Really though, you should find someone with an LMI Lambda to give
the keyboard to. It belongs with its mate.
Indeed! And if you do find a Lambda, then there would be quite a few
people interested in learning more gnarly details about the
architecture.
> I think this is a 3/60 processor. Not 3/50.
I said 3/50 because that is what the silkscreen says.
The silkscreen clearly says 3/60, you have a clear serial with a 5
right beside it to compare and any other marked component.
I know nothing about Sun hardware.
But an expert on Some
> >> Anyone who still has access to it should down-load the entire thing
promptly.
>
> > I am
> > wget -r -np -nc -U lynx -w 2 -l 0 http://pdp-8.org/
> > right now.
>
> Did you get it all? Anyone else download it?
I have got - probably - all.
Did you
Might be obvious, but since we know the IP, and that seems to be
stable one can just modify /etc/hosts to have a pdp-8.org address and
just mirror the result that way.
>Yes indeed! Still treasures to be found
>
> "There is no evidence that suggests this material is historically
> significant... I recommend disposal through the immediate destruction
> of all magnetic tapes."
Well, the semi-good news is that copies were made of most of
Yes indeed! Still treasures to be found
"There is no evidence that suggests this material is historically
significant... I recommend disposal through the immediate destruction
of all magnetic tapes."
Indeed
You don't even need call the law if you break a mercury thermometer,
which is about 3-4 grams of mercury. A bulb has what, a few
miligrams?
And if you break one you have to call HAZMAT. You did realize that,
didn't you? They contain mercury and any breakage requires professional
remediation by law!!
Uhm... No you don't. Stop the fearmongering please ...
The RICM just received $1,000 to buy a new oscilloscope. I would like a
four channel. and color would also be nice. The bandwidth doesn't need to
be high because we usually work on ancient equipment.
What would you suggest?
Siglent or Rigol are good bang for the buck. Rigol has a
This isn't a response, do not ignore.
http://www.unlambda.com/index.php?n=Main.Cadr
I mean other LOD bands, for later versions.
It was thus said that the Great Alfred M. Szmidt via cctalk once stated:
>
>> From: Alfred M. Szmidt
>
>> No even the following program:
>> int main (void) { return 0; }
>> is guaranteed to work
>
It was thus said that the Great Alfred M. Szmidt once stated:
>It was thus said that the Great Noel Chiappa via cctalk once stated:
>> > From: Alfred M. Szmidt
>>
>> > No even the following program:
>> > int main (void) { return 0; }
>>
It was thus said that the Great Noel Chiappa via cctalk once stated:
> > From: Alfred M. Szmidt
>
> > No even the following program:
> > int main (void) { return 0; }
> > is guaranteed to work
>
> I'm missing something: why not?
Yeah, I'm having a
> From: Alfred M. Szmidt
> No even the following program:
> int main (void) { return 0; }
> is guaranteed to work
I'm missing something: why not?
It boils down to pedantism. The encoding of the above is ASCII, and
the encoding type of a C program is
Anyone seen or got any?
> if it's not portable then it might as well be assembly and get the
> benefits that come with that.
Sorry, I don't agree. It _is_ possible to write portable code, but even
ignoring that, the benfits of writing in a higher-level language (good
control structures, complex
I have not had any emails from cctalk for 2 or 3 weeks. I went to my
subscription details and saw that emails were disabled for me. I re-enabled
them a few days ago but I still have not received any new emails. I can see
that there is traffic by looking at the archives, and if I am not
> Smalltalk invented scrollbars (they were clumsier than
> Apple's though) in the mid 70s.
Right. The typical desktop scroll bar as thought of today, however,
like typical desktop windows and menus, are largely an Apple
refinement if not invention.
Those where already available
Icons for files, the "OK" and "Cancel" buttons, scroll bars, all kinds
of utterly basic stuff were invented at Apple.
Well, other than that it wasn't.
>> No, Mouse is right, it's broken:
>
> Works for me (also from different networks outside the university network):
Interesting... I still get the same errors. Could it be
location-dependant in some way?
Tried from Boston, and Stockholm, so I don't think so.
Are you using the
> No, Mouse is right, it's broken:
Works for me
Ditto FWIW.
That seems to be peculiar to GNU. I haven't had any on GMAIL
Read the archive, it isn't peculiar to the gnu.org.
Two of the four ipv4 nameservers for gnu.org are broken. By those
odds, I would expect anything up to 50% of any mail you receive via
ipv4 to bounce.
Which has nothing to do with anything.
I gave you some hints in this direction the last time you mentioned you
were getting
> The whole "foo via cctalk" is *really* annoying... What is wrong with
> a half default mailman setup? There is no Reply-To header there, From
> is set to the person actually sending the message (as it should be).
Yes, that is most annoying. My complaint (and I guess many more
And for what it is worth, continued bounces.
From: cctalk-requ...@classiccmp.org
To: a...@gnu.org
Subject: confirm
Date: Sun, 05 Mar 2017 14:28:13 -0600
Your membership in the mailing list cctalk has been disabled
The whole "foo via cctalk" is *really* annoying... What is wrong with
a half default mailman setup? There is no Reply-To header there, From
is set to the person actually sending the message (as it should be).
And all the bounce addresses are set to
cctalk-bounces+foo=b...@classiccmp.org where
27 matches
Mail list logo