T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
988.1 | | FORTY2::HOWELL | Just get to the point... | Mon Feb 13 1995 12:03 | 15 |
988.2 | | KLAP::porter | the mantra of the walls and wiring | Mon Feb 13 1995 13:17 | 6 |
988.3 | Both ways... | ROMEOS::HARRIS_MA | Sales Executive II | Mon Feb 13 1995 13:31 | 13 |
988.4 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon Feb 13 1995 15:53 | 4 |
988.5 | IDE is looking good | POLAR::MOKHTAR | | Mon Feb 13 1995 21:01 | 20 |
988.6 | SCSI may be better for multitasking o/s | CGOOA::BONTJE | High performance and tolerant, too | Mon Feb 13 1995 23:35 | 7 |
988.7 | | HLDE01::SOEMBA::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Tue Feb 14 1995 03:25 | 46 |
988.8 | 'Course - cabling could make that tough to achieve... | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Tue Feb 14 1995 09:58 | 5 |
988.9 | | MROA::EIBEN | | Tue Feb 14 1995 10:12 | 22 |
988.10 | Lookout - it's a reality check! | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Tue Feb 14 1995 10:44 | 39 |
988.11 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Tue Feb 14 1995 11:07 | 3 |
988.12 | | FORTY2::HOWELL | Just get to the point... | Tue Feb 14 1995 11:16 | 4 |
988.13 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Tue Feb 14 1995 12:21 | 3 |
988.14 | | EEMELI::BACKSTROM | bwk,pjp;SwTools;pg2;lines23-24 | Tue Feb 14 1995 16:15 | 34 |
988.15 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Wed Feb 15 1995 03:47 | 7 |
988.16 | | MROA::EIBEN | | Wed Feb 15 1995 11:04 | 21 |
988.17 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Wed Feb 15 1995 11:44 | 3 |
988.18 | DOS usage? | BAHTAT::HILTON | Beer...now there's a temporary solution | Wed Feb 15 1995 14:01 | 1 |
988.19 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Thu Feb 16 1995 04:32 | 8 |
988.20 | | HLDE01::SOEMBA::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Thu Feb 16 1995 05:01 | 10 |
988.21 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Thu Feb 16 1995 07:08 | 3 |
988.22 | Mixing SCSI types, and EIDE? | WRLDYD::OSBORNE | | Mon Jun 05 1995 11:31 | 13 |
988.23 | | ZEKE::MAURER | SW Licensing & Business Practices | Mon Jun 05 1995 11:52 | 14 |
988.24 | THanks | WRLDYD::OSBORNE | | Mon Jun 05 1995 14:48 | 6 |
988.25 | | BOBSBX::QUINLAN | Mark Quinlan,Workstation Business Segment | Mon Aug 21 1995 18:19 | 23 |
988.26 | EIDE vs. SCSI: It's becoming a toss-up. | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Mon Aug 21 1995 18:46 | 40 |
988.27 | | UNTADH::SAXBY | Who needs a life when you've a PN? | Tue Aug 22 1995 03:39 | 5 |
988.28 | | ALPHAZ::HARNEY | John A Harney | Tue Aug 22 1995 09:00 | 9 |
988.29 | Zip type drives | PFSVAX::JMUSSER | | Tue Aug 29 1995 09:17 | 12 |
988.30 | | HUMANE::soemba.apd.dec.com::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Tue Aug 29 1995 10:26 | 24 |
988.31 | | MU::porter | MicrosoftEast | Tue Aug 29 1995 10:33 | 10 |
988.32 | Yes, and...... | PFSVAX::JMUSSER | | Tue Aug 29 1995 10:46 | 10 |
988.33 | | HUMANE::soemba.apd.dec.com::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Tue Aug 29 1995 12:18 | 14 |
988.34 | | FORTY2::SHIPMAN | MOG | Wed Aug 30 1995 04:44 | 16 |
988.35 | | HUMANE::soemba.apd.dec.com::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Wed Aug 30 1995 05:20 | 18 |
988.36 | Never have to worry about what drives I put on | STNKBG::MELENDEZ | | Wed Aug 30 1995 14:25 | 24 |
988.37 | | HANNAH::BAY | Jim Bay, peripheral visionary | Wed Aug 30 1995 14:30 | 9 |
988.38 | | BULEAN::BANKS | | Wed Aug 30 1995 14:46 | 14 |
988.39 | | STNKBG::MELENDEZ | | Wed Aug 30 1995 15:03 | 6 |
988.40 | 7 devices not 14 | WEDOIT::LANDRY | | Wed Aug 30 1995 15:56 | 11 |
988.41 | | BULEAN::BANKS | | Wed Aug 30 1995 16:15 | 4 |
988.42 | Oh, I get it :-) | WEDOIT::LANDRY | | Thu Aug 31 1995 11:21 | 5 |
988.43 | cache size on the (disk) onboard controller also counts for cost difference | SMURF::SEAGRAVES | Jim, Digital UNIX Tech. Partners. Eng. Grp.,381-6199 | Thu Aug 31 1995 12:51 | 3 |
988.44 | | LANDO::EIBEN | | Fri Sep 01 1995 10:33 | 18 |
988.45 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Fri Sep 01 1995 16:31 | 6 |
988.46 | | BULEAN::BANKS | | Fri Sep 08 1995 10:08 | 5 |
988.47 | | MU::porter | there is no such word as 'centric' | Fri Sep 08 1995 16:30 | 4 |
988.48 | IDE/EIDE, PIO or DMA ?? | COMICS::TRAVELL | John T, UK VMS System Support | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:15 | 35 |
988.49 | | CAPNET::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Tue Oct 10 1995 04:04 | 8 |
988.50 | | HUMANE::soemba.apd.dec.com::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Tue Oct 10 1995 06:53 | 27 |
988.51 | Here's what I remember | CAPNET::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Wed Oct 11 1995 08:53 | 19 |
988.52 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Oct 11 1995 09:37 | 12 |
988.53 | | HUMANE::soemba.apd.dec.com::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Wed Oct 11 1995 10:29 | 20 |
988.54 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Oct 11 1995 11:28 | 6 |
988.55 | 1542 may need new EPROMS | SMURF::TARSA | | Wed Oct 11 1995 16:32 | 10 |
988.56 | | HUMANE::soemba.apd.dec.com::RIK | Mostly Harmless | Thu Oct 12 1995 05:40 | 16 |
988.57 | | NPSS::GLASER | Steve Glaser DTN 2267212 LKG1-2/E10 (G17) | Tue Oct 17 1995 10:34 | 32 |
988.58 | Pure SCSI = 1 IRQ for disks | ZENDIA::MCARLETON | A paradigm shift without a clutch | Tue Oct 17 1995 12:18 | 9 |
988.59 | Ultra SCSI ? | hndymn.zko.dec.com::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Fri Mar 07 1997 08:44 | 8 |
| Um, along the lines of SCSI drivers. I was checking out Quantum disks
and noticed that they are listed as Ultra SCSI. Their description of
this off of their web page is that is is different that SCSI-2 and
SCSI-3 -
Should I worry about that? (ie will SCSI controllers support it?)
bjm
|
988.60 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Fri Mar 07 1997 11:06 | 8 |
| re: .59 by hndymn.zko.dec.com::MCCARTHY
Ultra SCSI disks should be hardware (and backward) compatible with
existing FAST SCSI, you just won't be able to utilize the benefits.
I don't think software cares, other than ultra SCSI host adapter
drivers are probably different.
/bill
|
988.61 | while at it... | SUBSYS::VIDIOT::PATENAUDE | Ask your boss for ARRAY's... | Fri Mar 07 1997 11:35 | 15 |
|
While you were on the Quantum web page, you should read in the technical section
under white papers, they have a real good write up of Ultra SCSI. I also have a
mirror of that paper on my groups web page at;
http://whatsa.shr.dec.com/disks.htm
In a nutshell, to use Ultra you need Ultra drives and Ultra controllers with
half the cable length of Fast-10 busses. Folk will soon be coming out with
widgits to releive the length restriction, but, for Joe average you will
probably find that even if you have compliant controllers and drives, you'll
still need to restrict it to fast-10 to be able to cable in that old tape drive
and cdrom's and external rz55 box ;^)
roger.
|
988.62 | ran across them.. | hndymn.zko.dec.com::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Fri Mar 07 1997 13:53 | 7 |
| Roger,
Thanks for the pointers. I found the descriptions of Ultra on Quantum's and
Seagate's pages - Seagate's seemed to be a bit more descriptive and helpful
to me.
bjm
|
988.63 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Fri Mar 07 1997 13:54 | 7 |
| Also worth taking a look at the Adaptec pages... Though they are
serious biased towards SCSI and away from IDE/ATAPI.
Not that that is such a bad thing....
Chris
|
988.64 | no prob. | SUBSYS::VIDIOT::PATENAUDE | Ask your boss for ARRAY's... | Mon Mar 10 1997 09:03 | 7 |
|
re.62
Your welcome. And if you find any other "must have" pointers, mail them
to me so I can review and update my page.
Roger.
|
988.65 | | TDCIS3::BOREL | If I don't meet you in this world ... | Tue Mar 11 1997 04:41 | 3 |
| What is Ultra SCSI ?
Olivier
|
988.66 | described in URLs | hndymn.zko.dec.com::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Tue Mar 11 1997 06:53 | 5 |
| >> What is Ultra SCSI ?
Go check out the URLs back a few. Those pages go into details.
Brian J.
|
988.67 | | SUBSYS::VIDIOT::PATENAUDE | Ask your boss for ARRAY's... | Tue Mar 11 1997 11:33 | 5 |
|
An in a nutshell;
Ultra SCSI is SCSI with the clock rate during data transfer phase doubled.
|
988.68 | | WRKSYS::INGRAHAM | Andy | Tue Mar 11 1997 12:00 | 7 |
| > Ultra SCSI is SCSI with the clock rate during data transfer phase doubled.
Actually I think it's doubled twice. Depending on your starting point.
Original SCSI moved bits at a 5 Mbit/sec/wire rate.
Fast SCSI uses 10 Mbit/sec/wire.
Ultra SCSI uses 20 Mbit/sec/wire.
|
988.69 | what about WIDE vs 'non wide'? | hndymn.zko.dec.com::MCCARTHY | A Quinn Martin Production | Tue Mar 11 1997 13:50 | 6 |
| One thing I didn't find described is the difference between (actually the
limitations of) SCSI and wide SCSI. I think the external connectors are
different but can I mix and match on the same cable? I'm still limited to
7 IDs right?
Brian J.
|
988.70 | | skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Tue Mar 11 1997 13:57 | 9 |
| With wide SCSI in theory you should be able to have 15 IDs...at least the
standard allows it. That's assuming all the software and hardware are up to
snuff.
Also from a logical point of view, a narrow disk works fine on a wide
SCSI...the mode is negotiated up front per device. However, that assumes that
the cabling works out right.
Burns
|
988.71 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Wed Mar 12 1997 08:27 | 25 |
| Wide SCSI uses a mini-68 pin connector on both internal and external
devices. Its ribbon cable for internal devices is actually physically
narrower than "narrow SCSI."
Most boards have at least one narrow connector (usually internal) on them,
in addition to the normal collection of wide connectors. Mixing and
matching narrow and wide devices has been successful for me, as long as I
put the narrow devices on the board's narrow connector. Trying to use
wide-to-narrow adapters on narrow devices has failed, probably because of
device ID conflicts (that is, narrow device ID 1 conflicting with wide
device ID 9, which isn't a problem if I leave the narrow devices on the
board's narrow connector).
Although the board will negotiate wide mode at initialization, this is
independent of a device's addressibility. In other words, you can have a
wide device (which has the extra address line) answer to ID 9, but still
operate in "narrow" mode. Why you'd want to is a different issue.
Re: Normal vs. Fast vs. Ultra
I believe every clock doubling reduces the maximum allowable bus length by
1/2. Original was 9 meters (I think), fast 4.5, and ultra probably 2.25.
I've hit the maximum SCSI bus length on fast/wide. Things don't work so
well when you hit it.
|
988.72 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Mar 12 1997 09:12 | 9 |
| I think the max lengths are 6m, 3m, 1.5m. Not much room on a 1.5m
cable for very many devices. I've been seeing some ultra wide
*differential* host adapters and devices lately. That allows much
longer signaling distances, but I don't know what the limits are.
Something I haven't seen mentioned yet re: wide vs. narrow. Perhaps I
missed it. Wide has a 16-bit datapath, narrow has 8-bit.
/Bill
|
988.73 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Wed Mar 12 1997 09:39 | 14 |
| Re: Length
Yeah, that sounds more appropriate. And, you're right; not much room for
devices, especially if you observe the restrictions on minimum distance
between devices.
Re: 16 bit:
Yes. Then again, most hard drives have a native transfer rate (how fast
the heads actually fly over the bits) that could easily be handled by fast
SCSI. Wide SCSI doesn't buy you any real disk transfer rate improvements,
although with proper buffering in the drive, it does cut down on bus
contention, and it is nice to have 8 more devices before having to buy
another SCSI adapter.
|
988.74 | | skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHER | Gravity: Not just a good idea. It's the law! | Wed Mar 12 1997 12:36 | 6 |
| Why does wide device 9 conflict with narrow device 1? You don't put the
address out in binary...you raise the data line whose number corresponds to
the device number. If you raise data line 9, a narrow device shouldn't even
see it.
Burns
|
988.75 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Mar 12 1997 12:59 | 12 |
| re: .74 by skylab.zko.dec.com::FISHER
>> Why does wide device 9 conflict with narrow device 1?
It would have to be because the SCSI ID is encoded.
1 = 0001
9 = 1001
A narrow device looks at just the lower 3 bits hence the conflict.
/Bill
|
988.76 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Wed Mar 12 1997 13:22 | 35 |
| Nope, that's not how it works....
The ID is put on the bus in bitmap form, not encoded.
High Bus Low Bus
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 = ID 1
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 = ID 9
Priority of Id's is as follows: 7 (highest) - 0, 15 - 8 (lowest)
Any device wanting to use the bus must arbitrate for the bus, and
not take it if any device of a higher priority is arbitrating.
For a narrow bus, you are limited to 8 ID's. The controller is
typically at ID 7, the highest ID.
For a wide bus, you have 16 ID's, and the controller is also typically
at 7, the highest ID priority.
What this gives you is the ability to mix narrow and wide devices on
the same bus. A narrow device can only be and see id's 0-7, but as all of
these are higher than 8-15, it will always win. The wide devices can be
at any ID, but if they are on 8-15, they must monitor the low bus ID's,
and not win arbitration if any ID on the low bus is asserted.
Refer to the Adaptec web site for a more in-depth review of cabling,
etc... www.adaptec.com
Chris
|
988.77 | | TARKIN::LIN | Bill Lin | Wed Mar 12 1997 13:50 | 8 |
| re: .76 by LEFTY::CWILLIAMS
Thanks, Chris. Makes sense not to dedicate lines to SCSI ID
when the datapath will do.
I bow to the SCSI gods... ;-)
/Bill
|
988.78 | and,,, | SUBSYS::VIDIOT::PATENAUDE | Ask your boss for ARRAY's... | Wed Mar 12 1997 14:06 | 22 |
|
The real reason have trouble with wide drive on narrow busses is;
Most old narrow busses/cables/terminators/controllers comply to the SCSI-1 rules
that say "all unused signals should be GROUNDED". On a narrow bus that means
that the pins that are used to carry data bits 8-15 and p2 are gounded. When you
introduce a wide drive onto that bus during ARBRITRATION phase the wide device
sees this as devices 8-15 (bits 8 through 15 are = ground = asserted) are on the
bus before him at a higher priority and the wide device will back down. This in
term means you (the initiator) will never get a response from the wide drive, he
is for all purposes invisible.
That is why you can put a RZ28M-VA (narrow) a BA356 box (wide) but you cannot
put a RZ28M-VW (wide) in a BA350 box (narrow).
Now if your wide device has on-board split termination as some of our newer
solid state disks that are coming out have, you can unterminate the lower 8 bits
for use on a narrow bus and sever/terminate the upper 8 bits with a jumper on
the device.
roger.
|
988.79 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Wed Mar 12 1997 16:59 | 15 |
| I'm running a combo bus of a wide disk with everything else narrow,
going dual port off a AHA2940UW... Theres a wide bus going to the disk,
terminated at the disk. There's a narrow bus going the rest of the way,
with the high bus terminated at the controller, and the rest terminated
at the end of the narrow bus.
The possible problem here is signal skew due to the 2 halves of the bus
being different lengths. I'm not seeing a problem, but it can exist,
and is real. A better config is 1 wide bus, with 68-50 pin adapters
connecting the narrow devices to the wide bus. Those adapters are not
cheap, though ($15-40 each), and you need one for each narrow device.
In my case, I'd need 5. Ouch.
Chris
|
988.80 | | WRKSYS::INGRAHAM | Andy | Wed Mar 12 1997 17:36 | 7 |
| > Most old narrow busses/cables/terminators/controllers comply to the SCSI-1 rules
> that say "all unused signals should be GROUNDED". On a narrow bus that means
> that the pins that are used to carry data bits 8-15 and p2 are gounded. When you
I'm not sure this makes sense (to me) either.
The extra byte that makes the bus wide are new signal pins, aren't they?
|
988.81 | | LEFTY::CWILLIAMS | CD or not CD, that's the question | Thu Mar 13 1997 09:17 | 8 |
| Yes, that's true. The problem came in StorageWorks bricks - the
internal flex cable designs grounded pins on the custom connector that
were re-defined for wide busses.
It's not a generic issue.
Chris
|
988.82 | correct. | SUBSYS::VIDIOT::PATENAUDE | Ask your boss for ARRAY's... | Thu Mar 13 1997 10:17 | 5 |
|
Chris is correct. The pins in StorageWorks were not "new" to wide. In generic
you run the opposite problem, if you use wide drives on a narrow bus with 50-68
pin adapters, the upper bits may be "float" instead of ground. That causes it's
own problems.
|
988.83 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Mar 13 1997 14:44 | 5 |
| .76:
I did not know that. Thank you Sir!
(It clears up at least one misconception of mine.)
|
988.84 | And now for something completly different. | FOR200::JOHNS | | Fri Mar 28 1997 16:10 | 11 |
|
completly unrelated to the previous discussion, but can anyone tell me
WHY external SCSI cases are so @#%$* expensive?
You can by a full tower w/250 watt power supply and 7 internal bays for
$45 but a much smaller 7 bay encloseur with a 200W power supply for
SCSI drives is $180 - $260!!
WHAT's the DEAL?
Garrison
(and NO, volume is not a believable reason.)
|
988.85 | Gouging, Scummy is regarded as en-vogue and costs top $. The drives fit fine in a tower :-) | SSDEVO::FIALA | Me, I'm just a recycler. | Fri Mar 28 1997 17:09 | 0 |
988.86 | Dont forget the lights | SSDEVO::ASTOR | Subsystems Engineering Support | Fri Mar 28 1997 17:22 | 8 |
| Garrison,
Grow your own out of a tower case. You will probably have to make
the cable and bulkhead as well. Make sure to put a bunch of LED's on
the front for the activity lights. Thats the problem with computers
these days - not enough blinking lights!
Kurt
|
988.87 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Wed Apr 02 1997 09:53 | 5 |
| Building one's own is certainly a good idea.
I think they're just used to selling to the high end and server markets.
You know, where transactions start with a purchase order, rather than check
or credit card, and price gouging is the name of the game?
|
988.88 | I like lights. | FOR200::JOHNS | | Wed Apr 02 1997 12:44 | 17 |
| Re .86
Your right about the lights, you would think that computer
manufacturers had never seen the original Star Trek. Almost nothing
BUT lights! Now THOSE were computers! :)
As far as the tower case, yes that would certainly work, but you end up
with a monster size case to do the same thing. Those 7 bay SCSI
enclosures are compact! Stuff one under a desk on top of your
mini-tower system and still have knee room.
Yeah, I guess it must just boil down to pure GREED.
Hmmm..I'm greedy, maybe I should start selling SCSI enclosures
as a new sideline. :)
Garrison
|
988.89 | LEDs/lights haven't been "in" for decades... :-) | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Wed Apr 02 1997 13:32 | 16 |
| >> Stuff one under a desk on top of your
>>mini-tower system and still have knee room.
If it did have a bunch of lights, you wouldn't be able to see them
with it parked under the desk. :-)
LEDs/lights are typically only for maintenence purposes, and as
such don't get a lot of demand by customers, anymore. Ninty-nine
percent of the time customers/consumers want a box they can park
somewhere out of the way, and only concern themselves with the
monitor, keyboard, mouse egonomics. There are limited reasons/purposes
where a few LEDs/lights are needed for the consumer/customer to see on
a regular basis.
Bob
|
988.90 | The Return of the Light! | WRKSYS::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Wed Apr 02 1997 13:43 | 18 |
| Roaming a bit further off-topic: in fact "lites" are making a comeback
in a big way - at least in the list of customer requirements for
servers.
Combining the "downsizing" of corporations (which affects the number of
hardware gods on site), the always-present desire to minimize
down-time, the advent of hot-swap SCSI, and software management
"agents" running across LANs and even WANs, we're being asked to
visually identify a faulted storage device. A system may call for help
to replace a drive that's going down the tubes - and even provide the
FRU to bring, but when the non-skilled humanoid arrives, having the
system point to the drive to be replaced makes a lot of sense (rather
than have said non-skilled humanoid try to figure it out)...
Buy stock in companies that make orange LEDs as this industry is
gonna be using a lot of 'em ;^)
/dave
|
988.91 | history repeats itself, even in the future | WHOS01::ELKIND | Steve Elkind, Digital SI @WHO | Thu Apr 03 1997 09:24 | 9 |
| >Your right about the lights, you would think that computer
>manufacturers had never seen the original Star Trek. Almost nothing
>BUT lights! Now THOSE were computers! :)
Ah, but as technology marched on, the flashing lights and all those
buttons and levers disappeared to be replaced by displays (2D and
holographic) and touch panels - both in the Federation and in the
Romulan, Cardacean (sp?), and Klingon Empires (ref: STTNG, DS9, ST
Voyager, and the ST movies). Obviously, history repeats itself!
|
988.92 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Apr 03 1997 09:41 | 12 |
| I wish my system had more lights. My PeeCee Power & Cooling room-warmer
box only has three leds: Power, HDD, Turbo. I've wired up the HDD and
Turbo lights to my two SCSI controllers. I must say, when I'm scanning
directly to disk, or doing a backup, it is quite satisfying to see both
busses light up.
Then again, with the cabinet's 4 fans, the CPU fan, and the 2 7200 RPM hard
drives (all of which conspire to hit the resonant frequency of the
enclosure), the Power LED tells me something that my neighbor could
probably tell me sooner.
Maybe I'll yank the Power LED and hook it up to the IDE controller...
|
988.93 | More knobs (more opportunities for knobs to be set wrong) | BBPBV1::WALLACE | john wallace @ bbp. +44 860 675093 | Sun Apr 06 1997 10:11 | 2 |
| Never mind the lights, how often could you have used a "write protect"
button ? I want my "write protect" buttons back...
|
988.94 | | HELIX::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome SHR3-1/C22 Pole A22 | Wed Apr 16 1997 12:12 | 3 |
| And toggle switches for toggling programs directly into
memory. Bring back the PDP-12; enough toggle switches
and lights to satisfy anybody!
|
988.95 | | BULEAN::BANKS | Saturn Sap | Thu Apr 17 1997 11:47 | 1 |
| the -12 was truly a hacker's machine!
|