[Coco] Hello, all
John Donaldson
johnadonaldson at sbcglobal.net
Mon Jul 17 21:57:32 EDT 2006
Joel,
I did some work for David too. I wrote KTERM and KRIBBS for the MM/1.
David and I sold a few
copies at one of the CoCoFest. Sold all the copies I had with me. David
did not have a working MM/1
at the fest or we could have made more diskettes. I bet my 8Meg board
came from you. LOL
John Donaldson
Joel Ewy wrote:
>Finally getting around to subscribing to the list.
>
> I'm Joel Ewy. I feel like I know many of you, but I'm not sure how many of you know me. When I lived in Elkhart, IN. I went to 2 or 3 of the Chicago fests (97-2000) and I notice Boisy has posted some pics of me there in 97 chatting with Joel Hegberg. I've had CoCos since 1980 (4K). I've got a couple CoCo 1s, 3 or 4 CoCo 2s, 3 or 4 CoCo 3s, a TC-9 Tomcat (that doesn't work too well) and an MM/1 (as well as some old Amigas, a fair number of old Macs, and a basement and now attic overflowing with PC junk.) I periodically get spurts of renewed interest in the CoCo and its descendants, and I seem to be in another one of those phases right now.
>
> I don't have many significant CoCo accomplishments to brag about, but I did once release a couple simple (read: crudely written) OS-9 utils to take 3 VEF or PIX (DS-69 Digisector) images (R,G,B) and munge them together into a 15-bit Targa file that could then be further manipulated on other systems to get a reasonable high-color image. I put it out as shareware on Delphi. If I can dig up the source I'll re-release it under the GPL FWIW.
>
> I also had some CoCo related stuff on the Web from about 95-2000, which I think is archived at archive.org -- including a picture made with the aforementioned vef2tga or pix2tga utilities.
>
> I also played a small role in the saga of the MM/1. Round about 95 I think, I called up Blackhawk to order an MM/1. David Graham told me he couldn't sell me one right away, because he needed somebody to stuff I/O and memory/backplane boards. Oh, Ok. Hey, wait a minute. I had spent a couple summers assembling modules for avionics test equipment at IFR Systems. I could stuff those boards! So I called him back and offered to help. There was one more catch. He really needed someone to spring for some parts.
>
> So... I 'borrowed' $1000 from my dad and bought a bunch of components -- sockets, SCSI controller chips, A/D converters, caps, connectors, the whole thing. David shipped me bare PC boards, and I soldered some up and sold them back to him to sell to the customers. Only problem was, Ver. 3.0 of the I/O board didn't work right. There were problems with the SCSI interface. Kevin Pease (I'm told) thought there was a race conditon in one of the GALs, but nobody seemed to be able to figure it out.
>
> I had bought just the unexpanded MM/1 board, and built my own I/O board and 8M RAM board from the stock of parts I had, but the SCSI didn't work, so I couldn't run a hard drive. Plus I had all these parts that weren't selling. We did sell some memory boards though, because those worked right. So every couple months David would call me up and order a memory board or two. I'd sit down in an evening and solder one up and ship them off to Oklahoma, or sometimes directly to a customer, and David would send me a check. Gradually, the orders came more seldom.
>
> I eventually traded an old universal device programmer that couldn't burn the 22V10 GALs used on one of the MM/1 boards to Ray Patterson (who did a lot of service work on the MM/1) for an earlier revision of the I/O board that had working SCSI and got some hard drives to work on my computer.
>
> Though I talked with David on the phone numerous times and corresponded via email, I only met him once -- at a Chicago CoCo Fest. Maybe '98 or '99. I was working on a cable adaptor that would allow me to use signals from both parallel ports on the MM/1 to hook up a Connectix QuickCam. I was going to use Linux drivers as a starting point. But soon after, while trying to wire up a SCSI Zip drive so I could back up my hard disks, I somehow managed to zap both of my hard drives. I lost the code I had been working on for the QuickCam, possibly also my modifications to Kotanski's (sp?) JPEG viewer (though I may have posted some version of that to Delphi, I can't remember), and almost certainly the little bit of work I did on an HTTP Get command using Chris Hawkes' socket library. Needless to say I was frustrated and depressed. Serves me right for trying to be responsible and back up my data! And I haven't heard from David Graham since that CoCo Fest,
> though I do have sporadic contact with Ray Patterson.
>
> I still have a stack of MM/1 Version 3 I/O boards, a fair number of 8M memory backplanes, and most of the parts needed to build them up. The boards themselves belong to Blackhawk, if any such entity still exists, but the parts are mine. I would venture to say that if anybody wants an 8M memory board we could come to some sort of arrangement. We should keep a record of the PC boards used, so if David ever re-emerges from the shadows we can work something out with him. But the parts are mine, and I don't think he'd begrudge me making back a little of what I lost, especially if it helps out other MM/1 users.
>
> And what about the I/O boards? Anybody interested in taking a crack at getting the SCSI working? I'll have to plug one in again and refresh my memory about what's wrong.
>
> Other items of possible interest to some of you: I got permission (I don't remember if it was just verbally or in an email) from Joel Hegberg to take over maintenance and make some kind of public release of his clipboard library for OS9/68K and KWindows. He sent me the source code, but I never got around to doing anything with it before the great hard drive calamity. I'm sure it was on floppy somewhere. Is the disk still readable?
>
> And finally, for the CoCo hackers out there: I have a small number (10 or less) of MC68B44 DMA controller chips. I suspect these are fairly uncommon. Were these even manufactured in large quantities? It is entirely possible that these were just engneering samples. In any case, I haven't had any way to test them short of wiring up some kind of test circuit and hooking it up to a CoCo, which I simply haven't done yet. Is anybody else interested in playing with such things just for fun? Even though they don't seem to be available in any sort of quantities, they could surely be emulated in an FPGA design or possibly in one of the larger CPLDs. The actual parts could be used in a design process for, say, a new disk controller, where you test an HDL version against the real McCoy.
>
> Oh, and I have source code for the OS-9 portions of Paul T. Burgin's Dragon Net network software and got permission to hack it for the CoCo. He doesn't have the DragonDOS source anymore, and it would have to be heavily modified to work on the CoCo anyway. But the source to his drivers and file managers is interesting and may have some use as a skeleton for some kind of CoCo network.
>
> Anyway, I'll stop blathering. I'm in the process of cleaning and reorganizing, and I need to find a new place to set up my CoCos and MM/1. I have put some new hard drives in the MM/1 and am in the process of seeing if I can recover anything from my CoCo 3's crashed drive. If there's any interest in any of the software (or hardware) artifacts I have I'll see what I can do to share the CoCo/OS-9 joy.
>
> JCE
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