in the sense that the only pins it tries to talk to are standard
> > QBUS pins, and AF1/AH1 for SR
Too funny that was
73 Eugene W2HX
-Original Message-
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Will Cooke via
cctalk
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2019 1:58 PM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: Re: apollo psa test point adaptor
> On May 21,
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 09:52:19AM -0600, Grant Taylor via cctech wrote:
> I think Google and their YAWNs
Definition, please? Wikipedia and Urban Dictionary are no help. A Google
search itself is nothing but false positives.
mcl
On 5/21/19 5:33 PM, Craig Ruff via cctech wrote:
The NCAR Wyoming Supercomputer Center has raised floors of about 20 feet.
Did the support posts go all the way down? Or was there some sort of
grid work that supported the raised floor above an open area that
contained the PDUs?
I ask becaus
The NCAR Wyoming Supercomputer Center has raised floors of about 20 feet. The
auxilary cooling and PDUs are installed down there. Needless to say, you don't
pull a floor tile there unless you are on the facility staff!
Interesting.
The arguments I’ve heard from a few data center builders/managers is that the
main factor in how a DC is built is that can the business be insured against
catastrophic loss. It has to meet all fire codes and has to be reasonably
resistant to unforeseen catastrophes, like flooding a
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