Old trackball won't work on modern laptops

Where are those Turbo buttons when you need them?

Reply to
JeffM
Loading thread data ...

actually, they have PCI card converters for old ISA cards.

--
"I\'m never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
Reply to
Jamie

In comp.arch.embedded Tom Lucas wrote: ...

Wine is not for emulating hardware. If your Dos program uses Raw IO accesses and no interrupt, there are some chances. Run wine as root and allow wine to access the IO ports in question

--
Uwe Bonnes                bon@elektron.ikp.physik.tu-darmstadt.de

Institut fuer Kernphysik  Schlossgartenstrasse 9  64289 Darmstadt
--------- Tel. 06151 162516 -------- Fax. 06151 164321 ----------
Reply to
Uwe Bonnes

a couple of 9V batteries... may only need one.

What's the output impedance of an MC1488 anyway?

+5, 0V, 4 TTL inputs (with pull-up) 4 inputs for the R part of a one-shot R-C timers (think 556 or 558),

only two of each on the cheap ones

R is typicaly a 250K variable resistor (to +5V)

often TTL level MIDI in and out too.

Bye. Jasen

Reply to
jasen

yeah, but what is it under load, and how does that compare withj what the trackball gets when it's connected to the reguular PC.

maybe 5V from the ps/2 socket would be enough for it.

--

Bye.
   Jasen
Reply to
jasen

It doesn't do harware at all, all it does is convert (some) windows software into linux software.

linux is fairly good with legacy hardware.

Dosemu on the the other hand can be told to enable ranges of IO ports for real hardware access.

Configuring dosemu can be tricky.

A new PC with an ISA slot could be expensive.

--

Bye.
   Jasen
Reply to
jasen

On a sunny day (23 Jan 2007 11:05:21 GMT) it happened jasen wrote in :

This is not completely correct, read the wine myth FAQ.

formatting link

Reply to
Jan Panteltje

Everything to do with the ICE is tricky so any dosemu pain will just be a part of a more comprehensive painmaking operation. However, it does sound as if it may be a route with a chance of success.

I've seen a few motherboards and they are not crazily priced and I don't mind spending a bit of cash for the right thing anyway. Someone mentioned a PCI to ISA converter which may allow me to use my existing hardware but it does add another layer of abstraction onto the layers already introduced by linux and dosemu.

Reply to
Tom Lucas

It didn't sag when connecting the trackball. But that might be because its regulator is out of regulation and doesn't draw much current.

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg

I like the sig " sometimes I cook with wine... other I even add it to the food" annon classic

mhp

Reply to
LVMarc

Joerg wrote: (snip)

Amen to that, Joerg. Stuff is either made so cheap that it breaks long before it should or the new models of the things it's used with render it obsolete. Either way, ya gotta buy new. It sux.

Try to find a new SCSI scanner or an x-GHz AT motherboard. Was checking out DVD burners on the Plextor site the other day and did a double-take when I noticed that all on that page, except one, is USB. Only the one odd one is ATAPI.

You think you have a problem? My OS doesn't support USB.

-- Michael trapped in the 90's with OS/2 Warp 3

Reply to
Michael

DVD

There is one solution to that and the industry shoots itself in the foot at times because of it: You can forego upgrades for a long, long time. Sure, I just bought a new PC for the lab because I needed one there. But I can and on occasion do schematic entry on this here newsgroup machine from the mid-90's. When working on schematic capture or filter design I do not notice any significant difference in productivity versus the new XP machine. Oh, and it has a real CRT where I can see stuff without glasses even when the sun hits the screen.

Did I mention that we do not own a DVD player at home and that one can live just fine without it? Or that the old 25" analog TV still works like a champ? That my car does not "feature" electric this, that and the other thing but passes smog with flying colors every time? That this consulting office is usually heated by a wood stove? That I split the firewood with a hydraulic cylinder driven by an engine built in 1942? That the 1950's tube radio here in the office sounds better than them newfangled MP3 players yet never needed new electrolytics?

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg

Some are going to be SATA as well... in fact, I believe that Plextor was one of the first companies to release SATA DVD/CD burners.

Keep the OS/2 machine around for whatever you need it for, spend $250 on a bare-bones PC and install Linux?

Reply to
Joel Kolstad

I'll ship you one for free if you'd like, Joerg! :-) Just e-mail me your address...

There's nothing wrong with keeping to the technology you already have and enjoy, although I would suggest that sometimes you may not appreciate newer technology until you've actually sat down and used it for awhile. There is a perceptible, positive difference between, e.g., a 1080p big-screen TV and your 25" analog clunker, while I'd buy that heating your office with wood is perhaps actually a little nicer than heating with electricity or gas.

I'm told that what most people consider the "better" sound of tubes is what we engineers generally refer to as "distortion." :-)

---Joel

Reply to
Joel Kolstad

the timer (0x40:0x1c) is typically well emulated, code that uses timing loops, however, will fail miserably as processors are now 1000 times faster than they were in the 80s

what software is giving you grief?

Bye. Jasen

Reply to
jasen

Interesting, but I didn't notice that point being addressed.

Bye. Jasen

Reply to
jasen

On a sunny day (28 Jan 2007 06:04:17 GMT) it happened jasen wrote in :

windows->linux It specifically mentions other OSses like BSD etc Also 'convert into' is the vaguest formulation of what it does I have seen so far. I think one can say it is pretty much a windows clone using Unix for the IO. (Now somebody will argue with ta). So let's refer to the description on their site.

Reply to
Jan Panteltje

Don't remember. As much as I do remember it was WDF filter design routines from Texas Instruments. But AFAIR I found a "fix" on the web to recompile in a way that the main program didn't use fixed timing intervals anymore and that made it work. With the Mildenberger WDF program I still have the issue that some warnings show up for about

100msec and I have to repeat the run several times, reading one word per "flash" to make out what it says.
--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg

Thanks, Joel. But we wouldn't use it at all :-)

True, but we only watch the evening news. And even those only up to the weather forecast. TV doesn't mean much for us.

No rushing air, much healthier IMHO.

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg

The primary heat source doesn't make a difference to the helthiness of room climate. Those European-style water-heated radiators make a nice heating, no matter how the water gets hot (I'm saying European-style because all I've ever seen in the US were those AC ducts used for both heating and cooling - quite unpleasant, actually).

robert

Reply to
Robert Latest

ElectronDepot website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.