i can give you a 166 for your smoothwall box, in exchange for the 150...
On 11/14/06, willie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tuesday 14 November 2006 21:13, Georgia Thomson wrote:
Hi everyone. just checking if any of you have any of the following
processors lying in your boxes o' bits. myself
On 11/14/06, Mitchell Hagerty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hey Georgia,
Don't count out the 8088 and 80186, You can find an 88 in IBM ATs
(often recycled as electric gate controllers) and the 186 was
primarily used in printers. Find a printer from the mid-80's you've
probably found a 186.
Good
Kyle Gordon wrote:
You should've seen the inferno on top of his birthday cake :-)
Kyle
Next birthday I'm 0x21 so you should be able to get away with six
candles, and only light two...
Gordon
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I still have an old IBM PS2 Model 60 lying in my mothers garage. This thing has
been dropped from the third floor and has been in a fire and still refuses to
die. They just dont make them like that anymore.
Claudio Calvelli [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Claudio-
The 8088 was the 16 bit chip,
Claudio Calvelli wrote:
Claudio-
The 8088 was the 16 bit chip, indeed, but it had an 8 bit adress bus.
The 8086 was superior to the '88 because it was a true 16bit cpu,
incorporating a 16bit address bus. The 8087 complements it to provide real
(floating point) calculations.
Yes,
Any use for a PDP-11/73? I haven't switched it on in years but it
does work.
Apologies I meant PDP-11/53 (actually very similar)
What's in it?
/me goes looking inside the PDP-11
KDJ11-D/S CPU board with a 15MHz CPU, 1536 (count 'em) kilobytes of RAM,
two serial ports
Hello, I am in the process of developing a Green Map project for Glasgow.
The project aims to make Glasgow a more sustainable city through the
creation of a locally focused web based Green Map and a series of
thematic paper based maps on issues such as recycling and reuse,
transport, food..
quite a collection you have there, though, why do you have the A1200 hard
drive in the acellerator bay?
I have an SGI box and a sun box looking for a home if you want to expand the
collection... also an HP9000, but it's a big um HUGE and power hungry.
On 11/15/06, Alistair J. Ross [EMAIL
Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
I believe RSX-11M may speak DECNet over a serial port.
That would be useful, I could use the VAX as a gateway to the pdp-11.
Unfortunately, it won't boot from DECnet over the serial port (I've
just tried) although it claims it can boot from DECnet over Ethernet
and over
Claudio Calvelli wrote:
No other removable media... but I am thinking it may be possible to
install a DEC o/s using a pdp-11 emulator (with any emulated removable
media which may be necessary) but making the emulator access the
real pdp-11's MFM disk during install - I do have a MFM controller
On Wed, 15 Nov 2006, Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
I believe RSX-11M may speak DECNet over a serial port.
DDCMP perhaps:
http://telecom.tbi.net/ddcmp.htm
Andrew
PS. A loving home can be found for any surplus Q-Bus goodness :o)
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Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
Claudio Calvelli wrote:
[snip]
Any use for a PDP-11/73? I haven't switched it on in years but it
does work.
What's in it?
Oh god, you woke the beast ... ;)
--
_ __/| William Anderson | Tim: Your cheese game is strong.
\`O_o' neuro at well dot com | Zane:
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