Haha, I was just poking at my old BB too. I miss that thing, it was pretty
nice when hooked up to a BES. The iPhone has been the only device I ever liked
better, and even then not every aspect. With RIM all but defunct I’d love to
see the BB OS source be released some day too. Of course it’d
On Tue, Aug 29, 2023 at 7:38 PM David Arnold via cctalk
wrote:
>
> Some of you might recall that Apple released a series of machines based
> on the Newton OS in the early 1990s.
BTDT, got the shirt.
https://i.imgur.com/pgFDNrO.png
Finishing up
The BB and Palm and Treo were faster and far more usable that the Newton.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Aug 29, 2023, at 18:59, Wayne S wrote:
>
> I used a newton and still have it a box. It was heavy and very slow.
> Graffiti didn’t work very well either. Microsoft came put with th
I used a newton and still have it a box. It was heavy and very slow. Graffiti
didn’t work very well either. Microsoft came put with their first notepad
running Win/NT a few years after that but it was slow too. I think Newton was
just ahead of it’s time. The cpu’s needed to run it efficiently h
On 8/29/23 7:28 PM, David Arnold wrote:
Some of you might recall that Apple released a series of machines based
on the Newton OS in the early 1990s.
ACK
How do Palm Pilot's compare to the Newton?
I had someone I respect and trust make a lot of comparisons between a
Palm T3 (?) I used to carr
Thanks David for taking this on. I think there are many who would
welcome Apple releasing Newton as they did for the early Macintosh
implementations.
> On Aug 29, 2023, at 8:28 PM, Fred Cisin via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> I was worried before the first lunar landing, because prior to sending
> passengers, they had never previously managed a soft landing, nor take-off
> from anywhere but Earth.
That's only partly true. The Surveyor craft had
Some of you might recall that Apple released a series of machines based
on the Newton OS in the early 1990s. There were eight models in total
from Apple, and a few more from third parties who licensed both the
hardware and software to make eg. ruggedized handhelds, or "smart"
(landline) phones
I was worried before the first lunar landing, because prior to sending
passengers, they had never previously managed a soft landing, nor take-off
from anywhere but Earth.
Then, one of the Sci-Fi magazines included a very short story (a couple of
paragraphs), in which the capsule settled down
> On Aug 29, 2023, at 8:03 PM, Sellam Abraham via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Aug 29, 2023, 7:02 AM Gavin Scott via cctalk
> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Aug 29, 2023 at 6:22 AM Peter Coghlan via cctalk
>> wrote:
>>> You reckon someone in Moscow is wishing they heard about this trick a
>> week ago?
On Tue, Aug 29, 2023, 7:02 AM Gavin Scott via cctalk
wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 29, 2023 at 6:22 AM Peter Coghlan via cctalk
> wrote:
> > You reckon someone in Moscow is wishing they heard about this trick a
> week ago?
>
> They instead chose the ever-popular Simplified Planetary Landing
> Approach Tr
On 8/29/23 06:30, Chris Zach via cctalk wrote:
Oh baloney. As long as the backplane pins are not mushed
these are surprisingly easy to fix and mouse crap can be
vacuumed out and cleaned off the cards and pins.
The thing that drove me the most nuts was finding a
backplane wire that had worn th
I hate what epay is doing to our hobby.
I prefer to sell and trade between our selves as reasonable prices
understanding that a lot of what we do is sweat equity.
If you think the hobby is bad, you should see what happened to housing.
"I know what I got!"
I have a lot of different geeky hobbi
On Tue, Aug 29, 2023 at 6:22 AM Peter Coghlan via cctalk
wrote:
> You reckon someone in Moscow is wishing they heard about this trick a week
> ago?
They instead chose the ever-popular Simplified Planetary Landing
Approach Trajectory.
-BUT- That does not mean it *can't* be restored, only that $15,000 is
ridiculous for a machine that clearly needs an expert with time and money.
b
On Tue, Aug 29, 2023 at 7:54 AM Mattis Lind via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> Den tis 29 aug. 2023 kl 13:30 skrev Chris Zach via cctalk <
>
Den tis 29 aug. 2023 kl 13:30 skrev Chris Zach via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org>:
> Oh baloney. As long as the backplane pins are not mushed these are
> surprisingly easy to fix and mouse crap can be vacuumed out and cleaned
> off the cards and pins.
>
> The thing that drove me the most nuts was
Oh baloney. As long as the backplane pins are not mushed these are
surprisingly easy to fix and mouse crap can be vacuumed out and cleaned
off the cards and pins.
The thing that drove me the most nuts was finding a backplane wire that
had worn through its insualtion and shorted against another
Fred Cisin wrote:
On Tue, 29 Aug 2023, Tom Hunter via cctalk wrote:
My trick for successful landing the CDC Cyber/6000 series lunar lander
version was to set the initial height above the moon's surface to the
minimum height of 1' and then let it drop. I never successful landed from
the default
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