Howdy Neighbor!
Indeed; lots of fun stuff.
I thought I saw a 4341 and did a double take; Columbia (CU20B) used
DEC's IBMSPL product to masquerade as HASP workstation via a PDP-11
(DN65) running some special code.? The machine we were fooling was named
CUVMA, so I guess you can tell what it was running.
An incredible amount of email went between the ARPAnet, CCnet and BITnet
over this link in the early 1980's.? I supported IBMSPL and the DN65 as
I was the Galaxy dude.? An unenviable position for early releases...
On 4/22/20 11:55 PM, Gregg Levine wrote:
Hello!
And we are neighbors. I am in Astoria Queens. Dave has an amazing
collection of machines, everything imaginable.
-----
Gregg C Levine gregg.drwho8 at
gmail.com
"This signature fought the Time Wars, time and again."
On Wed, Apr 22, 2020 at 11:43 PM Thomas DeBellis
<tommytimesharing at gmail.com> wrote:
Oh, I'm in Looooong Island, South Shore.
I actually have relatives not far from you in PA, but I hadn't gotten
around to noodging you yet for the distinct lack of 20's in your
collection. I mean, you have a 4341 yet no 20? Tisk, tisk...
Well, I'm pulling your leg a bit; a 20 is a seriously heavy lift. A KL
has three purposes in life: 1) Generate Heat, 2) Suck Power, 3) Run
winning code. A 2020 uses far less power, but doesn't have extended
addressing, so it is stuck at Tops-20 4.1, which leaves out a lot of
DECnet (and ARPAnet) stuff. Apparently, you can squeeze 5.0 in; MRC did
this, but that was MRC. Tops-20 is at version 7.0 now.
And both of them are seriously cranky beasts that needed care and
feeding from trained service personnel; wire wrap and all that (yech).
Remember, it's not a mainframe unless you can't fit it in your house and
have to take out a second mortgage to pay for the electricity and tons
(60 for a 20) of air conditioning.
So Paul Allen had a KL based 20, which is now in the the Living Computer
museum. But that cost was apparently less than a rounding error
compared to what he was worth. A mere monetary blip, as it were.
On 4/22/20 11:28 PM, Dave McGuire wrote:
> Hey, I'm 5hrs from DC, where are you based Tom?
> -Dave
> On 4/22/20 11:25 PM, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
>> For VMS, for the moment I've gone with one of Bob's machines as that is
>> on the 'local' DECnet area. Perhaps I'll get better performance
>> although Supratim is closer, milage-wise. D.C. is about a 5 hour drive
>> from here, while Bob's neck of the woods is a serious hike (Atlantic to
>> Pacific).
>> On 4/22/20 11:14 PM, Johnny Billquist wrote:
>>> Well, the more the better, so get that VMS account. If you want to, I
>>> can create an account for you on MIM as well. (But it will be
>>> tomorrow, I need to go to bed...)
>>> Johnny
>>> On 2020-04-23 05:12, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
>>>> Yes, but the MIM guest account is shared; I'm going to need to store
>>>> a few files (captures, control files, Etc.)
>>>> Wow, you've kept a real VAX running from 1993? Good for you!
I'll
>>>> contact you off-list.
>>>> On 4/22/20 11:07 PM, Supratim Sanyal wrote:
>>>>> Thomas - MIM already has a guest account ... I have had fun sending
>>>>> Johnny smtp emails to that account.
>>>>> I can give you an account on MARIAH (a real VAX) if you wish, shoot
>>>>> me a note offline if you decide to follow up ...
>>>>> Regards
>>>>> Supratim
>>>>> On 4/22/20 10:49 PM, Thomas DeBellis wrote:
>>>>>> I've had my fill of FAL and DAP for the moment and have
turned to
>>>>>> some other things as sort of a 'break'. The Tops-10 NFT
client
>>>>>> breaks on certain file names that the 20 sends it, so there is
>>>>>> going to be some debugging to track that down. Fortunately, a
very
>>>>>> patient person gave me PPN on one of their 10's.
>>>>>> Right now, I'm working on bringing the Tops-20 mail system a
bit
>>>>>> more up to date with respect to DECnet communications. These
were
>>>>>> largely put aside when full Internet connectivity happened.
Still,
>>>>>> the PANDA distribution has some bit rot because I know that
certain
>>>>>> Columbia changes for DECnet (to support CCnet) are not there. I
>>>>>> can't imagine that we didn't send them to MRC; that would
have been
>>>>>> unthinkable.
>>>>>> Fortunately, I was able to remember enough to put some of them
back
>>>>>> so that I got SMTP over DECnet working well, again. It had been
>>>>>> suffering from about two minute timing delays and now it's
>>>>>> instantaneous between 20's, like I remember. Oddly enough,
I
>>>>>> don't remember what else ran SMTP over DECnet; I'm
certain that RSX
>>>>>> and VMS could have done it. I think some VMS site might have.
>>>>>> However, most non-SMTP DECnet hosts on CCnet were running
Mail-11,
>>>>>> which the 20 also groks. In fact, it can convert Mail-11
addresses
>>>>>> to SMTP and route over other transports such as PUP, Chaos and
>>>>>> TCP/IP as well as DECnet. We did a lot of mail routing for
CCnet
>>>>>> to the Internet on CU20B, back in the day.
>>>>>> Unfortunately, there is some bit rot in some of the Tops-20
Mail-11
>>>>>> code, so I've got some tinkering to do. Does anyone have a
VMS or
>>>>>> RSX system that they'd care to give me a guest account on?
It
>>>>>> doesn't need any special capabilities; I'm just going to
be sending
>>>>>> mail and looking a few raw headers over.
>>>>> --
>>>>> Supratim Sanyal, W1XMT
>>>>> 39.19151 N, 77.23432 W
>>>>> QCOCAL::SANYAL via HECnet
And this spot belongs to the Rebel
Alliance to Restore the Republic Again