On 12/20/24 16:36, Van Snyder via cctalk wrote:
> The IBM 1403 printer had interchangeable print chains. I know of only
> four 1403 printers still working — two at the Computer History Museum
> in Mountain View, CA, one at the IBM Technology Center in Böblingen,
> Germany, and one near Endicott, NY
VCF East 2025 Exhibitor Registration is open:
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The show will be April 4-6 in Wall, NJ @ InfoAge Science and History Museums
Check the web page for updates over the next few weeks
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The IBM 1403 printer had interchangeable print chains. I know of only
four 1403 printers still working — two at the Computer History Museum
in Mountain View, CA, one at the IBM Technology Center in Böblingen,
Germany, and one near Endicott, NY.
All four have the 48-character "A" or "Business" chai
On Thu, Dec 12, 2024 at 7:58 PM Henry Bent via cctalk
wrote:
>
> On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 at 21:37, Cameron Kelly via cctalk <
> cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> > I have a QIC tape that I’m looking to get the contents off of and was
> > pointed in bear’s direction and he’s ignored my emails too.
> >
Was a datasheet ever offered for the DEC 'lemac' series
(de203/de204/de205)? Like the thing with all the registers and
programming information not the installation guide.
Regards,
Kevin
Collision detect check failure is a warning, not a send failure -- the message
is misleading There are several possible causes.
1. The transceiver predates SQE check, it doesn't implement the signal. If so,
turn off the message, you're fine.
2. The transceiver can do SQE but it's turned off.
On 20 December 2024 21:35:01 GMT, Kevin Bowling via cctalk
wrote:
>On Thu, Dec 12, 2024 at 7:58 PM Henry Bent via cctalk
> wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, 12 Dec 2024 at 21:37, Cameron Kelly via cctalk <
>> cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
>>
>> > I have a QIC tape that I’m looking to get the contents off of a
On 2024-12-20 21:35, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
On 12/20/24 16:36, Van Snyder via cctalk wrote:
The IBM 1403 printer had interchangeable print chains. I know of only
four 1403 printers still working — two at the Computer History Museum
in Mountain View, CA, one at the IBM Technology Center