There were a articles in the more technical journal-type mags 1981/82 that
discussed porting IBM DOS to non IBM 8088 systems that go into the
mechanics of it. DOS v 1.25 was the OEM version for the early ports.
*indirectly* from these you might find references to IBM BIOS porting and
who did it, t
On 6/6/23 04:25, Bill Degnan via cctalk wrote:
> There were a articles in the more technical journal-type mags 1981/82 that
> discussed porting IBM DOS to non IBM 8088 systems that go into the
> mechanics of it. DOS v 1.25 was the OEM version for the early ports.
> *indirectly* from these you migh
On 6/6/2023 10:22 AM, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
On 6/6/23 04:25, Bill Degnan via cctalk wrote:
There were a articles in the more technical journal-type mags 1981/82 that
discussed porting IBM DOS to non IBM 8088 systems that go into the
mechanics of it. DOS v 1.25 was the OEM version for th
Chuck mentioned he world at Durango and there was a Poppy computer. I
quick Google search turned up a mention here:
https://www.nytimes.com/1983/11/30/business/sperry-introduces-personal-computer.html
"Still later, they designed a 80186/80286 based 16-bit system, the Durango
"Poppy"; MS-DOS was s
On 6/6/23 08:08, js--- via cctalk wrote:
>>
> As much as these writings are appreciated, I often find myself
> frustration by the assumption that the audience knows everything you're
> talking about. Just what are you talking about? I searched this
> entire thread for mentions of "Poppy" and "
I remember running SCO Xenix on a generic 286 with 1MB main RAM and an
Intel Above Board with 4MB of RAM. The Above Board board cost $4000
with the 4MB of RAM on it at the time.
The Above Board was populated with 256K x 1 DRAMS so it had 128 chips on
it. 64 on the main board and 64 on a dau
Chuck: Thanks but AFAICT the Columbia MPC-1600 was not PC-DOS compatible
MS-DOS and PC-DOS
Because PC-DOS and MS-DOS share the same origins, the quest for a compatible
operating system isn’t formidable. To successfully emulate PC-DOS, we at
Columbia Data Products (CDP) provided a second BIOS
On 6/6/23 10:22, Tom Gardner via cctalk wrote:
> Thanks but I'm pretty sure the Hyperion was not PC-DOS compatible.
We have to be careful when tossing around the term "PC-DOS compatible".
In particular, I'm reminded of a dodge used by Bill Godbout and his
Compupro S-100 8086 and 8088 products. E
> On Jun 6, 2023, at 2:33 PM, Tom Gardner via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> May I suggest compatibility is like pregnancy – you either are or you are not.
I'm reminded of a comment about the PDP-11 family:
"A PDP-11/xx is compatible with a PDP-11/yy if and only if xx == yy".
:-)
paul
On Mon, 5 Jun 2023, Tom Gardner via cctalk wrote:
Hi:
Doing some research for historical purposed – no litigation at all –
trying to identify the first “legal” PC-DOS compatible PC,
“legal” in the sense that it’s BIOS was not a copy of an IBM BIOS.
Eagle gets the honor of being first MS-DOS co
On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 3:04 PM db via cctalk wrote:
>
> Just before the end (for me anyway) we did a newer h/w
> revision starting from scratch keeping it 100% compatible but
> of course by then it was too late. I had very little to do with this
> project
> but I believe it was sold to Commodore.
On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 12:39 PM Santo Nucifora via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 3:04 PM db via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> That is very interesting. I've seen Commodore Hyperion's in the same case
> but with the molded "Commodore" brand instead of "Hyperion" but figure
> The 5150, as released in August 1981, had SIX ROM sockets. It had one
> 8K
> ROM for the BIOS, four 8K ROMs totaling 32K for BASIC, and one empty
> socket, which usually stayed empty. A company calling itself MBI sold
> an
> accessory ROM for that socket thatr added some trivial features.
>
I
Sellam,
Bo Zimmerman at Zimmers.net has a picture of one here:
http://www.zimmers.net/commie/canonical.php?UPTOP&cat=PC+Series&prod=1&model=PC-3052
Here is one booting up on Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFnPXH1Fy5w
The quality is not great for either of them and there are no internal
On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 1:09 PM Santo Nucifora via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> Sellam,
>
> Bo Zimmerman at Zimmers.net has a picture of one here:
>
> http://www.zimmers.net/commie/canonical.php?UPTOP&cat=PC+Series&prod=1&model=PC-3052
>
> Here is one booting up on Youtube:
> https://ww
The 5150, as released in August 1981, had SIX ROM sockets. It had one
8K ROM for the BIOS, four 8K ROMs totaling 32K for BASIC, and one empty
socket, which usually stayed empty. A company calling itself MBI sold
an accessory ROM for that socket thatr added some trivial features.
On Tue, 6
In 1983 or 1984?, PC-World magazine ran an article comparing compatability of
the clones. They "tested" based on which software would run, such as "Flight
Simulator". They used version 1.00 of XenoCopy, which deliberately would
only run on real genuine IBM 5150 PC, although the versions of Xen
>Message: 7
>Date: Tue, 06 Jun 2023 02:41:56 +
>From: John Floren
>Subject: [cctalk] Re: Getting floppy images to/from real floppy disks.
>To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
>
>
>It's funny that luggable power packs come up here as I'm trying to revive my
>Otrona >Attach
"The only possible way to have 100% compatability is copyright
infringement. But, you can certainly come up with something that is
similar enough to do what you need."
> On Jun 6, 2023, at 6:13 PM, Fred Cisin via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> "The only possible way to have 100% compatability is copyright infringement.
> But, you can certainly come up with something that is similar enough to do
> what you need."
That's not always true. Another way to get it is to
"The only possible way to have 100% compatability is copyright infringement. But,
you can certainly come up with something that is similar enough to do what you need."
On Tue, 6 Jun 2023, Paul Koning wrote:
That's not always true. Another way to get it is to implement from
sufficiently high
On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 8:01 PM Fred Cisin via cctalk
wrote:
> >> "The only possible way to have 100% compatability is copyright
> infringement. But, you can certainly come up with something that is
> similar enough to do what you need."
>
> On Tue, 6 Jun 2023, Paul Koning wrote:
> > That's not a
On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 1:21 PM Fred Cisin via cctalk
wrote:
> If/when I dig it out, how much should I ask for it? (Berkeley California)
> NO, Ed, I won't give it away AND pay shipping.
:D
> EARLY 5150, but with trivial modifications, such as additional holes in
> brackets for 4 half-height
On Tue, 6 Jun 2023, Bill Degnan via cctalk wrote:
I thought the goal back then was not 100% hardware compatibility, it was
MS/IBM DOS compatibility. To be able to load/run/copy files from one PC to
another, dBASE, Lotus, Wordstar, etc. I don't think most manufacturers
cared as long as the softw
On Tue, 6 Jun 2023, Sellam Abraham via cctalk wrote:
The primary distinguishing features of the very first run of 5150's are:
1) No "B" inside a circle stamped on the back panel
2) Only two case screws on lower right and left of back panel (none on top)
3) Black power supply
Here's a photo that
On Tuesday, June 6th, 2023 at 2:38 PM, Robert Feldman via cctalk
wrote:
>
>
> >Message: 7
>
> > Date: Tue, 06 Jun 2023 02:41:56 +
> > From: John Floren j...@jfloren.net
> > Subject: [cctalk] Re: Getting floppy images to/from real floppy disks.
> > To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Of
> If/when I dig it out, how much should I ask for it? (Berkeley
> California)
The 5150 or the ROM? :) I don't know about either but prices have been
getting ludicrous lately. I would be interested in playing around with the
ROM so if you ever dig it up and dump the contents. Or I can always
If/when I dig it out, how much should I ask for it? (Berkeley
California)
On Tue, 6 Jun 2023, Ali wrote:
The 5150 or the ROM? :) I don't know about either but prices have been
getting ludicrous lately. I would be interested in playing around with the
ROM so if you ever dig it up and dump the
In 1981, IBM immediately released the "PC Technical Reference Manual"
which included schematics, and source code for the BIOS ROM. The
I gave my copy of that to someone on this list in Toronto a few years ago.
If you buy a replacement of the old manual, the V2.02 is quite a bit
better.
On Tue, Jun 6, 2023 at 7:47 PM Paul Koning via cctalk
wrote:
> I'm reminded of a comment about the PDP-11 family:
>
> "A PDP-11/xx is compatible with a PDP-11/yy if and only if xx == yy".
That I suspect is actually false. The11/05 and 11/10 were the same
machine, ditto the11/35 and 11/40.
On Wed, Jun 7, 2023 at 1:36 AM John Floren via cctalk
wrote:
> Thanks, Bob, that would be very helpful! I think the biggest thing is
> figuring out how the pack was wired into the J4 header on the PSU... if
> you've got the manuals for the DC option, it might have schematics too.
Be very caref
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