Thanks! Had a good bit of fun reading that.
I’m not going to try building an FPGA version though. Not yet.
> On 3 May 2019, at 22:26, Jan Adelsbach via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> On 5/3/19 8:02 PM, Sytse van Slooten via cctalk wrote:
It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working
On Fri, May 3, 2019, 06:21 Liam Proven via cctalk
wrote:
>
> It looks to me like an Apple "live photo".
>
Google/Android's version of the same. In a couple cases (like the CM's LED
panels) I used it intentionally to capture motion. In others, I had
forgotten to shut it off :(
I can/should go ba
On 5/3/19 8:02 PM, Sytse van Slooten via cctalk wrote:
It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working in 2019 - is most
were never fully populated with card cages in all 8 hyper-cubes. That
particular machine only has card cages in 2 of the hyper-cubes. The other 6
are empty.
>> It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working in 2019 - is
>> most were never fully populated with card cages in all 8 hyper-cubes. That
>> particular machine only has card cages in 2 of the hyper-cubes. The other 6
>> are empty. I'm not sure a machine with max 64K processo
On Fri, 3 May 2019 at 10:41, Aaron Jackson via cctalk
wrote:
>
> Very nice photos although I am confused by some. Some of them appear to
> be moving but a lot of stuff stays still. What is happening??
Please bottom-post on the list.
It looks to me like an Apple "live photo".
--
Liam Proven - P
Very nice photos although I am confused by some. Some of them appear to
be moving but a lot of stuff stays still. What is happening??
This one for example:
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipMxQT03fXAj3rZSF8jUm5IrLnmLnVYTTP_hgiNtZ6z-0-pKjaFeKB3aw1ItxldqKA/photo/AF1QipPyuT8UHx84MIB-PxX5L04jePbF6
It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working in 2019 - is
most were never fully populated with card cages in all 8 hyper-cubes. That
particular machine only has card cages in 2 of the hyper-cubes. The other 6
are empty. I'm not sure a machine with max 64K processors was ever
Last weekend I made an unannounced visit out to Roswell, GA to visit
our brothers-and-sisters-in-hoarding at the Vintage Computer Festival
Southeast. They were hosted by the new location of the Computer
Museum of America, not yet open to the public. The show was a solid
representation of the hob
> On 1 May 2019, at 22:42, alan--- via cctalk wrote:
>
>
> It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working in 2019 - is
> most were never fully populated with card cages in all 8 hyper-cubes. That
> particular machine only has card cages in 2 of the hyper-cubes. The other 6
> It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s...
Oh, I forgot - the problems with all CM-2s is that they are
fantastically useless machines. The SIMD hypercube architecture looked
good on paper...
--
Will
> It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working in 2019 -
> is most were never fully populated with card cages in all 8 hyper-cubes.
Most were 16K machines, I think.
> The CM-2 in the photo has faux LED panels installed with LEDs spacing
> that exactly matches the real CPU card st
Few more photos here:
https://www.atlhcs.org/photos-from-vintage-computer-festival-southeast-7-0/
-Alan
On 2019-05-01 16:10, Jason T via cctalk wrote:
Last weekend I made an unannounced visit out to Roswell, GA to visit
our brothers-and-sisters-in-hoarding at the Vintage Computer Festival
So
It's a CM-2. The problem with most CM-2s - aside not working in 2019 -
is most were never fully populated with card cages in all 8 hyper-cubes.
That particular machine only has card cages in 2 of the hyper-cubes.
The other 6 are empty. I'm not sure a machine with max 64K processors
was e
On 1 May 2019, at 21:10, Jason T via cctalk wrote:
Last weekend I made an unannounced visit out to Roswell, GA to visit
our brothers-and-sisters-in-hoarding at the Vintage Computer Festival
Southeast. They were hosted by the new location of the Computer
Museum of America, not yet open to the pu
> > What is that wonderfully evil looking computer halfway down the
> > pictures with all the red blinkin LEDs? That would make a wonderful
> > centerpiece to an evil lair!
>
> I didn't realize they had a Connection Machine. And apparently it at
> least powers up? Neat!
Ah so that is what
> On 1 May 2019, at 21:10, Jason T via cctalk wrote:
>
> Last weekend I made an unannounced visit out to Roswell, GA to visit
> our brothers-and-sisters-in-hoarding at the Vintage Computer Festival
> Southeast. They were hosted by the new location of the Computer
> Museum of America, not yet o
> What is that wonderfully evil looking computer halfway down the
> pictures with all the red blinkin LEDs? That would make a wonderful
> centerpiece to an evil lair!
I didn't realize they had a Connection Machine. And apparently it at
least powers up? Neat!
De
> Here is my photo set: https://photos.app.goo.gl/aiKGadREX511xeUt5
> (contains computers, computer collectors and one giant rabbit)
What is that wonderfully evil looking computer halfway down the pictures with
all the red blinkin LEDs? That would make a wonderful centerpiece to an evil
lair!
Cute bunny rabbit!!!
On Wed, May 1, 2019 at 4:11 PM Jason T via cctalk
wrote:
> Last weekend I made an unannounced visit out to Roswell, GA to visit
> our brothers-and-sisters-in-hoarding at the Vintage Computer Festival
> Southeast. They were hosted by the new location of the Computer
> Museum
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