PLEX86  x86- Virtual Machine (VM) Program
 CVS  |  Mailing List  |  Download  |  Newsgroups

Unisys TO300 lost keyboard


Your Ad Here

Your Ad Here

How to find your soulmate IN ONE DAY Using The 4th Dimension
Uses of The 4th Dimension ------------------------------ Since I discovered The 4th Dimension, one of the conclusions I have reached is...

From Deep Down Under, mpholland(at)gmail.com I have had a Unisys TO-300 terminal in my possesion for a year or so. I am wanting to hopefully connect to my FreeBSD box. However, I do not have a keyboard to go with it. In a topic from this newsgroup from 1999 it was mentioned that this terminal maybe similair to a Wyse 50-60. I am wanting to know if anyone can confirm or deny this, and if yes, if a Wyse 50-60 keyboard would work with it? I managed to find +5V and Gnd and tried hooking up a standard PC keyboard. Would anyone have the pinpout for the keyboard RJ socket? I had some luck getting the following on the screen *FDX Main 1- 1 0:00". The 0:00 would increment every minute I had it turned on, but I was unable to get any further. Having never setup a terminal before my knowledge is lacking. I was told you can press F3 to enter setup of the terminal, which I tried without any luck. Any info would be much appreciated. Matt Matt,

IBM up for grabs 2817
before they sold the cottle rd facility (to hitachi) ... when 87 cut thru the middle of the property, the plant rec area came up on the other side of...

These days, the computer industry is so boring, with Microsoft and Intel commanding what will be built and all other vendors merely obeying. It was much more interesting, back when vendors designed their equipment in a mulbreastude of inventive ways.

This is a long-winded way of saying that you probably won't be able to get a "standard" PC keyboard (whichever "standard" you mean) to work with this Unisys terminal.

Even if you managed to physically connect the wires without causing a fire, it is highly likely that the voltages and signalling of a PC-type keyboard will be totally different from what the terminal expects.

If you are desperate, you might be able to find a Unisys-branded TO-300 keyboard from a used-equipment vendor, but it would cost money. Just now I found one for $65 U.S. by searching this website:

But perhaps you can do better; See also

If the TO-300 is a private-label version of a Wyse product (and I don't know this), then you might be able to use a Wyse keyboard, but finding one of those could take time, and there is more than one Wyse terminal keyboard type. See:

The F3-to-Setup trick works for many DEC, Dorio, and Boundless products, but it is not a universal feature of character-cell terminals. In fact, even for a single terminal model, the setup sequence can vary depending on which keyboard option is installed.

IBM up for grabs 2818
Anne & Lynn Wheeler some other pictures from site referenced in previous article ... cottle road site: in the plant site pciture from the air .... hiway...

The "FDX" just means "full duplex"; while "Main" tells you it's not the alternate screen buffer being displayed.

VM maclib reference
the original superset of DCSS, I had started on CP-67 and referred to it as virtual memory management (VMM) ... this included...

Another avenue to knowledge might be among people who have been users of older Unisys systems. Thus, I'm cross-posting to this message to "comp.sys.unisys" and "alt.folklore.computers".

...RSS

-- Have a Cow, Man!



Your Ad Here

List | Previous | Next

VM maclib reference

Alt Folklore Computers from Newsgroups

The #1 Usenet Provider on the Internet

CrayCyber.org makes SGI Origin 2000 available for public