On Tue, 11 Aug 2015, Jay Jaeger wrote:
Aside from the write pre-comp thing which you seem to have in hand (and
which is generally handled by the *drive*, not the controller, i.e., the
bit timing from the controller does not change, as far as I know), one
Au contraire.
Write precompensation is
On Sat, 8 Aug 2015, Chuck Guzis wrote:
I've got a Linux utility to translate SIMH .tap to raw binary, if that's
interesting to anyone. I would have thought that such utilities existed
already.
They probably do, but I have written my own set of tools for reading and
writing TAP and AWS
On Tue, 4 Aug 2015, Guy Sotomayor wrote:
I spent some time today and made a video of my MP 3000 system booting up to
z/OS. The video is here: http://youtu.be/WnJmeQR0GQU.
I thought the P/390 was the smallest S/390?
Christian
On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, Rich Alderson wrote:
the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, *no matter what*, they
lose capacitance over time, until c. 14 years from manufacturer date
they are at 10% of rating.
Please excuse me, but this is utter nonsense.
Most electrolytics in our machines are
On Tue, 21 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:
But yes, selenium rectifiers rarely work now (although there are exceptions)
and when they fail they can take out the mains transformer. And they smell
horrible (think of school dinner cabbage!)
Huh? All devices with selenium rectifiers that I/we own are
On Wed, 21 Oct 2015, Paul Anderson wrote:
The VT101,02,31, and 32 are the same, as are the VT100, 105, and 125.
If you say they are the same, can you turn a VT101 into a VT102?
Christian
On Thu, 12 Nov 2015, Tom Moss wrote:
I've never seen anything works on the sector level, but there are plenty of
There is DITU (Disk-Image Transfer Utility) for MS-DOS, and it's free
including C source code. I use it e.g. to image the hard disk of a DOS PC
into a file (either network or
On Mon, 9 Nov 2015, Johnny Billquist wrote:
Normally, you'd call them Tx, Rx and GND, but anyway...
No, you do not need to loop back any signals. DEC didn't like to abuse modem
control for flow control.
What about the connections between the TTL signals and the line
drivers/receivers? There
On Tue, 10 Nov 2015, rod wrote:
They were for video in and out. You could sync the VT100 to a feed of
mono video and the overlaid picture would appear on the screen and at
the video out connector.
AFAIR you couldn't. You had to synchronize the external video source to
the VT100.
Christian
On Mon, 2 Nov 2015, Christian Corti wrote:
I wish it were true in my case. I don't even get it running under SIMH.
Is it possible that the error is because of the monitor not seeing the QD32?
At least if I netboot NetBSD it doesn't see the QD32 either, only the RQDX3.
[...]
Playing a bit
Hi all,
I'm trying to set up a MicroVAX II that has an SMD disk attached to an
Emulex QD32 controller. I need to test and/or format the disk and so I'm
looking for images of the Emulex diagnostic floppies (should be RX50
AFAIK). Those found at http://www.headcrashers.org/comp/rx50/ boot, but
On Fri, 30 Oct 2015, Jay Jaeger wrote:
I also have a QD32. I have Emulex diagnostics, but on a TK50, and I
don't have an image, nor do I have any diagnostic documentation.
However, when I ran the diagnostic (many YEARS ago) on my uVax II
(FVD32M) it was self-explanatory.
[...]
I wish it were
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015, Chris Elmquist wrote:
On Thursday (11/05/2015 at 10:59AM -0800), John Ball wrote:
I've been trying for the past week to verify that telephony on my teletype
machine (model 33) is functioning properly but the biggest hurdle I am
running into is I have nothing to easily dial
On Fri, 6 Nov 2015, Jos Dreesen wrote:
Eric Smith and I have been looking for these for a long time.
They are BASF floppies, though.
As are mine... ( some 3M and CDC disk also part of the haul )
Does that mean they will need baking ?
Never had any problems with 8" BASF floppies (and 5¼"
On Fri, 30 Oct 2015, Jon Elson wrote:
On 10/30/2015 09:42 AM, Christian Corti wrote:
[...]
AFAIK). Those found at http://www.headcrashers.org/comp/rx50/ boot, but I
have not the faintest idea of how to start anything in there; even a "DIR"
How about HELP or even "?"
I seem
On Tue, 25 Aug 2015, Doug Jackson wrote:
This about screen pretty much sums it up.
http://gmane.org/about.php
[...]
Severalmailing list archives http://gmane.org/links.phpexist, but these are
all hidden under a web interface. Reading mail that way is not convenient.
Reading mail as if it
On Tue, 25 Aug 2015, jwsmobile wrote:
Also injecting the list into the usenet mess violates any rights the authors
here have in who reads the discussion. Of course who can chime in is
controlled, but I'm just paranoid enough I'd not like to have all this firing
off into all the usenet
On Fri, 4 Sep 2015, j...@cimmeri.com wrote:
culture re what is offensive. His remarks did not bother me because they
were "typically German." Maybe me saying that will offend Holm... lol...
Hey, they weren't "typically German"... we don't want to make
generalizations, do we?
I think the
On Fri, 4 Sep 2015, Jay West wrote:
No, there's no retrobrite involved. Just a normal spray on household
cleaner, followed by Magic Eraser and a lot of elbow grease. Yep, Magic
Eraser is a wonderful thing.
Or for those on my side of the world: Sidol Kunststoffreiniger
Can't imagine anything
On Sat, 5 Sep 2015, Al Kossow wrote:
They were common. I worked on a bunch of them. Expect the vacuum sensors to
be bad
in the columns. I think Guy still has a couple of them.
We've repaired them with cut outs from latex gloves. The problem is the
membrane that became brittle with the time.
On Fri, 11 Sep 2015, Dave Wade wrote:
Could not find anything on their web site...
You have to ask them directly, they should still have all the means
because they also do ATB stuff. That's what we did a few years ago, but
our "project" stalled because they wanted some obscure file format
On Thu, 10 Sep 2015, Simon Claessen wrote:
btw. in the Netherlands where I live, they are called ponskaarten and are
nowhere to be find also. We only have one box of fresh cards and one box of
used cards with our IBM 029. Of course the unused cards stay in the depot
until we can do something
On Tue, 5 Jan 2016, Fred Cisin wrote:
1) if the alignment of the head of the original recording and of the
overwrite head are not a perfect match, then there can be some residual data
somewhat off axis.
At a first thought I don't see how there can be residual data because
there is the tunnel
On Mon, 21 Dec 2015, William Donzelli wrote:
But considering the mix of 50 and 60 Hz stuff you likely have by now
(that is what you get for moving!), spending some decent money on a
real VFD might be worth it. I might think a cheap VFD may give
ferroresonant iron fits with all those extra
On Tue, 17 Nov 2015, et...@757.org wrote:
By any chance could someone configure the mailing list to add or [cc] or
[cct] into the beginning of the subject line? Not looking to filter, just not
looking to delete messages.
I *hate* modified subject lines, and I *hate* subjects that don't match
On Wed, 1 Jun 2016, Chuck Guzis wrote:
At random, I've flipped over the 4 keyboards nearest me to read
thelabel. All say "Model M" along with the plant number. The part and
FRU varies; the one I'm typing this on is 1391401 for the part number.
And all my keyboards say "MANUFACTURED IN
On Fri, 15 Jan 2016, Piero Andreini wrote:
I scanned several manuals belong the Alphatronic P2 300dpi pdf no
compression.
Nice; is there any manual not found on
ftp://computermuseum.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/alphatronic/
?
And BTW, IMO 600dpi is a *minimum* nowadays. No matter what some
On Mon, 8 Feb 2016, Mattis Lind wrote:
layers of of a multilayer PCB. As mentioned earlier in this thread I did
such a conversion on a MSV11-D board more than 25 years ago and then I had
to lift up this pin and connect it via an extra wire.
What about the DRAM refresh? 4116 have a 7 bit
On Mon, 8 Feb 2016, Ian S. King wrote:
Yes, its faceplate reads 'PDP-11', not 'PDP-11/20'.
Actually the faceplate reads 'pdp11' ;-)
Christian
On Wed, 10 Feb 2016, CuriousMarc wrote:
Note that Christian Corti stated that his drive is capable of 9-track
operation. That's an E.
It is not an E.
(Apparently that will also write 9-track PE at 1600bpi, but it will write
9-track NRZI at 800bpi).
I would know that ;-)
Interesting
On Fri, 12 Feb 2016, Curious Marc wrote:
Can you confirm it can read and write 9 track formats in PE 1600 cpi?
Was there ever a 7970B with PE? I have the manual matching this unit
(serial number is marked on the cover page) and there's no mention of PE
AFAIK. It's the 1971 version of the
On Thu, 11 Feb 2016, Christian Corti wrote:
I have a 7970B (-236) with options 127, 006, 007, 012 and 023.
According to the HP 1000 Peripherals Selection Guide from 1982, page 16,
option 236 specifies an 800bpi master magnetic tape subsystem with one
drive and two-card 13181B interface
On Mon, 25 Jan 2016, Rik Bos wrote:
These tapes where used in a number of machine such as 9825, 9831, 9835, 9845,
9915, and 85A There was also at least 1 external tape drive that used these
[...]
Aagh, I forgot about the HP85 some instrument programs where written for
[...]
For me, the most
On Mon, 25 Jan 2016, Oliver Lehmann wrote:
Not so much of luck so far
MS-DOS Kermit should run just fine under Windows, at least the last time I
tried it...
Christian
On Tue, 26 Jan 2016, Chuck Guzis wrote:
So did Intel on the MDS. I don't recall if there was any significant
difference between Intel and HP MMFM encoding, however.
The initial CRC value ($ vs. $) and the header (six vs. four
bytes) are different, but the encoding was quite
On Sun, 14 Feb 2016, Jay Jaeger wrote:
Looking at this manual for the 7970B / 7970E I see that dual 7/9 track
heads did exist.
Yes, but only in read-only configurations.
Yours has a plate that claims it has option 127 (as
well as 6, 7, 12 and 23). The 127 implies a 9 track only head, but I
On Wed, 17 Feb 2016, Jose Manuel wrote:
I have a Kim 1 board.
Please contact.
So what? We have at least half a dozen KIM-1, some with expansion boxes,
EPROM burners, memory extension, etc.
;-)
Christian
On Wed, 17 Feb 2016, Peter Koch wrote:
But this gives me the opportunity to ask wether anybody else out there still
owns Cadmus equipment. If I will take these machines I might need spare
parts and boot media (or tape images). Anybody has such stuff?
Of course :-) We have I think three 9900
On Mon, 22 Feb 2016, Paul Birkel wrote:
My PDP-11 is labeled as "S-386" and dated 9/23/70, which I guess makes it
fairly early in the production run (but I do wonder what the initial
manufacturing rate was given the relative riskiness of this new
architecture). Anyone have S# and dates for
On Wed, 9 Mar 2016, Jay West wrote:
Anyone have any pictures, datasheets, or other ephemera related to Sequoia
Systems line of fault tolerant systems?
That's what I found in the Computer Review No. 1 from 1987, page 351:
SEQUOIA SYSTEMS: SEQUOIA POWER:
On Mon, 14 Mar 2016, Doug Ingraham wrote:
The only difference in NiMH and NiCd charging schemes occurs when rapid
charging them. When rapid charging both types would use a DV/DT technique
coupled with a temperature sensor. The DV/DT is much smaller for NiMH than
NiCd. So if they went to the
On Mon, 14 Mar 2016, tony duell wrote:
I am told some later drives used the spindle motor as a generator when the
power failed to provide the power for emergency retraction.
Yes, the HP 7905/7906 does this for example.
Christian
On Fri, 18 Mar 2016, Mike Ross wrote:
I just have the controller board; I don't have any of the hard drives
left. All I remember is the disk was an 8" and the interface is a
single 40-pin cable; so not SMD and not SCSI. Far too early for IDE or
ATA. Any suggestions for what the interface might
On Tue, 15 Mar 2016, Paul Koning wrote:
From the various comments, it sounds like NiMH is a useable substitute.
On the other hand, NiCd batteries are still readily available.
Yes, but NiCd cells really don't like being charged only and never
discharged. And they tend to crystallise quite
On Tue, 5 Apr 2016, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
http://www.retrocomputing.net/
Looks like he has both an 11/780 (though it looks to be in pieces) and a 390.
Impressive collection.
... that get's much smaller if you omit all those entries for flat band
cables, connectors, heat sinks, power
On Thu, 17 Mar 2016, Christian Corti wrote:
simple read(). All I get is
mt0: unknown opcode 0x80 status 0xc01 ignored
[...]
Ok, I was fishing deep in the TMSCP protocol manual, and after fiddling
with the MSCP driver I found out that Opcode 0x80 (OP.END) alone (page
A-2) means MSCP protocol
On Wed, 2 Mar 2016, E. Groenenberg wrote:
When looking for Unix distro's for rhe PDP-11, I did find information
of how to make a System II using a Unix version 7 as it's base.
I also came across some hits about the existence of System 5 Release 1
for the PDP-11 (basically intended to be only
On Thu, 3 Mar 2016, kra...@informatik.uni-stuttgart.de wrote:
On Wed, 2 Mar 2016, Martin Meiner wrote:
I am currently looking for documentation (configuration, SCH, ...) on DEC's
M865 Teletype-interface. Not the M8650 or M8655, mind you.
Could someone point me to the right direction?
We have
Hi,
I was given an Altos 486 Series 1000, and albeit its name sounds
promising, it's not the classic Z80 based Altos 486, but a modern UNIX
machine with i486 processor (non-PC architecture) from around 1992.
Problem: no tapes, no hard disk (was removed as it contained sensitive
data). Has
First I want to note that everybody is missing the subject about *square
1:1* displays...
On Mon, 16 May 2016, Ethan Dicks wrote:
I have been keeping my eye out for older panels. I have some 12" 4:3
and a few 17" 4:3 and I think one 19" 4:3. Never run across anything
larger. I don't think
On Fri, 13 May 2016, Peter Coghlan wrote:
for information about it has turned up very little except for a
reference on the DECUS website to:
V00250 UCAMS: Universal Cross-Assembler for Microprocessors
Version: February 1987
Oh yes, the good old "Universal Cross-Assembler für
On Tue, 10 May 2016, tony duell wrote:
Yes indeed. Fortunately this one wielded under my trimmer and all is
properly aligned now. All I need to do now is troubleshoot the keyboard
circuit which I hope is the same as the VT102...
In general it is a bad idea to cure faults by adjustments. Unless
On Thu, 14 Apr 2016, Yvan Janssens wrote:
Also, DD won't work on those disks; you'll have to use sg_utils and use raw
SCSI commands to dump the disks. Linux DD uses the system calls to read
block devices, and interestingly enough, they only support multiples of
512b for sector size on that.
On Sat, 7 May 2016, Mattis Lind wrote:
What are the failure modes of PROMs?
I had a PROM fail on the 11/45 CPU board. This PROM is responsible for the
Conditional Codes handling. There was one output that had failed. I think
that the output drivers may fail, because I was able to temporarily
On Tue, 19 Jul 2016, Swift Griggs wrote:
The photo of that unit is entertaining. Whoever buys it will need to setup
3x 30A 220v outlets. That's going to make some licensed electrician very
happy.
Why? 32A 3-phase CEE connectors (the red ones) are very common, especially
since most electrical
On Sat, 16 Jul 2016, Peter Corlett wrote:
main compelling feature of the A2000 was the built-in hard disk.
The A2000 did *not* have a built-in hard disk, that was the A3000. The
A2000 was just an "updated" A1000 in a large desktop case with Zorro
slots... completely braindead.
Christian
On Mon, 27 Jun 2016, CuriousMarc wrote:
side in which you have to insert a "key". Is the key just a small blade tool
or does it have to be more special shape than that?
Yepp, it's just a small blade; you could use a strong paper clip or a
small blade screwdriver instead.
Christian
[Exceptionally top-posting...]
There are two modules each containing eight pulse transformers. That's it.
The left module has the cover removed.
No memory, no register. This board is from 1971, so it would contain some
TTL FFs or RAM (e.g. 7489) for registers.
Christian
On Wed, 1 Feb 2017,
On Thu, 2 Feb 2017, dwight wrote:
Are you sure the cores are transformers and not memory
cores?
Yes, because (ROM) memory would have *many* wires through each core /
around each transformer rod.
Christian
Hello,
amongst other panels and things (CDC 6600 dead start panel, PDP-15
frontpanel) I got this one:
http://up.picr.de/28257957bg.jpg
I *guess* it also comes from the CDC 6600 but I'm not sure. Can anyone
identify it?
Christian
On Thu, 2 Feb 2017, Adrian Graham wrote:
is fixed 5v. Also you'd expect that sampling at four times the clock speed
(they'll both do 25Mhz with 6 channels) then every pulse would be picked up.
No, because the pulse length may be far inferiour to the sample clock
rate. You may also need to
On Mon, 13 Feb 2017, Philipp Hachtmann wrote:
- the USB connector will be replaced by a mini (NOT micro!!) USB connector.
What's wrong with USB-B? I consider both Mini and Micro as not
mechanically reliable, i.e. I fear that the cable will unplug itself or
the mechanical strain will break
On Tue, 17 Jan 2017, Al Kossow wrote:
let me see what I can get to on it. we got a ton of stuff from the stuff
we bought in Germany
That is where our GA stuff comes from ;-)
So probably you could have manuals and software for the SPC-16.
Christian
On Tue, 17 Jan 2017, Chuck Guzis wrote:
I find it curious that what seems to be collected in the minicomputer
area seems to be gear of major brands.
Me too :-)
Does anyone collect Varian minis?
Yes! We have a couple of Varian 620/f (some with expansion boxes)
Or General Automation?
On Thu, 19 Jan 2017, Andy Cloud wrote:
1. What do you use to clean the exterior plastic and/or metal if
applicable? I'm always worried about staining the plastic using strong
solvent... could you also include what type of cloth/sponge/anything you
use :)
The best for cleaning plastics is this:
On Thu, 19 Jan 2017, Chris Osborn wrote:
I do it by using a GBS8200 to convert the RGB output to VGA. I also use
"VGA" is RGB, too ;-)
I guess you mean converting CCIR timing to "VGA" timing. This is not a
matter of simple conversion; you need to recreate the picture (like
sample it and
On Tue, 20 Sep 2016, Eric Smith wrote:
On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 7:42 AM, Denise de Vries
wrote:
Does anyone know of documentation for the HP9895A format with its own M2FM
encoding?
I have a kryoflux preservation stream but so far can make no sense of it.
I've
On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Josh Dersch wrote:
with the TC11 system," and I haven't managed to find it. I *have* found
this:
http://mirrors.pdp-11.ru/inf.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdp11/dtf.mac
... which is simply a mirror of our FTP server at
ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/cm/...
I
On Thu, 10 Nov 2016, Noel Chiappa wrote:
BTW, I noticed a couple of places in DTF.MAC where error checking code was
commented out, e.g.:
;EHLT4:XX ;HALT WITH BLK#IN LIGHTS, CONTINUE
; MOV #257.,R0;TO FIND DATA WORD POSITION
; ADD TOG1,R0
On Wed, 9 Nov 2016, Noel Chiappa wrote:
Having just looked at the original :-), it did have two messages:
"ready drive 0 and type y"
and
"tcf: error"
Seems the original must have been the XXDP TC11 DECtape formatter program
by Robert J. Collins. I have no clue where I found the RT11
On Mon, 24 Oct 2016, Paul Koning wrote:
You need to look at the PDP-11 UNIBUS Design Description document on
Bitsavers. Firstly, in section 4-1, it specifies which chips to use
and recommends not using a whole list of other chips. The only
recommended chips are: 8640, 8641 and 8881.
Sure.
On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, jos wrote:
On 17.11.2016 17:18, Murray McCullough wrote:
Today in the age of pointer-graphics, ie., using a mouse, is a very
important day: Nov. 17, 1970, Doug Engelbart, of SRI, Menlo Park, CA,
invented the mouse or granted a patent for "X-Yposition indictator for
a
On Fri, 11 Nov 2016, Al Kossow wrote:
No one is making new 80 column punched card stock either.
No stock, or no cards? I would think that one of the paper
manufacturers would be putting out postcard stock of the right
specifications.
This has been discussed for several years here. No one
On Sun, 30 Oct 2016, allison wrote:
Later versions like 2.9 and V7 do want I
That's wrong. We run 2.9BSD on our 11/34, initially on two RL01 disks,
now on one RL01 (as boot and swap device) and one RA80 (there is a
third-party MSCP driver for 2.9BSD). I need to upgrade the machine with a
On Tue, 25 Oct 2016, Guy Sotomayor Jr wrote:
OK, re-reading the first part of section 5.2.5, it?s pretty clear that the
Unibus is 120-ohm:
A bus terminator is defined as a Unibus element or part of an element containing
a resistive network which connects to the end of a Unibus segment and
On Mon, 5 Dec 2016, Glen Slick wrote:
I tried using ImageDisk on a PC to read the two HP 1630 3.5-inch
floppies I have (10304 8085 preprocessor, 10342 HP-IB, RS-232C/V.24,
RS-449 preprocessor). It appeared to be able to read the expected data
just fine. Singled sided disk with 16 256-byte
On Tue, 3 Jan 2017, Ethan Dicks wrote:
On Tue, Jan 3, 2017 at 8:04 PM, Charles Dickman wrote:
I am looking for schematics or any documentation for the LA180
interface for the PDP8/e. A scan would be great. I want to see if I
can use it to interface to a Centronics interface
On Tue, 3 Jan 2017, Paul Koning wrote:
The key questions for reconstructing such a device is what the
modulation scheme is, and the pulse pattern. There might be marker
pulses for sector start, for example, or that might just be derived from
a counter in the controller.
It's in the
On Mon, 2 Jan 2017, Jon Elson wrote:
(For reference, we were talking about my experiences with a Bendix G-15, not
an LGP-30.) So, I think the G-15 drum had a brass sleeve that might have
How should I know? Change the subject then!
Christian
On Wed, 4 Jan 2017, Cory Heisterkamp wrote:
I'm far from an expert, but it certainly looks like an oxide coating to
me. I'm reminded of the folklore when IBM was developing the RAMAC and
Yes, it is ferric oxide.
http://www.radar58.com/temp/drum.jpg
http://www.radar58.com/temp/drum2.jpg
On Mon, 26 Dec 2016, Adam Sampson wrote:
"Underhill Engineering Co Ltd" painted on the top in the eBay pictures
(if you squint) is a bit of a giveaway!
I was only able to see "Under...".
They have a nice page about the machine's history:
On Fri, 23 Dec 2016, Cory Heisterkamp wrote:
Yep Chuck, this is the CA machine. I was surprised it never reared its
head on classiccmp the past few days. -C
If you tell me its serial number I can eventually tell you who was/were
the previous owner(s) ;-)
Christian
On Fri, 23 Dec 2016, Cory Heisterkamp wrote:
I recently became the owner of an LGP-30, supposedly in 'working'
condition. However, the machine is roughly 2000 miles from me and will
need to be transported by freight. Before it's palletized, are there any
special precautions I should take to
On Tue, 28 Mar 2017, Evan Koblentz wrote:
"What do an Apple 1, Commodore 65, Enigma Machine, and the inventor of C++
all have in common?"
They're just overestimated pieces of junk ;-) (and C++, not its inventor)
[duck...]
Christian
On Tue, 28 Mar 2017, Systems Glitch wrote:
Looks similar to a Mentec KDJ11-B workalike, I don't remember their
designation. Onboard RAM and DLV11-J from what I remember...
The board says SBC J11-8, so that should give a hint.
Christian
On Wed, 15 Mar 2017, dwight wrote:
The Olivetti used a piece of wire for the delay line. I forget what the
Dielh Combitron used but I know it used a two delay lines. One was for
registers and the other was for lookup tables that loaded at turn on
time from a metal tape ( as I recall ).
I can
On Mon, 20 Mar 2017, Ed wrote:
Looking for windows 1.x for HP-150 touchscreen Also looking for
Look at the obvious hpmuseum.net site, it's there.
Christian
Hi,
I have another frontpanel, this one is from Plessey Peripheral Systems and
must come from a 16 bit system. It's only the board with LEDs and
switches. Does anyone know the system this panel comes from?
http://computermuseum.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pics/temp/plessey_fp.jpg
Christian
On Sat, 1 Apr 2017, Peter Corlett wrote:
Both USB 2.0 and PCI are orders of magnitude faster than real-world
wifi. Even ISA will give wifi a run for its money. I recommend you not
bother with wifi if you care about network performance.
No, USB 2.0 is way too slow for 802.11ac that outperforms
On Fri, 3 Mar 2017, Jules Richardson wrote:
Thanks to both of you. I came back to cctalk after not checking it for a few
days, and wondered what the %$#^ was going on, with every message showing
with cctalk as the "from" field.
I'm another one who dislikes the new system. It would be much
On Thu, 9 Mar 2017, Tor Arntsen wrote:
I did an strace and I can confirm that the Linux 'whois' client that I
used from those various sites sends '-T dn' (or actually -T dn,ace)
write(3, "-T dn,ace uni-stuttgart.de\r\n", 28) = 28
I can't see where this whois originates from, it has version
On Mon, 6 Mar 2017, Mouse wrote:
Only if you don't bother editing it down to whichever address you want
to reply to (as I did for this message). If your user agent doesn't
let you do that, well, your choice of a crippled user agent (and an
inability to edit the list of recipients is a pretty
On Mon, 6 Mar 2017, Mouse wrote:
Yes, and it must not be in the Reply-To: field because in normal
cases, this field is the one used for replying, and I want to reply
to the list, and only to the list.
...that's sure what this sounds like. If so, I have little sympathy
for your position.
So
On Mon, 6 Mar 2017, Mouse wrote:
[...]
And BTW, what you are doing is not clever at all:
mo...@rodents-montreal.org
SMTP error from remote mail server after initial connection:
host MX-4.rodents-montreal.org [98.124.61.89]:
550-.de's whois server, whois.denic.de, is completely
On Tue, 7 Mar 2017, Pete Turnbull wrote:
No, Mouse is right, it's broken:
Works for me (also from different networks outside the university
network):
# whois uni-stuttgart.de
% Copyright (c) 2010 by DENIC
% Version: 2.0
%
% Restricted rights.
%
% Terms and Conditions of Use
%
% The data in
On Sat, 4 Mar 2017, Alfred M. Szmidt wrote:
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
On Mon, 3 Apr 2017, Chuck Guzis wrote:
I'm probably showing my age (again), but "QIC" and "Supercomputers" just
seems to be about as related as "Chateau Margaux" and "Cheez Whiz".
If one is spending millions on a supercomputer, why would anyone want to
put software for it on a QIC cart?
Well,
On Mon, 17 Apr 2017, Rod Smallwood wrote:
There are what appear to be 1976 date codes on some caps.
If its that old then replace all and any electrolytic capacitors plus any
paper based caps.
If they aint bad now they soon will be.
*shaking head*
Sorry, this is just a plain dumb answer.
Hi,
for those who wonder why our mirror at
bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de
is outdated:
The reason is that the main rsync server is down/unavailable since March,
11. I've already contacted Al several days ago but haven't got any
response yet.
Christian
On Sun, 30 Jul 2017, Alexandre Souza wrote:
Light green? Was it battery electrolyte? Wash it with vinegar (yes,
vinegar) and after, wash with a good detergent and warm water.
No, *not* vinegar. Use citric acid. You don't want to force the formation
of copper acetate.
Christian
1 - 100 of 455 matches
Mail list logo