Different printing methods cost different amounts. The basic service at
shapeways is something called SLS , which is laser-sintered nylon powder.
It produces very good results in terms of both dimensional & shape accuracy
and the toughness of the part, but it's expensive.
The kind of printers peop
in my experience 3d printing is not cheap, you have to want the thing
kind of a lot
On Wed, 1 Jul 2020 at 15:50, Lee Kelley wrote:
>
> I don't know how common it is but our public library has a 3d printer and
> even though they won't print anything remotely gun related the will print
> most any
Ctrl-break-reset
http://bitchin100.com/wiki/index.php?title=Recovering_an_Unresponsive_Laptop
When the display comes on is it just black or do you see text? After the unit
has lost power completely you will need to do a hard reset to get it to boot
properly. I forget the key combination off the top of my head, but you hold
down a few keys and hit the reset button.
Jeff Birt
-Origin
I got a M100 off craigslist recently. In the parking lot it powered up with new
batteries (old ones in it literally crusty). When I got it home, it powered on
but after a few seconds the display just faded out, and it won’t power back on
unless I wait several hours, then it does the same brief p
I don't know how common it is but our public library has a 3d printer and
even though they won't print anything remotely gun related the will print
most anything else for 5 cents an oz.
On Wed, Jul 1, 2020, 17:41 B 9 wrote:
> Thanks, Lee! I appreciate the expert insight. I hope Steve is able to
Thanks, Lee! I appreciate the expert insight. I hope Steve is able to rejigger
the hook tabs with slightly less overhang.
$15 for 50¢ of material sounds crazy, but I don't have a 3-D printer. Are there
any 3-D print services that aren't so expensive? My local makerspaces have
closed their door
Nice!
On Wednesday, July 1, 2020, 10:44:32 AM EDT, Gary Weber
wrote:
STARDISK.COM is a TPPD2 file import/export utility for CP/M running on the NEC
PC-8401A(Starlet) or PC-8500. I've verified proper functionality with real
TPDD2 hardware so I have to conclude that yes the format of
Was just thinking that also. :)
On Wed, Jul 1, 2020 at 7:51 AM Kurt McCullum wrote:
> Interesting.
> If you have the cables, you can put a PC in between the TPDD2 and the
> Starlet and use that serial sniffer utility I sent you to see what's going
> on. That's how I figured out the TPDD2 sector
Interesting.
If you have the cables, you can put a PC in between the TPDD2 and the Starlet
and use that serial sniffer utility I sent you to see what's going on. That's
how I figured out the TPDD2 sector access protocol.
Kurt
On Wed, Jul 1, 2020, at 7:44 AM, Gary Weber wrote:
> STARDISK.COM
STARDISK.COM is a TPPD2 file import/export utility for CP/M running on the
NEC PC-8401A(Starlet) or PC-8500. I've verified proper functionality with
real TPDD2 hardware so I have to conclude that yes the format of the
request is correct.
On Wed, Jul 1, 2020 at 6:23 AM Kurt McCullum wrote:
> Alm
just an FYI,
* I have spent some time improving my REXCPM wiki page instructions
* I have not changed any of the code I supply, as of yet.
One thing that can be very confusing about REXCPM is that REXCPM actually
changes the banks allocated to system RAM.
This is the key function of the hardware.
Almost seems like an FDC request. I've never encountered it.
There is a response code 4X (pg42 of manual) where X can be 0-F which would
include 48. But you are looking for a request not a response.
What does STARDISK.COM do?
Is the rest of the TPDD request formatted correctly?
Kurt
On Tue, Ju
13 matches
Mail list logo