Another batch of fresh stuff from Sellam's collection

2019-09-16 Thread Sellam Ismail via cctalk
It's time for another batch of exciting stuff from my collection to find
its way into yours!

Today's batch:

Compaq Contura 4/25
Compaq LTE/286 Laptop
Compaq Portable III Operations Guide + System Software
Packard Bell PB414A Multi-Media PC
Radio Shack 1982 TRS-80 Microcomputer Catalog No. RSC-7
Radio Shack 1983 TRS-80 Microcomputer Catalog No. RSC-8
Radio Shack 1985 TRS-80 Microcomputer Catalog No. RSC-12
A Practical Guide to the Tandy 1000SX
Heath Computer Systems H-386 Desktop PC
Gravis MouseStick GMPU
Logitech Wingman Attack Joystick
Modular CIrcuit Technology PC EPROM Programmer
Atari CX22 Trak-Ball
Kingston DataCard KTM-DC16/127 Hard Disk/Memory Expansion
Data General How To Use The Nova Computers Manual
DEC Digital Products and Applications (1971)
VAX Architecture Reference Manual
Macintosh PowerBook 1400c
Macintosh PowerBook 180
Apple 800K External Drive
Apple PC 5.25 Drive
AppleCD 300
AppleCD 300e Plus
American Megatrends Voyager 486 Motherboard
Zenith Data Systems N8003 External CD-ROM Drive
Apple LisaDraw Manual
Apple Lisa Office System Release 3.0 Manual
Apple 486/66 DOS Compatibility Card
Asante MC3NB NuBus Ethernet Interface
Kingroyal 2-serial, 1-parallel, 1-game Interface
STB 2-serial 1-parallel interface
Sealevel Systems 3088 dual-port serial card
Cardinal Technologies VGA 300
IEV Corp. VIP-2000 Interactive Graphics Controller
Datacopy Corp. Datacopy Model III
Domex UDS-IS10 SCSI interface
Talking Tech Bigmouth
Your PC Multi-Lab PCL-711 Analog and Digital I/O Card
Danford SEU 3800 multi-port serial card
Triad Systems PC-IDC-8 8-port ISA Serial Interface
U.S. Digital PC7166 Incremental Encoder Interface
Western Digital WD1003V-MM2 HD/FD Controller (Prototype?)
Supra SupraExpress 33.6i Voice Modem
3Com EtherLink III 3C509B-TPO
Allied Telesis AT-2000T-PNP TP ISA network interface
Advanced Logic Research 16-bit VGA/Parallel
Iwill SIDE VLB SCSI/IDE/FDC/I-O Controller
Adaptec AHA-2940UW Ultra Wide SCSI Controller
Berkshire Products PCI PC Watchdog
BusLogic BT-958 SCSI-3 Adaptor
Network Appliance 110-01579 PCI NVRAM Board
Ocean Optics ADC2000-PCI+ A/D Converter
Philips TV Tuner PCI Board
S&S Research MOTU PCI-324 Audio PCI Interface
Smart Modular Technologies 90079 Modem/Sound Combo Board
ATI Rage IIc AGP Graphics Card
Asus V8170/128M AGP Graphics Card
Matrox G45+ AGP Graphics Card
IBM 2330364 Token Ring Network Adaptor 16/4
SCO Informix v3.11 for the Apple Lisa 2
SCO Lyrix v3.10 for the Apple Lisa 2
SCO MF/SCO Level II COBOL v2.0 High Performance
SCO Multiplan v2.10B for the Apple Lisa 2
SCO Xenix Development System v3.0 for the Apple Lisa 2
SCO Xenix Operating System v3.0 for the Apple Lisa 2
SCO Xenix Text Processing System v3.0 for the Apple Lisa 2
Hands-On BASIC for the IBM PCjr
HP 82901M Flexible Disc Drive
HP 9885M Flexible Disk Drive
HP 10247A Clock Probe
HP 10248B Eight Bit Probe
HP 10248C Eight Bit Probe (Pod 1)
HP 10248C Eight Bit Probe (Pod 2)
HP 10248C Eight Bit Probe (Pod 3)
HP 10248C Eight Bit Probe (Pod 4)
HP 10248C Eight Bit Probe (1610B)
Convergent Technologies NGEN XM-003 Memory Module
Wico Command Control Joystick

Links to the newly listed items can be found in the usual place:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I53wxarLHlNmlPVf_HJ5oMKuab4zrApI_hiX0pNmy48/edit?pli=1&fbclid=IwAR29aeaPInesPowqSLeq_ElmtOwSThjfRAJyW9T_oN6mnjPPt4wO1CchMGQ#gid=949372371&range=A1

As always, please contact me directly by e-mail 
to inquire about an item.

Thanks!

Sellam


cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Fritz Mueller via cctalk
There were only 2 11/45s that I knew of.  The first was the “front end” 
that sat in front of all of the terminals and allowed connection to the 
various 10s (at the time there were 3: 2 KA10s and a KL10), C.MMP and 
CM*.  The other 11/45 ran the XGP...


They had moved on to a Xerox 9700 and DECSYSTEM-20s behind Micom port 
selectors by the time I first rolled up there in 1984.  CS still had a 
cluster of PERQs in Wean Hall.


Not too long after that, the DECSYSTEM-20s were decom'd, and the old 
terminal clusters were converted over to IBM PCs, Macs, and IBM RT 
Andrew workstations.


  --FritzM.



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk
11/40’s were pretty ubiquitous at CMU when I was there and at least as far as I 
could tell, were all configured pretty much the same (in that they all had 
custom writable control store).  I personally dealt with 3 different sets of 
11/40s:
A single 11/40 with WCS that I used for doing some image processing work
2 11/40’s tied together with a prototype of C.MMP’s cross point switch
C.MMP (16-way PDP11…I saw it running with 4 11/20s and 12 11/40s).  At the end 
the 11/20s were removed and just the 11/40s remained.

There were only 2 11/45s that I knew of.  The first was the “front end” that 
sat in front of all of the terminals and allowed connection to the various 10s 
(at the time there were 3: 2 KA10s and a KL10), C.MMP and CM*.  The other 11/45 
ran the XGP (Xerox Graphics Printer)…granddaddy of laser printers so that we 
could get “high quality” output (versus line printer).

TTFN - Guy

> On Sep 16, 2019, at 2:27 PM, Fritz Mueller via cctalk  
> wrote:
> 
> First off, I've had a couple of follow-ups on these units, so they are spoken 
> for at this point.
> 
> The member with first dibs has also offered to scan the docs and see that 
> they make their way to Al.
> 
> I was wondering if these were c.mmp cast-offs?  Guy: I encountered these in 
> the CMU computer club hardware room (Doherty Hall basement, I think?) circa 
> 1986.  There were a couple of '11/40s adjacent, and those did have some sort 
> of custom writable control store cards.
> 
> The computer club was cleaning house, so I hauled off an '11/45 with CPU 
> spares that looked pretty stock, the aforementioned memory units, and a rack 
> mount Tek 'scope (about all I could convince my friends to help me haul off 
> campus at the time :-)
> 
> Not sure what ever happened to the rest of the equipment that was down there. 
>  I know they had a couple of working Altos, on a thick net segment with the 
> old vampire transceivers that had the little round glass windows in an 
> aluminum box.  And what must have been parts of an earlier PDP (I remember a 
> smallish teletype bolted on to a piece of white Formica desktop.)
> 
>   --FritzM.
> 



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Fritz Mueller via cctalk
First off, I've had a couple of follow-ups on these units, so they are 
spoken for at this point.


The member with first dibs has also offered to scan the docs and see 
that they make their way to Al.


I was wondering if these were c.mmp cast-offs?  Guy: I encountered these 
in the CMU computer club hardware room (Doherty Hall basement, I think?) 
circa 1986.  There were a couple of '11/40s adjacent, and those did have 
some sort of custom writable control store cards.


The computer club was cleaning house, so I hauled off an '11/45 with CPU 
spares that looked pretty stock, the aforementioned memory units, and a 
rack mount Tek 'scope (about all I could convince my friends to help me 
haul off campus at the time :-)


Not sure what ever happened to the rest of the equipment that was down 
there.  I know they had a couple of working Altos, on a thick net 
segment with the old vampire transceivers that had the little round 
glass windows in an aluminum box.  And what must have been parts of an 
earlier PDP (I remember a smallish teletype bolted on to a piece of 
white Formica desktop.)


--FritzM.



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk
I don’t know.  It would be hard to replicate because of the custom HW and the 
custom uCode that ran on the 11/40s.  I even think that the 11/20s were 
modified as well.  So trying to figure that out would be “interesting”.  ;-)  
There is documentation on bitsavers that covers the custom uCode HW for the 
11/40s.  The MMU as I recall was also radically different than what was 
standard on 11/40s (and non-existant on 11/20s…the 11/20 changes started to get 
to be so large, I believe later on they just ditched the 11/20s and C. was just 
all 11/40s) to allow for  really large memory spaces…I don’t recall what the 
maximum possible memory on C. was, it did have 1.2MB while I was there.

And that’s just the HW.  Hydra (the OS that ran on C.MMP) was a capability 
based system (so you needed the proper capability to do anything).  I recall at 
one point the grad student who was doing work on the file system, “lost” the 
root capability to the file system…so it was no longer possible to create new 
file systems.

Since C.MMP was a “one off” system, don’t expect (even if the SW survives) that 
there’s an “installation guide”.  ;-)  It was pretty organic.  Last and not 
least, all of the code was either PDP-11 assembler or BLISS-11.  It was all 
cross built from the (heavily) modified TOP-10 systems that the CS department 
was running.

Hydra did a number of things that eventually lead to Accent and then Mach 
(which portions are still in use in the guts of OS X).  It was what we would 
call today a microkernel system in that the kernel was the only thing that ran 
in privileged mode.  Everything else were user processes (file system, drivers, 
terminal system, etc).  As I said, it was a capability based system, so to use 
something you needed to have a capability to it (files didn’t have Unix style 
permissions…if you had a capability to a file that capability determined what 
you could do to the file).  It had a number of reliability traits: it could 
detect failures in HW and in SW and restart the appropriate failed item.  In 
the case of CPUs and memory, it could “wall off” the failed component can cause 
diagnostics to be run to either isolate the problem further or determine that 
the failure is no longer present.

TTFN - Guy

> On Sep 16, 2019, at 10:59 AM, Paul Koning  wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On Sep 16, 2019, at 1:52 PM, Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk 
>>  wrote:
>> 
>> The only thing that I believe would have used these would have been C.MMP.  
>> It had 1.2MB of memory on it when I was there.
>> 
>> TTFN - Guy
> 
> It's been a long time since I've heard that reference.  Did any of that 
> software get preserved?  I wonder how hard it would be to make SIMH handle it.
> 
>   paul
> 



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Paul Koning via cctalk



> On Sep 16, 2019, at 1:52 PM, Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk 
>  wrote:
> 
> The only thing that I believe would have used these would have been C.MMP.  
> It had 1.2MB of memory on it when I was there.
> 
> TTFN - Guy

It's been a long time since I've heard that reference.  Did any of that 
software get preserved?  I wonder how hard it would be to make SIMH handle it.

paul



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Guy Sotomayor Jr via cctalk
The only thing that I believe would have used these would have been C.MMP.  It 
had 1.2MB of memory on it when I was there.

TTFN - Guy

> On Sep 16, 2019, at 10:45 AM, Al Kossow via cctalk  
> wrote:
> 
> I would be interested in putting up the later docs
> I wonder if Guy remembers what these were used for at CMU
> 
> On 9/16/19 10:19 AM, Shoppa, Tim via cctalk wrote:
>> The Microram was a multipurpose solid state memory chassis sold by EMM 
>> (Electronic Memories and Magnetics) with what we called later in the 1970's 
>> a "personality board" that plugged it into each different CPU's backplane.  
>> They sold a similar system (maybe even plug compatible at some level) with 
>> core planes under "Micromemory" brand name. I see we already have a "emm" 
>> directory in bitsavers with docs about some of their core products.
>> 
> 



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Al Kossow via cctalk
I would be interested in putting up the later docs
I wonder if Guy remembers what these were used for at CMU

On 9/16/19 10:19 AM, Shoppa, Tim via cctalk wrote:
> The Microram was a multipurpose solid state memory chassis sold by EMM 
> (Electronic Memories and Magnetics) with what we called later in the 1970's a 
> "personality board" that plugged it into each different CPU's backplane.  
> They sold a similar system (maybe even plug compatible at some level) with 
> core planes under "Micromemory" brand name. I see we already have a "emm" 
> directory in bitsavers with docs about some of their core products.
> 



cctalk@classiccmp.org

2019-09-16 Thread Shoppa, Tim via cctalk
The Microram was a multipurpose solid state memory chassis sold by EMM 
(Electronic Memories and Magnetics) with what we called later in the 1970's a 
"personality board" that plugged it into each different CPU's backplane.  They 
sold a similar system (maybe even plug compatible at some level) with core 
planes under "Micromemory" brand name. I see we already have a "emm" directory 
in bitsavers with docs about some of their core products.