Reljmp.pdf on Steve's page
http://www.club100.org/memfiles/index.php?direction=0=nom=Steve%20Adolph=8154idtjifrfcaggk5712smhf1
On Sat, Aug 5, 2017 at 10:17 PM Willard Goosey wrote:
> On Sat, 5 Aug 2017 06:30:49 +
> Jim Williams wrote:
>
> > Semi-off
On Sat, 5 Aug 2017 07:12:01 +
Jim Williams wrote:
> The problem I'm working on now is sorting out where/how to set up the
> termcap to be suitable for the Model T (It's been years since I even
> messed with Linux). I have to figure out if I'm supposed to set it up
> in
On Sat, 5 Aug 2017 06:30:49 +
Jim Williams wrote:
> Semi-off topic, but the memory management thing made me remember:
> could a program implement a jump table storing the offsets from the
> start-of-program to the various routines and data, and then calculate
> the
Hi folks.
Days ago talking about the good old times with a friend of mine, he who in
those years owned a Olivetti M10 MODEM told me that he often downloaded the
images of the 10 most wanted issued by the FBI and could see them on the screen
or print them on paper.
The matter made me curious, so
> On Aug 5, 2017, at 09:40, Lee Kelley wrote:
>
> OH yes I'm am in the movie
> Actually a "Bad guy" in the movie has a laptop, it's a prop I set up, that is
> an ASUS 10 inch convertible and I have Club 100 sticker, sent to me by Rick a
> few years back, that is on the
OH yes I'm am in the movie
Actually a "Bad guy" in the movie has a laptop, it's a prop I set up, that
is an ASUS 10 inch convertible and I have Club 100 sticker, sent to me by
Rick a few years back, that is on the top covering the ASUS logo.
On Sat, Aug 5, 2017 at 11:36 AM, John R. Hogerhuis
On Sat, Aug 5, 2017 at 9:32 AM Lee Kelley wrote:
> Have any of you heard of the new movie Sense of Urgency, there is a
> Windows laptop type computer
> in it but it has a "Club 100" sticker on the lid of the computer.
>
> I didn't see the sticker but I saw you :-)
-- John.
Have any of you heard of the new movie Sense of Urgency, there is a Windows
laptop type computer
in it but it has a "Club 100" sticker on the lid of the computer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A12XHinvF18
It appears to be just a "cameo" but I thought some of you might be
interested.
Lee
--
Well there are termcaps for model t's. Note they would be different for
different charsets and the 200 larger screen.
But, you don't necessarily need a termcaps if your coding just for our
community. Especially if you want your code to work on Windows too. The
model t terminal escapes are
The service manual covers the hardware side fairly well, but I'm not aware of
the actual communication protocol being available anywhere.
As Willard says, the DOS and disk BASIC have to be loaded from disk; the SCREEN
command only selects the display mode.
m
- Original Message -
I haven't given up on the M.U.D. server. I managed to get Smaug loaded
onto my Win7 machine, really easily.
Right now all it does is allowed the admin to access the M.U.D. locally.
I still need to (re)learn how to make my own areas/mobs/etc. I figured
it out once, long ago, I'm sure I can
Someone pointed out much RAM a gopher client would eat. I'm wondering,
with the Rex 5 or the Woolly, with their on-board storage, wouldn't it
be possible to write a word processor or gopher client or other software
that needs more room, that basically uses the Model T's RAM as a window
into a
On Fri, 4 Aug 2017 18:17:17 + (UTC)
Jan Vanden Bossche wrote:
>Is there somewhere a description of how the DVI interface
> works, and what signals (type & speed) come out (and where) of the
> Model T ? And how they have to be interpreted ?Did you need to load
> any
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