You must be a kid if you don't know what 5081 cards are or am I the only one on the list who does?
Jim

At 03:11 PM 6/9/2006, you wrote:
John,

> carry 5081 cards in my pocket

Wow!  5,081 cards in your pocket!?
Must be really small cards or really big pockets!
Talk about playing with a full deck!  :-)

Ah, it's Friday, isn't it?

Mike Walter




"Jim Bohnsack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Sent by: "The IBM z/VM Operating System" <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU>
06/09/2006 01:45 PM
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"The IBM z/VM Operating System" <IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU>



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Subject
Re: DDR to standard labeled tapes






Watch that dark ages stuff, Chuckie.  By the time I saw that problem, I
was
no longer keying on an 029 or maybe 026.  I had graduated to a 3278 or
3279, altho I did then and still do carry 5081 cards in my pocket.

Jim

At 01:31 PM 6/9/2006, you wrote:

>In the Dark Ages (stone knives and bear skins), CTCs were problematic for
>SA programs because the interrupts are generated by the system on the
>*other* end.  The various SA programs that still depend on an I/O
>interrupt in addition to, or instead of, LOADPARM were changed in the
>Middle Ages (represented by the invention of Sense ID) to examine more
>closely the cyberDNS of interrupting device.  3088s exacerbated the
>problem because it was so easy to fully interconnect the attached
systems.
>  Or someone decided that *now* would be good time to ENABLE one of the
>adapters.  :-)
>
>For a 3088/CTC, the channel reset only affects *this* system's I/O
status.
>  The other side can still restart the link and annoy your SA program.
>
>If you find an SA program that gets confused by random interrupts and
>cannot be overridden by LOADPARM, you should probably call it in.  With
>the XA I/O architecture there are all kinds of interrupts that can come
in
>that have nothing to do with "a tape was mounted" or "somebody flipped
the
>test/normal switch on the 3278" or "Attention was pressed on the 3215".
>
>Alan Altmark
>z/VM Development
>IBM Endicott

Jim Bohnsack
Cornell Univ.
(607) 255-1760





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Jim Bohnsack
Cornell Univ.
(607) 255-1760

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