Reply 13940 of 17930, by bjwil1991
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I wonder if it's possible to do IRC from a terminal?
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from C64 to FX-6300.
I wonder if it's possible to do IRC from a terminal?
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from C64 to FX-6300.
bjwil1991 wrote on 2020-01-12, 04:30:I wonder if it's possible to do IRC from a terminal?
I never used one that I could recommend. But I heard about them - text-based irc applications used from a terminal. Irssi being one of them.
I’d rather recommend you to use a GUI client (mIRC on Win, Textual or LimeChat on Mac, HexChat for linux distros).
I’m using Textual on Mac. And Mutter for iOS - but I have Mutter since a few years ago, I dunno if theres a new app better than that for iOS.
"Design isn't just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
JOBS, Steve.
iPad Pro running Mini vMac and emulating a Mac II with System 7.5.5!
I’m gonna test Basilisk II iOS version to see if I can get networking going on. Mini vMac does not support it.
"Design isn't just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
JOBS, Steve.
bjwil1991 wrote on 2020-01-12, 04:30:I wonder if it's possible to do IRC from a terminal?
Yes. Just log into a host system an run what ever irc client is on there. You can also do this via serial port on an old system connected to newer system. Run terminal emulator program on the old system to log in to the host system. The link is old but gives you an idea of what can be done. http://www.sorgonet.com/8086/8088_linux_dumb_terminal/
There's a glitch in the matrix.
My Windows 98 machine runs on a 32GB SD card which is always getting full. Due to the 128GB limit I see no point in putting something bigger in there for all of my games, because it still wouldn't be enough.
So I put OpenWRT on my router (TP-Link Archer C2700, really awesome device with two USB 3.0 ports) and set up a Samba share to an external 2TB USB drive.
After that, I mapped that drive as a network share. Amazingly, this works out of the box with Windows 98 and Windows 10 as long as I don't put in a password and set it up as a public share.
I did not expect this to be that easy. 2 terabytes on Windows 98 should last for a while. I can put all of my ISOs on there and mount them with Daemon Tools, saving as much space as possible.
I think I finished my Swan XT10 (8088 Turbo 10MHz).. got the floppy controller, Adlib, ATI VGA Wonder 16, and XT-IDE all installed and working. 😁
Tested a spare Dell branded 486 LPX motherboard. I got it cheap last year but never managed to get it working and didn't have time to investigate further.
Now that I have a spare 486DX CPU laying about, I dug out the board once again and tested it out. Same problem, a bunch of beeps and no POST.
I found the specs of the board online and what Dell system it originally came out of (a 486P) and thus finally figured out the problem - it wants FPM Parity SIMMs and I only have non-parity FPM & EDO SIMMs. So I've ordered some RAM from eBay and hopefully once that arrives I can test the board out and see how it compares to my other 486 board.
PTherapist wrote on 2020-01-12, 16:51:Tested a spare Dell branded 486 LPX motherboard. I got it cheap last year but never managed to get it working and didn't have time to investigate further.
Now that I have a spare 486DX CPU laying about, I dug out the board once again and tested it out. Same problem, a bunch of beeps and no POST.
I found the specs of the board online and what Dell system it originally came out of (a 486P) and thus finally figured out the problem - it wants FPM Parity SIMMs and I only have non-parity FPM & EDO SIMMs. So I've ordered some RAM from eBay and hopefully once that arrives I can test the board out and see how it compares to my other 486 board.
I’m curious, always want to learn something “new”. Since I wasn’t much into the hardware things (my dad was) but more into software things, I have to ask... what are the differences between these two types of RAM and why it requires the former?
"Design isn't just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
JOBS, Steve.
RAM with parity has 9 bits per byte. This way, it can detect single bit errors in RAM. Parity was used in the early days when RAM chips were not that reliable and also in computers aimed at professionals.
Hacked together a Y/C to S-Video (SVHS) cable from two old cables to add to my Commodore 64 AV cable so I can hook it up to my Dell 2001FP. Works just fine 😀 I added a 330 ohm resistor to the Chroma channel to make it a bit more compliant with the S-Video 'standard'. I did not do any comparisons with/without this resistor.
The Pi1541 hat arrived, I quickly soldered it together and wanted to use it, but my Raspberry Pi would just not boot after following the software instructions. I spent half an hour checking stuff, until I looked at the Pi itself. I was convinced I had a Raspberry Pi 3, but it's a 2B. *sigh* I feel a bit dumb. Now awaiting the arrival of a Raspberry Pi 3B.
Edited: typos, spelling mistakes
1982 to 2001
Cyrix200+ wrote on 2020-01-12, 20:06:Hacked together a Y/C to S-Video (SVHS) cable from two old cables to add to my Commodore 64 AV cable so I can hook it up to my D […]
Hacked together a Y/C to S-Video (SVHS) cable from two old cables to add to my Commodore 64 AV cable so I can hook it up to my Dell 2001FP. Works just fine 😀 I added a 330 ohm resistor to the Chroma channel to make it a bit more compliant with the S-Video 'standard'. I did not do any comparisons with/without this resistor.
The Pi1541 hat had arrives, I quickly soldered together and wanted to use it, but my Raspberry Pi would just not boot when following the software instructions. I spent half an hour checking stuff, until I looked at the Pi itself. I was convinced I had a Raspberry Pi 3, but it's a 2B. *sigh* I feel a bit dumb. Now awaiting the arrival of a Raspberry Pi 3B.
Oh damn! Btw I’ve been thinking about getting a Rock64 or LattePanda. I find myself very limited by what the rPi can offer.
derSammler wrote on 2020-01-12, 17:08:RAM with parity has 9 bits per byte. This way, it can detect single bit errors in RAM. Parity was used in the early days when RAM chips were not that reliable and also in computers aimed at professionals.
Thanks!!
"Design isn't just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
JOBS, Steve.
While digging thru my old cd disk collections looking for older motherboard driver cd's found my original FreeBSD v1.1 CD given me by sir Rod Grimes back in about 1996. Rod and a few others were the developers of FreeBSD and I got to work nights and weekends for him building P.Pro rack servers running FreeBSD that were shipped to various Universities. Am going to make an ISO and upload to Archive.org.
added: upped to Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/freebsd1.1june1994walnutcreek
Hate posting a reply and have to edit it because it made no sense 😁 First computer was an IBM 3270 workstation with CGA monitor. 🤣 Second computer a 286 12Mhz with real IDE drive ! After that came 386, 486, Pentium, P.Pro and everything after....
oeuvre wrote on 2020-01-12, 14:22:
Nice system ! have you looked for a decent beige KB to match your nice Dell tower ?
Hate posting a reply and have to edit it because it made no sense 😁 First computer was an IBM 3270 workstation with CGA monitor. 🤣 Second computer a 286 12Mhz with real IDE drive ! After that came 386, 486, Pentium, P.Pro and everything after....
bjwil1991 wrote on 2020-01-12, 04:30:I wonder if it's possible to do IRC from a terminal?
Yeah it is. Depending on your OS's age try something like irssi (newer) or ircii (older). I use irssi from a terminal window.
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.
Cyrix200+ wrote on 2020-01-12, 20:06:Hacked together a Y/C to S-Video (SVHS) cable from two old cables to add to my Commodore 64 AV cable so I can hook it up to my D […]
Hacked together a Y/C to S-Video (SVHS) cable from two old cables to add to my Commodore 64 AV cable so I can hook it up to my Dell 2001FP. Works just fine 😀 I added a 330 ohm resistor to the Chroma channel to make it a bit more compliant with the S-Video 'standard'. I did not do any comparisons with/without this resistor.
That's a good idea. I might do something similar myself, I have a spare DIN cable that I can splice into S-Video & Audio outputs. I won't be adding the resistor though, as I'm going to get a LumaFix64 for my C64 instead.
I forgot to ask to Cyrix200+, why did he ordered a rPi 3B instead of a rPi 4? Much better than getting an outdated version.
"Design isn't just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
JOBS, Steve.
bfcastello wrote on 2020-01-13, 13:23:I forgot to ask to Cyrix200+, why did he ordered a rPi 3B instead of a rPi 4? Much better than getting an outdated version.
Pi1541 is not compatible with the Raspberry Pi 4, only with 3(B).
PTherapist wrote on 2020-01-13, 13:11:<snip>
That's a good idea. I might do something similar myself, I have a spare DIN cable that I can splice into S-Video & Audio outputs. I won't be adding the resistor though, as I'm going to get a LumaFix64 for my C64 instead.
Yes, LumaFix64 also fixes this problem (and probably better since you can tweak the resistor value).
1982 to 2001
Horun wrote on 2020-01-13, 04:19:oeuvre wrote on 2020-01-12, 14:22:Nice system ! have you looked for a decent beige KB to match your nice Dell tower ?
Not particularly... fine with this generic HP one as it is comfortable and does the job.
HP Z420 Workstation Intel Xeon E5-1620, 32GB, RADEON HD7850 2GB, SSD + HD, XP/7
That reminds me I have a mechanical Dell keyboard that came with an Optiple GX110 I never got around to clean and retrobright.. It weighs a ton and has a very large footprint. It's also very yellow.
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.