What Jessie Did Next...

...being the inane ramblings of a mundane Yorkshire bird.

Page 25 of 26

<%image(20060711-beebs.jpg|120|106|)%>I’ve managed to source some Econet bits including terminator boxes and socket boxes. There’s now enough bits to get a basic level 3 fileserver and workstation up and running, plus the ANFS ROMs which Chris has done for me will go nicely in the Masters together with the Econet modules which will arrive this week. I can then turn my mind to the dialup interface and the modems – probably the first BBs which will go up will be The Rabbit Run (since I wrote a lot of the code and sort-of understand it). I’ll do some touting once we’ve worked out the icky bits of connectivity – we’ll have a couple of Archimedes ones up too.

Paid a quick trip to Maplin after work to get some shielded 4-core cable, and got blank looks when I asked what the mutual capacitance on the cable was. Took a few seconds then got asked “oh, you want speaker wire?” *sigh* They really have gone downhill 🙁

I also appear to have Z80 coprocessors coming out of my ears, where I really want 6502 ones. Pfffff. Anyone out there want to do a swap?

Update: The Winchester drive appears to have gone pop. More specifically (according to this tech note) the LED error code translates to “Index pulse not detected during spinup”. So, time to find another drive, which will be a bit of a sod: to this end I’m now looking for a Miniscribe 3438, or at least some other half-height ST506 (pref. RLL) drive.

The whole web2.0 thing (rounded corners, mirrored logos, silly names, gratuitous use of AJAX) is just so 1999 it hurts – there was a good article on ZDnet this morning about it. Don’t get me wrong, some stuff’s quite neat (such as the squurl.com domain name digger), it’s just I have a seriously big sense of deja-vu. I did find this very amusing though.

In other news freedb.org is closing down. That’s quite sad, really.

Hmph. I think my subconscious is telling me something about this code I’m maintaining…

[joel@azura cortina]$ svn vommit
Unknown command: ‘vommit’

*sigh*.

I finally got off my arse this morning, fired up the RiscPC and reconfigured its IP address.

End result, Haven (my old Viewdata BBs) is back and available via a Java client again. Taste that 40-column retro Viewdata goodness here, but don’t expect any updates – the Sysop’s Bulletin still thinks I work for Mailbox, and that was at least 4 years ago.

Those of you who are really retro can probably telnet to haven.jml.net:23 with a Viewdata emulator such as Hippoterm. The truly retro will have to wait until I’ve got it hooked up to a phone line, but that’s probably best saved for the BBC Micro madness 🙂

[ Those of you who don’t know what the hell I’m on about (usually because you whippersnappers are too young, this was during the 80s dammit) can find more about Viewdata on CCl4’s site – be enlightened at the marvels of escape codes, attributes, and giant telephone bills ]

On the way to the bus stop tonight I passed by Salt’s Deli in Leeds, where being a football widow tonight I consoled myself with some Pecos Blue, a bag of their own Espresso blend, and some Green+Blacks 80% chocolate.

Add a glass of port to that, and I’m feeling a bit better now!

Rumours abound of another Ghostbusters movie once more, without Bill Murray – but with Ben Stiller, whom I bloody despise: the only good Ben Stiller film I’ve seen is Mystery Men, and that’s ‘cos the supporting cast blew him away totally.

Rumoured release date of 2008. Given the mess Akroyd made of Ghostbusters II and Blues Brothers 2000, I’m not holding out much hope.

This is cool, a tutorial on how to build your own Canon shutter release cable. It includes the relevant bits to wire it up to a serial port too so you can automate it. Very cool.

Today, the board which Neil fitted last night threw an utter spaz (serves us right for trusting a part from PC World). Thus, I am in Docklands having driven 250 miles, I have replaced the server, and I am about to drive 250 miles back up north then do a full day’s work. That’ll mean that by the end of tomorrow I’ll have had a total of 5 hours’ sleep over 72 hours.

I’m getting too old for this lark.

Um, yeah.

/dev/hdd1 has gone 49710 days without being checked, check forced.

I’d better back that up, then.

I’m still on the lookout for PHP beautification stuff, and came across phpCodeBeautifier. What utter bollocks – it’s only available for Windows it seems, at least the site doesn’t mention anything about ELF versions and refuses to run the binary under Linux. How bloody useless is that…

It’s been a day in Manchester for me at UKNOF4. Photos here.

Some good memorable presentations:

  • Randy Bush’s fairly unique presentation style gave us an entertaining look at his latest work on routing security
  • Ian Meikle of Nominet told us about DNS monitoring and their Nagios style system, and showed us some screenshots of the way that they’re using DSC to build some interesting stats together with the guys at OARC (I think I might have a proper play with that).
  • James Rice reported on the BBC’s multicast progress and experiences, although I was saddened to find they have no plans to bring back Ogg Vorbis streaming.
  • I was also quite impressed with LINX’s work with THUS on fingerprinting spam using TCP fingerprinting rather than reading message headers.

The inevitable social event was held at a bar in Canal Street – I don’t think I’ve ever been to a networking event at a gay bar before!

Met up with quite a few old ISP-land acquaintances I’d not seen in eoghans – and surprisingly there was some bridge-building too; it seems to have been the month for that.

Got home to find the 64k BBC computer I’d been shipped wasn’t a 64k Beeb after all, but a bog-standard 32k Model B. Still, Nicky bought me a nice pressie – the new Beautiful South album – that’s something to listen to while I clear up the house in preparation for tomorrow’s party.

My money’s on Finland. UK and Lithuania in the top five.

I’m sat here in the corner of the room at UKNOF4 with Ben, reading about BT’s new wireless base stations on park benches. This led us to think that perhaps if you could disguise wireless bridges in the base of cans of Tennents Super Extra, you could extend the range courtesy of wandering tramps.

It’s not even 10am yet. I’ve been away from these sorts of events too long 😉

Shane Richie and Vinnie Jones are starring in a new Carry On movie called Carry On London.

There truly is no God.

I did say yesterday that I’d post more once I’d stopped swearing. Truth of the matter is that I haven’t stopped swearing in the slightest.

There’s a BBC Master 128 in my collection: it’s almost 20 years old to give it its due, and the CMOS battery pack inside had badly corroded so I replaced it. I’ve also made an attempt to repair one of the shift keys – the internals of the keyboard switches are prone to oxidisation but the entire damn lot of spares I had were oxidised too. How tedious.

Anyway, as mentioned yesterday I’d picked up an internal 65C02 second processor, which upgrades the 128 to the Turbo model and enables it to run the Level 3 Econet fileserver software. I also picked up the 8-bit IDE module from JGH and set it all up. That’s where the troubles began. You see, things like the IDE module and the GoMMC rely on patched filesystems and external utilities for things like formatting, firmware upgrades, etc. which is all well and good, but a pain in the arse if you’ve only got 5.25″ drives attached to the Beeb and the only floppy drive in the house which will work on a PC is a 3.5″ one.

So, thinks I, I shall be clever. I pulled the RiscPC out from its resting place and connected it up to the sole SVGA LCD sitting in the house. Nothing. Nada. Not an electronic sausage. The RiscPC is just too old, and the LCD panel is just too limited in its range – fine for a Windows box, crap for something which requires some sort of odd sync. I swear for a short space of time, and then remember I used to do transfers like this using serial leads.

Problem #2 occurs – the BBC’s serial port requires a 5-pin domino DIN connector, which aren’t made any more. After fighting with a pair of pliers, I manage to construct a 5-pin domino connector and Google for a suitable pinout, selecting the first likely candidate. Soldering iron gets fired up, and I start building the cable (bear in mind it’s easily 5 years since I soldered anything, probably 10). At this point, there’s a huge crack sound from the garage. I investigate, and smoke is coming out of the Master 128’s switched-mode PSU. I turn it off, and then back on to be greeted with the familiar ‘beep boop’ – doesn’t seem too bad, so I leave it switched off while I go back to finishing the cable, which takes me about another 20 minutes.

Return to the workbench, start up one of the BBC B machines with ADFS in. Find the old Comstar-II ROM. Connect the serial lead. Try to talk to it. Nothing. I return to the laptop and Google some more to find out the relevant *FX command to change baudrates. In that time, I discover Angus Duggan’s serial cable pinout with a completely different set of pinouts. I swear once more, fire up the soldering iron, desolder my connector and resolder it with the correct pinouts. It works! Hurrah! Much celebration!

The celebration however is shortlived as I discover that Comstar’s XMODEM file transfer routines are shonky enough to barf at things over 200kbytes in size, and can’t do flow control properly so there’s retries every time it saves to floppy. So off I go to dig in the floppy disks eventually returning half an hour later with a copy of Gareth Babb’s term application, which does the job and at 19200bps as well. I now have, er, a 5.25″ floppy with all the software on I need. Time to plug in the IDE drive to the Master 128, and get it going. I duly do this, and find that I can no longer access the floppy disk. Bollocks. So it’s either the floppy or the hard disk. Further investigation reveals that the 1MHz bus doesn’t actually think it’s got anything plugged into it. There’s a tale involving the GoMMC as well, but that’s pretty much got the same level of success.

I’m starting to think that:

  • The BBC Master 128 is so knackered that the 1MHz bus is blown, and it’s doing odd things internally.
  • The MMC card I have for the GoMMC isn’t compatible “enough”.

So, I’m on the lookout for another Master 128 (got one in the loft? Give me a yell please!), and Kieran’s bringing round an MMC card he has kicking around the place.

I just keep thinking of the satisfaction I’ll have when it’s all working, and my mind inevitably wanders to the thought that I haven’t yet worked out a reason why I’m doing this.

OK, so I didn’t really go for the RISC OS stuff at all, I went purely to meet up with the 8-bit chaps and do some serious Beeb geekery. Photos are here.

The charity stall rendered a fantastic pile of goodies, mostly to assist me in my evil projects: an ARM710 module for the RiscPC; an old Arc Beebug disc buffer; 4-slot backplane for an A310; SJ Research Econet clock box, ATPL BBC Micro mouse (the rubber on the ball’s gone all sticky and gooey tho); ROM cartridge for the Master populated with a couple of ROMs I’ve not ID’d yet; internal 65C02 copro for the Master (swiped from under the nose of the bloke who kept bagsying the cheese wedges); some manuals including a pre-release of the original BBC Micro manual; a MEMC1a; some RO3 ROMs for Kieran; a couple of replacement mouse balls; a Beeb with 1770, ADFS, and various other bits; an 80-track double-sided 5.25″ drive; and an Econet module for a BBC Master.

I’m especially chuffed I got the clock box. Those things are like hen’s teeth.

Dropped into Jonathan Harston’s stand and purchased one of his 8-bit IDE interfaces for the Beeb – he’d got one of Sprow‘s MiniB devices as well but sadly no power for it, which rendered it pretty useless 🙁

Next door were the guys from Binary Dinosaurs and the computer museum at Bletchley Park, who had a variety of interesting stuff including a full, working, original BBC Domesday system. It was acting up a bit later on in the day but seems to have been largely reliable.

There didn’t seem to be much RiscPC which I found interesting other than a podule to do USB and a laser keyboard thingy.

Socially it was nice to see old colleagues, but there were a lot of people missing and the show was half the size it was last year. This is it really – the RiscPC stuff is still too new to be nostalgic, which I think is why there was so much fascination at the old Beebs. I mean, I was only 15 when they stopped making the damn things!

As I write this I’m battling installation of a pile of stuff on the various Beebs so more later once I’ve stopped swearing. Really.

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