No, we are not. The P800 series used a card format, the name of which
escapes me at the momen, but I believe it started with an M. The only
experience with Philips computers, other then the P800 series, is the
P2000. It was marketed by Philips Austria, and was a pre-PC system. I
believe there w
On 2019-10-26 20:01, Tony Duell via cctalk wrote:
On Sat, Oct 26, 2019 at 6:53 PM nico de jong via cctalk
wrote:
In order to test things, I've developped a simulator and assembler for
the P857, although without floating point and I/O processor, as I have
no documentation for that, so maybe I
On 2019-10-26 20:13, jos via cctalk wrote:
On 26.10.19 11:00, nico de jong via cctech wrote:
Hi all,
Back in the 70's and 80's Philips had a quite popular series of mini
computers called P800, which also branched out to the PTS series and
possibly other.
Could I be lucky to find other lis
Yes, exactly.
Do you have the manuals in a mailable version?
Cheers
Nico
On 2019-10-26 21:30, Adrian Stoness via cctalk wrote:
mean like this
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/800x795q90/r/922/b5tczU.jpg
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/800x533q90/r/922/XYBanl.jpg
https://imagizer.imagesh
Yes, I know of Vaxbarn. I have copied many of Camiels manuals, and he
has copied a lot of mine. I visited him and his lovely wife a few years
ago. Very agreeable people (and nice kids...)
I know about the P1000, but I've never seen one "on the flesh". When I
started to work for Philips Data Sy
The Honeywell does not look like a P800, and to the best of my knowledge
Philips (with one L) did their own development in the mini sector.
However, I do know that for example one of their text processing
systems, one in the P5000 range (the P5001?), was a rebadged Canadiann
system, Alas, the
The Philips P92xx series was the rebadged x16 stuff.
De
I came across an old copy of Popular Science on yesterday, forthwith I know
not how, that had a story of two vintage/old/retro/classic-computers. How
old? 1983. Coleco ADAM, my favourite, and Atari 600XL, not so much. I still
have my ADAM. No not why. But isn’t this why we all belong to classiccomp
> On Oct 27, 2019, at 9:25 AM, Dennis Boone via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> The Philips P92xx series was the rebadged x16 stuff.
Yes, that's what I understood as well. But others are not. The PR8000 is a
quite distinct design; I hope that at some point more documentation will
materialize. I hav
> On Oct 27, 2019, at 9:15 AM, nico de jong via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> The Honeywell does not look like a P800, and to the best of my knowledge
> Philips (with one L) did their own development in the mini sector.
>
> However, I do know that for example one of their text processing systems, one
> On Oct 27, 2019, at 6:34 AM, Murray McCullough via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> I came across an old copy of Popular Science on yesterday, forthwith I know
> not how, that had a story of two vintage/old/retro/classic-computers. How
> old? 1983. Coleco ADAM, my favourite, and Atari 600XL, not so much.
On Sat, 26 Oct 2019, jos wrote:
On software side not much : a single cassette with Fortran & manuals.
That is also the problem with our P856, I have a single-density FDC with
floppy drives but no floppy based operating system.
Christian
On 2019-10-27 15:56, Christian Corti via cctalk wrote:
On Sat, 26 Oct 2019, jos wrote:
On software side not much : a single cassette with Fortran & manuals.
That is also the problem with our P856, I have a single-density FDC
with floppy drives but no floppy based operating system.
Christi
Hi,
Some manuals are available at:
http://electrickery.xs4all.nl/comp/divcomp/doc/index.html
There is a simulator (and more manuals) at:
http://www.theoengel.nl/P800/p800sim.html
Greetings,
Fred Jan
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