Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What was your first computer? Post 302373573 by edfair on Friday 20th of November 2009 09:07:44 PM
Old 11-20-2009
As IBM FE in early 60s got to see all the old stuff still installed prior to the 1401s. Was supposed to go to 7080 school but cancelled at last minute and sent to fixing EAM stuff. Got to "penny a day" on a 1401 and hands on repair on some 1402s if it was card drive stuff. Amusing stuff was not paying attention to signing with penny a day, comparison for last day failed, the high speed 1403 probably went through 30 pages before I got it stopped.
First owned was 6800 SWTP starting with 1 K, ending with 6800 and 6809 mixed manufacturers, up to 48K and hard drives. Proud of hardware hacking a bitbanging serial port to make it SASI and driving up to 3 hard drives and 4 floppies on a WD controller. And the software hacks to patch in the drivers, most of which I wrote in assembler or machine language. Did the full TRS line as a leasing and service company with some basic programming for quick & dirty jobs, then transitioned into PC stuff when I finally saw the handwriting on the wall. Missed the MCA fiasco because the ISA stuff was still selling.
Jumped into a hardware problem when 3 other companies had failed to fix a machine, had to learn Xenix in the process, and ended up with a life consumed by SCO stuff.
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

getting computer name

Hi all! Is there any function to get the name from a computer by the IP adresse? Thank you in advance! Greetings Mario (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: coredump2003
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

xwindow on old computer

hello at first sorry for my english... i know it isn't good but i hope you can understand me i want to install xwindow on my old pentium133MHz, 49MB ram memory, graphic card - stb horizon64 1MB (with old monochromatic monitor - horizontal 30.6-36.0, vertical 50-90) all this under redhat6.1...... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pgas
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

who - PC Computer name

Does anyone know of a way of identifying the PC / client name rather than IP address via who or some other AIX command (5.3). (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gefa
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Computer Does NOT Ping

Hi, I cannot ping my IP address on the following settings and was wondering if anyone knows a solution to make the computer pingable. Windows XP Media Centre Edition Service Pack 3 Wireless Router DLINK DSL-G604Tv2 Wireless Connection Windows Firewall - disabled completely by "stopped in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: timmc10
2 Replies

5. What is on Your Mind?

How Many hours on Computer?

How many hours you spend on Computer in a day??? (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: malcomex999
10 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Can't shutdown the computer

i cannot shutdown my computer through GUI or CLI when i put the command shutdown -P/-r nowor press the shutdown button it goes to the login prompt and stays like that afterwards, so i press CTRL+ALT+delete (which works) but that only restarts it and closes processes like winbind and apache ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: mi117
6 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Please help my computer has been compromised

Hi everyone, I hope I am posting in the right spot and I really need some help. I am going through a horrible divorce and I am afraid that my husband has compromised . He set up my mac computer and router and for my job set up remote access for me. I caught him cheating on me and I think he... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: kk243665
6 Replies
LaTeXML::MathParser(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				  LaTeXML::MathParser(3pm)

NAME
"LaTeXML::MathParser" - parses mathematics content DESCRIPTION
"LaTeXML::MathParser" parses the mathematical content of a document. It uses Parse::RecDescent and a grammar "MathGrammar". Math Representation Needs description. Possibile Customizations Needs description. Convenience functions The following functions are exported for convenience in writing the grammar productions. "$node = New($name,$content,%attributes);" Creates a new "XMTok" node with given $name (a string or undef), and $content (a string or undef) (but at least one of name or content should be provided), and attributes. "$node = Arg($node,$n);" Returns the $n-th argument of an "XMApp" node; 0 is the operator node. "Annotate($node,%attributes);" Add attributes to $node. "$node = Apply($op,@args);" Create a new "XMApp" node representing the application of the node $op to the nodes @args. "$node = ApplyDelimited($op,@stuff);" Create a new "XMApp" node representing the application of the node $op to the arguments found in @stuff. @stuff are delimited arguments in the sense that the leading and trailing nodes should represent open and close delimiters and the arguments are seperated by punctuation nodes. The text of these delimiters and punctuation are used to annotate the operator node with "argopen", "argclose" and "separator" attributes. "$node = recApply(@ops,$arg);" Given a sequence of operators and an argument, forms the nested application "op(op(...(arg)))">. "$node = InvisibleTimes;" Creates an invisible times operator. "$boole = isMatchingClose($open,$close);" Checks whether $open and $close form a `normal' pair of delimiters, or if either is ".". "$node = Fence(@stuff);" Given a delimited sequence of nodes, starting and ending with open/close delimiters, and with intermediate nodes separated by punctuation or such, attempt to guess what type of thing is represented such as a set, absolute value, interval, and so on. If nothing specific is recognized, creates the application of "FENCED" to the arguments. This would be a good candidate for customization! "$node = NewFormulae(@stuff);" Given a set of formulas, construct a "Formulae" application, if there are more than one, else just return the first. "$node = NewList(@stuff);" Given a set of expressions, construct a "list" application, if there are more than one, else just return the first. "$node = LeftRec($arg1,@more);" Given an expr followed by repeated (op expr), compose the left recursive tree. For example "a + b + c - d" would give "(- (+ a b c) d)"> "Problem($text);" Warn of a potential math parsing problem. "MaybeFunction($token);" Note the possible use of $token as a function, which may cause incorrect parsing. This is used to generate warning messages. AUTHOR
Bruce Miller <bruce.miller@nist.gov> COPYRIGHT
Public domain software, produced as part of work done by the United States Government & not subject to copyright in the US. perl v5.10.1 2009-06-11 LaTeXML::MathParser(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:40 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy