I'm sure you have all been on the edge of your seats waiting to hear any
I have now replaced all the RIFAs in the PSU with 400V polypropylene types
Also in the meantime I've dug out one of my first gen Raspberry Pis and set up agetty on it - basically making it a totally over-engineered serial to IP adaptor. That's allowing me to now post this from an Acorn A3020 - I
So here's the interactive bit... Obviously BBS is one good answer but does anyone have any oddball recommendations for text-based entertainment on today's Internet?
I fell off while waiting some time back. :P
Good effort, that mean you're telnetting to the PI, and then you have to telnet out again? I used to just hang serial lines into my "server" box.
You can still play the odd MUD but they're generally not terribly busy these days. Have a look at shattered.org:23 If you spot spectre, eyvee or missdemeanour yell, you'll prolly get yourself some assistance if you want it.
Well, I'm using a serial terminal emulator to get into the Pi, then telneting / SSHing / "links"ing from there.
I'm having a spot of bother with terminal settings - they are tantalisingly close but I had to forfeit today's Bubble Boggle door game because all the letters appeared as blank squares. Ruined my whole weekend :(
I'm sure you have all been on the edge of your seats waiting to hear any kind of update on the capacitor-torching power supply in my BBC micro. Well, maybe not but it is very quiet in here again so you're getting an update anyway :)
I have now replaced all the RIFAs in the PSU with 400V polypropylene
types which hopefully will be less prone to self-immolation, or at least might not do so until I'm long dead. The power supply seems completely happy, the BBC micro itself has survived the experience and doesn't even smell that bad now.
Also in the meantime I've dug out one of my first gen Raspberry Pis and set up agetty on it - basically making it a totally over-engineered
serial to IP adaptor. That's allowing me to now post this from an Acorn A3020 - I love this machine!
So here's the interactive bit... Obviously BBS is one good answer but
does anyone have any oddball recommendations for text-based
entertainment on today's Internet?
Thanks for the update, *I* was waiting on baited breathe.
Seriously, tho, I hope to do similar upgrades to my systems - when they breathe their dying breaths... appreciate your fun posts, and am glad that your BBC is still loved - wait a minute, that has different meanings in.... nevermind.
Yup, mental blank. I have no idea what is around for the ol' beebers but if you can find a slip/ppp client for it then all you need is some native tools usually telnet is around being about the most basic. There's a few tools around for the II range, that'll do slip/ppp over serial.
Its all going to depend on ANSI emulation I would have to guess. They can be quite variable, some may cope with colour and character but not handle movement. Others may not handle colour or characters but manage movenment. It'll take some trial and error.
Re: Magic smoke update
Acorns. Quite honestly I'm not very good at making things work on this platform, though - I think it needs a special kind of brain so I will have
loves telling me that whatever crazy bodge he just explained makes sense
You need to install your 6502 brain :)
Do the Acorns have "the tube" for a co-pro or alternative processor? There are some really weird things people have hitched up to it... 65C816's, Z80 although that was pretty standard, someone had a 386 hitched up I think too.
The Acorn (A3020) uses an ARM 250 - apparently the first system on a chip.
I think that's why I love it so much. Computing heritage aside, it's a 32 bit RISC running at 12 MHz so it's not bonkers level restrictive and even
I'll have to get a 6502 head on when I "properly" start work on the BBC, though. That'll require a level of coding efficiency that I can only aspire to at this point!
That was about 30 years ago... they're not very common here. I'm
unsure I've seen an actual Acorn here at all.
I used to aspire to assembly, but never really got my head around it. Just had to make do with BASIC. Just remember functionality is 95%, and the other IBM idiom... it might be slow, but it sure is hard to use :)
It turns out with BBC BASIC (and probably many others) that:
"IF a% AND 2 = 0"
"IF a% AND 2 = 0"Woah, I've never seen a statement that looks remotely like that in any version of basic. In fairness though most of what I've seen are either MS variants including Applesoft, or some early TRS80 versions.
... print("Yes")a = 1
if(a & 2 == 0):
So C64 has the same behaviour as the Acorn. I'm pretty sure that's based on MS BASIC - Didn't Bill Gates hide an Easter egg in the PET?
Atari 8 bit BASIC ================= No bitwise operators :(
Applesoft BASIC =============== No bitwise operators (apparently
earlier versions had bitwise AND / OR / etc but they were replaced
by logical AND / OR / etc).
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