Samir Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 http://24.96.150.90/events/byte/index.html isn't responding here.Thank you! That was a routing issue that was quickly fixed. It should work fine now. I actually noticed that all the traffic konked out the 486 web server, so nothing was working for a while. I just rebooted it, so full 15Mb is back online for downloading. Some chick just tolted me that she didn't want to pollute her brand new SSD with dirty magazines. She said all the paper dust from handling and scanning could gum up the works!! It was best to leave it online and out of the house.HAHAHA!!! Maybe she was looking at real dirty magazines. Either that or she was that blonde that's in all the blonde jokes. [blonde and brunette walking down the sidewalk] Brunette, pointing at the ground: "Look! A dead bird!" Blonde, looking up at the sky: "Where?" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Samir Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 Or that if I ever get abducted by extra-terrestrials I might only have time to grab my usb drive before we leave. And if so, then I'd have some good reading material for the flight to their homeworld. And to boot, I'd have some materials with which to barter. LOL!! "Can you say floppy?" "Flop-eee" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keatah Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 (edited) I think this chick was referring to keeping down the amount of write cycles to flash-based storage. Another, much much older lady I know actually refuses to let the internet into her house because satan might come out of the coax-cable. With all the evil-ness surrounding pr0n and finances and trading and child coercion and online crime and corporate greed and id theft and stuff - she feels justified. She is serious, because she has kids and they have to go to the library. Which is a way aways. It's not like they can't afford it or anything, being in an affluent neighborhood. So her hubby discussed getting wireless internet, and he argued the point that everything happens above ground. No buried cables running past the gates of hell deep in the bowels of the earth. But, noooooo, she complained that it could act like a lightning rod and attract the corrupt spirits that oozed up through the ground which had escaped from hell. She said it could be worse, because as the information floats in the air it could seep into your brain and get you that way. So one time I asked her about the electricity, she said that any evil coming out those wires in the ground would be fried crisply and thoroughly. And she said something similar for the natural gas lines, that it would be suffocated and "stinked away" by the smell! You can probably guess this person has a thorough water filtration system set up too. I tell you man.. there's some serious weirdos out there! Edited January 28, 2011 by Keatah 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+wood_jl Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 I personally do not do that. I have a separate directory for every magazine series.. But almost everybody else I know reads them on-line. Seems that if it is online, then people will just come back, online, to re-read anything. As soon as you present the idea of downloading, they stop and get all flustered about hard drive space, and the time it takes to download and unpack. Their panties get all bound up and everything. Like as if it is a ritual to be carefully considered and if it is worth doing. As if, somehow, reading it online is far less intensive by some orders of magnitude. Wow, yeah. That sure isn't an issue for us data-hoarders, now is it? LOL Especially since 2TB external USB drives can be had for $60 sometimes, on sale. Soon the problem will be trying to figure out which one in the pile has you mag collection. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mariush Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 Hello, I've found this thread on ascii.textfiles.com (Jason Scott's blog: http://ascii.textfiles.com/archives/2672) and I have to say it made my week. I love reading these old magazines and see how technology evolved - here in Romania where I live we only got some rare imports of Byte, usually also very expensive, and the other IT magazines focused more on general IT news, product reviews and so on. I'd like to give back a little so I've mirrored the files on a dedicated server: ftp:// helpedia.com/pub/archive/temp/Byte/ Please copy the link, remove the space and paste it in a new browser window/tab or in your favourite FTP client/download manager. It's configured to accept 2 downloads at the same time from the same IP and up to 20 simultaneous connections, so at least 10 people at a time should be able to download files easily and fast - server is on a 100 mbps unmetered connection in Holland. Feel free to publish the link in the first post but please don't make it clickable, I don't want it indexed by search engines. I've also uploaded the files posted so far on Rapidshare, using my own premium account, so there is not wait time and you'll get the maximum speed possible (if you're in Europe at least). The RS links for each pdf are in the only text file in the FTP folder. I'd rather not post them here and look like I'm spamming links. If a mod/admin or OP says it's OK I can also post them. OP, if you wish I can create an account on the FTP server so you can upload the PDF files directly to it and take the strain off your computers. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Samir Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 Another, much much older lady I know actually refuses to let the internet into her house because satan might come out of the coax-cable. With all the evil-ness surrounding pr0n and finances and trading and child coercion and online crime and corporate greed and id theft and stuff - she feels justified. She is serious, because she has kids and they have to go to the library. Which is a way aways. It's not like they can't afford it or anything, being in an affluent neighborhood. So her hubby discussed getting wireless internet, and he argued the point that everything happens above ground. No buried cables running past the gates of hell deep in the bowels of the earth. But, noooooo, she complained that it could act like a lightning rod and attract the corrupt spirits that oozed up through the ground which had escaped from hell. She said it could be worse, because as the information floats in the air it could seep into your brain and get you that way. So one time I asked her about the electricity, she said that any evil coming out those wires in the ground would be fried crisply and thoroughly. And she said something similar for the natural gas lines, that it would be suffocated and "stinked away" by the smell! You can probably guess this person has a thorough water filtration system set up too. I tell you man.. there's some serious weirdos out there! Wow. She takes the cake. I'd love to see her go to a shrink and get a professional assessment.Especially since 2TB external USB drives can be had for $60 sometimes, on sale. Soon the problem will be trying to figure out which one in the pile has you mag collection.Or if the drive has failed. Drives are built no-where near as well as they once were. I have an 80gb that's not even 5yrs old that was filled and put away start clicking when I went to retrieve the data. I have a SCSI raid full of 9gb 2nd generation Seagate Cheetah drives that I booted up after almost a decade and they worked perfectly. You get what you pay for--the Cheetah drives were $1100 each back in the 90s. Hello, I've found this thread on ascii.textfiles.com (Jason Scott's blog: http://ascii.textfiles.com/archives/2672) and I have to say it made my week. I love reading these old magazines and see how technology evolved - here in Romania where I live we only got some rare imports of Byte, usually also very expensive, and the other IT magazines focused more on general IT news, product reviews and so on. I'd like to give back a little so I've mirrored the files on a dedicated server: ftp:// helpedia.com/pub/archive/temp/Byte/ Please copy the link, remove the space and paste it in a new browser window/tab or in your favourite FTP client/download manager. It's configured to accept 2 downloads at the same time from the same IP and up to 20 simultaneous connections, so at least 10 people at a time should be able to download files easily and fast - server is on a 100 mbps unmetered connection in Holland. Feel free to publish the link in the first post but please don't make it clickable, I don't want it indexed by search engines. I've also uploaded the files posted so far on Rapidshare, using my own premium account, so there is not wait time and you'll get the maximum speed possible (if you're in Europe at least). The RS links for each pdf are in the only text file in the FTP folder. I'd rather not post them here and look like I'm spamming links. If a mod/admin or OP says it's OK I can also post them. OP, if you wish I can create an account on the FTP server so you can upload the PDF files directly to it and take the strain off your computers. I'm glad you've joined us. Just in time! My poor little server is getting hammered like never before. It actually got stuck mid-reboot earlier this morning, so all my mirrors were down for a good 8hrs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+wood_jl Posted January 28, 2011 Share Posted January 28, 2011 Or if the drive has failed. Drives are built no-where near as well as they once were. I have an 80gb that's not even 5yrs old that was filled and put away start clicking when I went to retrieve the data. I have a SCSI raid full of 9gb 2nd generation Seagate Cheetah drives that I booted up after almost a decade and they worked perfectly. You get what you pay for--the Cheetah drives were $1100 each back in the 90s. I just buy the USB drives in pairs - AND ONLY IN PAIRS. Last year, $70 each for 1TB USB externals, each a copy of the other. This year, $60 each for 2TB USB externals, each a copy of the other. Not likely to lose data this way. If I get nervous, then I'll have to buy them in triplicate, but so far, so good, and I think the liklihood both will fail is next to nil. One lives in the original box, and I rotate them once in a while. As soon as one fails, I will buy a new pair and hopefully the surviving drive will live long enough to pull the data off it. For $1100 worth of 2TB drives, I don't think I'd ever worry, though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
exobuzz Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 I'm glad you've joined us. Just in time! My poor little server is getting hammered like never before. It actually got stuck mid-reboot earlier this morning, so all my mirrors were down for a good 8hrs. I wrote this before but incase it was missed (Actually i think thumpnugget is away right?). if the front links are switched to http://files.exotica.org.uk/byte/ I can balance the traffic between us somewhat. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 29, 2011 Author Share Posted January 29, 2011 I'm glad you've joined us. Just in time! My poor little server is getting hammered like never before. It actually got stuck mid-reboot earlier this morning, so all my mirrors were down for a good 8hrs. I wrote this before but incase it was missed (Actually i think thumpnugget is away right?). if the front links are switched to http://files.exotica.org.uk/byte/ I can balance the traffic between us somewhat. Only cell phone access right now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Samir Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 I just buy the USB drives in pairs - AND ONLY IN PAIRS. Last year, $70 each for 1TB USB externals, each a copy of the other. This year, $60 each for 2TB USB externals, each a copy of the other. Not likely to lose data this way. If I get nervous, then I'll have to buy them in triplicate, but so far, so good, and I think the liklihood both will fail is next to nil. One lives in the original box, and I rotate them once in a while. As soon as one fails, I will buy a new pair and hopefully the surviving drive will live long enough to pull the data off it. For $1100 worth of 2TB drives, I don't think I'd ever worry, though.I used to do that until I found files miscomparing between drives. I've got two full 640gb drives that I compare every year. And every year I find a file or two that miscompare. Luckily, I pull this from a third backup to figure out which file was correct and which was wrong. These are Seagate/Maxtor SATA drives formatted NTFS. And the crazy thing is I've seen the same thing on a pair of 160gb drives that were IDE and formatted FAT32. I think as areal densities have increased, the error rate has stayed the same, so the likelyhood of having an error has increased even though the error rate spec has stayed the same. I use three Western Digital RE3 drives manually mirrored and am transferring all of my usb drive pairs to them. Data migration sucks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 29, 2011 Author Share Posted January 29, 2011 Hello, I've found this thread on ascii.textfiles.com (Jason Scott's blog: http://ascii.textfiles.com/archives/2672) and I have to say it made my week. I love reading these old magazines and see how technology evolved - here in Romania where I live we only got some rare imports of Byte, usually also very expensive, and the other IT magazines focused more on general IT news, product reviews and so on. Thank you very much for the added bandwidth. I've updated the thread start with the new address. Also thanks for the pointer over to the article. I'm not sure how I feel about my nickname over there (Scanner-Destroyer). They are very serious about their archiving! I'm trying to figure out a costume that fits that description for next Halloween I did leave a comment yesterday but the moderator has not approved it as of yet. BTW: One of the observations from the article said that the resolution on the BYTE PDFs was not good enough to read the smallest print. I have not seen an issue with this - I found the smallest example of text I could find when I started this whole thing and made sure it was easily readable. I could have missed something smaller... Has anyone found any text they can't read easily if they zoom up? My assumption is that he was looking at the example pages given in each magazine introduction which are less than 1/2 of the PDF resolution. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 29, 2011 Author Share Posted January 29, 2011 I'm glad you've joined us. Just in time! My poor little server is getting hammered like never before. It actually got stuck mid-reboot earlier this morning, so all my mirrors were down for a good 8hrs. I wrote this before but incase it was missed (Actually i think thumpnugget is away right?). if the front links are switched to http://files.exotica.org.uk/byte/ I can balance the traffic between us somewhat. Updated! Thanks much! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 29, 2011 Author Share Posted January 29, 2011 BYTE Vol 00-08 1976-04 Automation - 100 Pages 58,220,082 bytes BYTE Vol 00-08 from April 1976... Now THAT is an awesome cover! I thought Jaws was released in 1977 so now I know where Spielberg got the idea for the main Jaws poster Make sure you read the "Letters" column in this issue - lots of stuff about star trek and space war games. The article on the magic of computer languages was also very good. The rest is awesome fodder for the low-level hardware guys. A few nice little diddies from page 16: Glorobots Rx A robot was having conniptions at reading handwritten inscriptions, but acquired the knack by decoding a stack of typical doctor prescriptions. Evolution A self-evolved robot named Babbitt, because of his dubious habit of unbridled mating and self-propagating, was housed in a hutch like a rabbit. Hear Ye Hear Ye The sensory robots are near, but will not be ready this year, for each of them tries to eat with his eyes, and cocks his nose trying to hear. In this issue.... Foreground BIORHYTHM FOR COMPUTERS HOW TO BUILD A MEMORY WITH ONE LAYER PRINTED CIRCUITS AARGH! (or, HOW TO AUTOMATE PROM BURNING WITHOUT EML) CONTROLLING EXTERNAL DEVICES WITH HOBBYIST COMPUTERS INTERFACE AN ASCII KEYBOARD TO A 60 mA TTY LOOP DESIGN AN ON LINE DEBUGGER I0 STROBES FOR THE ALTAIR 8800 SAVE MONEY USING MINI WIRE WRAP Background PROGRAMMING THE IMPLEMENTATION THE MAGIC OF COMPUTER LANGUAGES THE SR-52: ANOTHER WORLD'S SMALLEST FRANKENSTEIN EMULATION MICROPROCESSOR UPDATE: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TMS9900 Nucleus In This BYTE Customization-The Expression of Individuality Letters Space Ace Revisited What's New BYTE's Bits Technology Update BYTE's Bugs Classified Ads Book Review Clubs, Newsletters BOMB Reader's Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 00-08 1976-04 Automation Cover Index 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 29, 2011 Author Share Posted January 29, 2011 BYTE Vol 00-11 1976-07 Core Memories - 116 Pages 68,658,493 bytes BYTE Vol 00-08 from July 1976... Everything you wanted to know about ferrite core memories (and more) but were afraid to ask... Learn about the 8080 and learn machine language for the 8008.. make a do-everything chips and a cassette interface.. .Design your own printed circuits and yes another multi-page article on generating characters. The "Ask BYTE" column talks about fixed-length records versus variable length records. Foreground COINCIDENT CURRENT FERRITE CORE MEMORIES EXPLORE AN 8080 WITH EDUCATOR-8080 THE "IGNORANCE IS BLISS" TV DRIVE CIRCUIT WHY WAIT? BUILD A FAST CASSETTE INTERFACE Background ASSEMBLING A SPHERE MACHINE LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING FOR THE "8008"-Chapter 1 PUT THE "DO EVERYTHING" CHIP IN YOUR NEXT DESIGN SURPLUS ELECTRONICS IN TOKYO AND MANI LA MAKE YOUR OWN PRINTED CIRCUITS A PLOT IS INCOMPLETE WITHOUT CHARACTERS Nucleus In This BYTE The Trend Toward Hassle Free Products Tool Box BYTE's Bits Good Grief! What's New? Software Bug of the Month 2 What Happened at Trenton Clubs, Newsletters Letters Ask BYTE Reader's Service Classified Ads BYTE's Bugs Book Reviews BOMB Download it here: BYTE Vol 00-11 1976-07 Core Memories Cover Index 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keatah Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 Ahh, the TMS9900 and SR-52, now we're cooking with gas! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Samir Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 Woke up to find my web server needed rebooting. Mirrors back online again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 31, 2011 Author Share Posted January 31, 2011 BYTE Vol 00-13 1976-09 Bicentennial - 132 Pages 77,169,682 bytes BYTE Vol 00-13 from September 1976... And yet another awesome cover but Ug! This issue will hurt your brain. obtaining "random" number sequences which unfun looking math, building your own math circuits in hardware, A star trek trainer, number conversions with a plethora of flow charts, detailed pin-out of the Z-80, programming the 8008 in machine language, much more.. Foreground BUILD THIS MATHEMATICAL FUNCTION UNIT-Part 1 RANDOMIZE YOUR PROGRAMMING A BASIC STAR TREK TRAINER HOW TO DO A NUMBER OF CONVERSIONS THE CIRCUIT FOR Z-80s A FLAMELESS IC RECYCLING TRICK AMSAT 8080 STANDARD DEBUG MONITOR: AMS80 VERSION 2 Background ARE YOU AN AUTHOR? THE MSC 8080+ MICROPROCESSOR AS A PERSONAL SYSTEM MICROPROCESSOR UPDATE: SC/MP FILLS A GAP MACHINE LANGUAGE PROGRAMMING FOR THE "8008"-Chapter 3 Nucleus In This BYTE Come One, Come All! Letters Software Bug of the Month 4 BYTE's Bits What's New? Classified Ads Clubs, Newsletters Programming Quickies BOMB Reader's Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 00-13 1976-09 Bicentennial Cover Index 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mariush Posted January 31, 2011 Share Posted January 31, 2011 Please fix the link, not working. Will copy it to my mirror server when i wake up ion about 6-8 hours Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted January 31, 2011 Author Share Posted January 31, 2011 Please fix the link, not working. Will copy it to my mirror server when i wake up ion about 6-8 hours The magazine is uploading now.. Should be done in a few minutes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keatah Posted January 31, 2011 Share Posted January 31, 2011 Cool! Home-built math co-processors, made from calculator parts! How resourceful.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted February 1, 2011 Author Share Posted February 1, 2011 BYTE Vol 00-14 1976-10 Ham Radio - 148 Pages 87,059,411 bytes BYTE Vol 00-14 from October 1976... Wow now this is a lot of information about Morse code. Morse vcode this, Morse code that.. Morse Mores Morse! They must have put out a call for Ham radio related content and everyone had similar ideas... Anyway a fun read with as always. There was an interesting article about computers moving to personal use.. A quote that was pulled in the the article: Imagine a Community Information Exchange, complete with telecommunications access ports, mass storage and an accounting algorithm to keep track of operating expenses attributed to each user's activities. Crazy Talk! Foreground ADD THIS 6800 MORSER TO YOUR AMATEUR RADIO STATION IF ONLY SAM MORSE COULD SEE US NOW A MORSE CODE STATION DATA HANDLER BUILD THIS MATHEMATICAL FUNCTION UNIT- Part 2 Background THE COMPUTER ... VERSUS ... HAND SENT MORSE CODE A HAM'S APPLICATION DREAMS EFFICIENT STORAGE OF MORSE CHARACTER CODES KEEP PACE WITH THE TIMES HOMEBREWERY VS THE SOFTWARE PRIESTHOOD MEETING ACTIVITIES FOR COMPUTER CLUBS Nucleus In This BYTE The Concertina System Letters Software Bug of the Month 5 Some Historical Notes What's New? BYTE's Bits Classified Ads Programming Quickies Book Reviews KilO'Byte Travel logue Excerpts from Future Hi story Clubs, Newsletters BOMB Reader Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 00-14 1976-10 Ham Radio Cover Index 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted February 1, 2011 Author Share Posted February 1, 2011 BYTE Vol 02-02 1977-02 Usable Systems - 164 Pages 99,956,448 bytes BYTE Vol 02-02 from Ferruary 1977... Personal Computer - Sytems that are usable my the masses. What could prove that more than an auto-line generator for the SYS-8 with Neil Diamond belting out "Sweet Auto Line" oh yeah... Once again brainy articles on television interference, cassette interfacing, and serial storage media... and don't forget a look at the F8 article about the processor used on the Odyssey 2 game machine. Foreground SWEET AUTO LINE BUILD THIS ECONOMY FLOPPY DISK INTERFACE AUDIBLE INTERRUPTS FOR HUMANS THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM CASSETTE INTERFACE CALCULATOR KEYBOARD INPUT FOR THE MICROCOMPUTER ADD SOME BARC TO YOUR 8080 Background THE DIGITAL CASSETTE SUBSYSTEM , Part 1 COLOR DISPLAYS ON BLACK AND WHITE TELEVISION SETS SERIAL STORAGE MEDIA: Introduction and Glossary CUB 54, WHERE ARE YOU? (Or How to Navigate Using Mini-O) MICROPROCESSOR UPDATE: THE F8 SYSTEM A MIKBUG ROADMAP TTL LOADING CONSIDERATIONS Nucleus In This BYTE An Idea Whose Time Has Come! Letters Ask BYTE What's New? Baker Street Irregular Classified Ads Description: A Multi Cassette Controller Clubs, Newsletters Book Reviews BYTE's Bugs Further Notes on Bar Codes Kilo'Byte BYTE's Bits The Word "Byte" Comes of Age About the Cover - Venus de Piotto BOMB Reader's Service Download it here: BYTE Vol 02-02 1977-02 Usable Systems Cover Index 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThumpNugget Posted February 1, 2011 Author Share Posted February 1, 2011 OK! That is is for the next few weeks.. Feels good to have 1976 completed.. I was going to save the Vol 2-2 until I returned but there was a specific request for it so there was not much point in letting it sit around Looks like there is some heavy bandwidth happening right now.. The upload looks good.. Just slow right now.. be patient. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
texpat Posted February 1, 2011 Share Posted February 1, 2011 ThumpNugget, I've been avidly reading some of these old Bytes, and you've done a fantastic job on them. So great to see how things used to be. Hoping you run across the Byte AI issue they did in maybe 86 - 87 time frame, as I wrote a uni project off that... Thanks so much for what you've been doing, it's been awesome reading some of these old articles. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raindog2112 Posted February 1, 2011 Share Posted February 1, 2011 BYTE Vol 04-06 1979-06 Artificial Intelligence - 288 Pages 184,211,897 bytes Download it here: BYTE Vol 04-06 1979-06 Artificial Intelligence Cover Index Double page sticking problem in the 159-164 range. Those pages need to be re-scanned. (It's kind of easy to notice when the page size in the PDF is taller and you're reading in side-by-side mode.) Anyhow, I think this was the first issue I ever had back in the day. Unfortunately I tossed the issue out.. I saved all the recent ones but this one for some reason... Have to wait for another to pop up to make the corrections. I can grab those pages when I get back home to Portland. Practically living in my "second home" in Cupertino right now.... :-( 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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