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Re: Networking first needs (was Re: Listserv, Relay, Xyzzy and TCP/IP)
Drew Derbyshire wrote: [snip] It's definately configurable by files. It's just that you have to assemble the files and build a new RSCS nucleus to make permanent changes :-) More seriously, it is
By Peter Coghlan · #41 ·
Re: Networking first needs (was Re: Listserv, Relay, Xyzzy and TCP/IP)
That's not scalable.? Consider what BitNet did, which was have a single site generate the map for the network and send it out.? Fifty sites to have to assemble the new table? I'm aware of that, and
By Drew Derbyshire · #42 ·
random OS/2 trivia
apropos of nothing ... I decided I have not done enough of the Masochism Tango lately, so I got OS/2 Warp Connect 4 installed under VM Fusion. Fascinating CD formal, let me tell you -- my Mac wanted
By Drew Derbyshire · #43 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
As a professional developer on z/OS (not a quality claim - just that someone pays me) I've used Right-Control as <enter> and Left-Control as <reset> from the mid-90s to today - and for the foreseeable
By Greg Price · #44 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
I prefer using ENTER on x3270.? I use Shift-ENTER for new line (or fake it with a tab key)? on it. Yes, Left-Control is Reset on the OS/2 emulator. That's what you get for using z/OS instead of
By Drew Derbyshire · #45 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
I was working at IBM (in FL) at the time of OS/2 and was on some of the original task forces that were defining the OS. Unfortunately management didn¡¯t listen to us on quite a few topics. The
By @shiresoft · #46 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Isn't it older than that? The 3178 keyboard had both a "newline" key which moved the cursor and "enter" which generated an aid. The newline was where the right control key is on a modern keyboard,
By Dave Wade · #47 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Hello! I believe it is. We'd need Dave M to comment on that, but he's busy answering questions from people who are being surprised. This is something even I can't answer which is certainly a first. As
By Gregg Levine · #48 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Gregg, You can just see on this keyboard for sale on E-Bay https://www.ebay.com/c/1300341987 the right control is labelled "enter" and the left "reset" Dave
By Dave Wade · #49 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Hello! Remember what I posted.. I'm not doubting the circumstances, if any that is. However..... I'm still looking for that missing example thing called an "OS/2 Runtime for Windows". ----- Gregg C
By Gregg Levine · #50 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Well, if you REALLY wanna get weird, try a 327x data entry (keypunch) keyboard; the LCM+L has one (I've typed on it), and there is a picture here: https://deskthority.net/wiki/File:3276.jpg -ahd-
By Drew Derbyshire · #51 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
I'm still keeping my eyes open for a copy of OS/VU, myself. -ahd-
By Drew Derbyshire · #52 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Yea, unfortunately that¡¯s what I have on almost all of my 3278¡¯s (fortunately my lone 3279 has a typewriter style keyboard). The forever damned keyboard collectors want the typewriter ones and
By @shiresoft · #53 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Hello! Um what does that one do? And I'll take mine unwrapped. ----- Gregg C Levine gregg.drwho8@... "This signature fought the Time Wars, time and again."
By Gregg Levine · #54 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
OS/VU? http://www.weathergraphics.com/tim/ibm.htm
By Drew Derbyshire · #55 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Hello! Very funny. I suggest (strongly, rather strongly) "When HARLIE was One". It was written by author David Gerrold about 40 or so years ago, back when computers took up the whole room to work in,
By Gregg Levine · #56 ·
Re: random OS/2 trivia
Drew Derbyshire wrote: Back in the early 1990s, when I would call IBM (in Ireland) looking for support with VM/HPO, the first question the person taking my call would ask was: "Is that hardware or
By Peter Coghlan · #57 ·
Differences between S/380 and XA mode?
Folks, I googled some information and now learned that there are 380 versions of VM, VSE and MVS. I now have some questions for you. What is any differences between S/380 and XA mode? Also I learned
By Timothy Stark · #58 ·
Re: Listserv, Relay, Xyzzy and TCP/IP.
> > From the original author of the Pascal version of Relay: > > > Between VT moving away from VM/XA as part of Y2K and the demise of > > Bitnet, it's been a long time since I've been sure I knew
By Timothy Stark · #59 ·
Re: Differences between S/380 and XA mode?
Tim, VM/380 mode simply allows access to more than 16Mbytes of memory. The memory above the "line" is real, non-paged memory, so must be shared among all VMs that use it. It does not implement XA or
By Dave Wade · #60 ·