Canon AI Note IN-3000 and IN-5000 question

2022-05-30 Thread Stan Sieler via cctalk
Hi,

Does anyone know when the Canon AI Note  IN-5000 was released?

The nearly identical Canon AI Note IN-3000 came out in 1989, and I wonder
(without proof) if it (3000) might have a been a slightly later,
cost-reduced version of the 5000.

Google searching came up empty for the IN-5000,
and all hits I got for the IN-3000 were copies of an old ebay-like page
offering one some years ago.

It's a Newton/Magic like calculator (and more) that recognized handwritten
equations (and more).

thanks,

Stan


PL/M & CP/M

2022-05-30 Thread Bill Gunshannon via cctalk



Recently in my wanderings on the web I saw a comment(I don't
remember where) that said at least one of the PLM-80 compilers
floating around was built from a dis-assembly of another one.
Does this ring a bell with anyone?  Would anyone know where I
might find these sources?  I have the Fortran version running
but I would like to look into something capable of running on
an 8bit system.

bill


Re: PL/M & CP/M

2022-05-30 Thread Chuck Guzis via cctalk
Are you talking about this?

https://web.archive.org/web/20131110002247/http://www.nj7p.info/Common/Toys/Software/OS/work/IntelTools.zip

(Courtesy of Mark Ogden)

--Chuck




On 5/30/22 15:06, Bill Gunshannon via cctalk wrote:
> 
> Recently in my wanderings on the web I saw a comment(I don't
> remember where) that said at least one of the PLM-80 compilers
> floating around was built from a dis-assembly of another one.
> Does this ring a bell with anyone?  Would anyone know where I
> might find these sources?  I have the Fortran version running
> but I would like to look into something capable of running on
> an 8bit system.
> 
> bill


-- 
--Chuck

Sent from my digital computer


Re: PL/M & CP/M

2022-05-30 Thread Bill Gunshannon via cctalk

On 5/30/22 18:20, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:

Are you talking about this?

https://web.archive.org/web/20131110002247/http://www.nj7p.info/Common/Toys/Software/OS/work/IntelTools.zip

(Courtesy of Mark Ogden)



Not what I thought I was looking for but may turn out very
useful anyway.  I might be able to build a system and then
dis-assemble it to Z80 mnemonics.  In any event, it will
make fun reading.

Thank you.

bill