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Topic: geekery
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searching  28
09-25-2006 01:52 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 09-25-2006 01:53 AM
I am looking for an old keyboard with keys which were only about 1/8" tall, and bigger around than the modern keyboards. I saw and used this keyboard when I was in college in the computer lab in the late 80's. I have carpal now, and am looking to find one of these computer keyboards to make writing easier.

Does anyone here know of such a keyboard?
 
Messages 27-26 deleted by topic administrator 07-23-2006 02:03 AM
Randy Beck  25
12-09-2004 03:30 PM ET (US)
I guess they couldn't see the typewriting on the wall.
David Mercer  24
12-09-2004 02:59 PM ET (US)
At 11:33 AM 12/9/2004, you wrote:
>There's a big memory hole that's developing here. Am I the only
>one who remembers when IBM was the leading manufacturer of
>electric typewriters? Wasn't that office equipment, too?

Oh don't I know it, I learned to touch type on Selectrics while
taking a typing class after being frustrated from 5 years of hunt and peck typing. IBM Selectrics with no letters on the key
caps were used for tests. So you really learned to type.

Like someone mentioned in this thread a few messsages ago, the
original PC keyboard sucked partially to not cannibalize their
dedicated wordprocessor sales; they also didn't want to kill their (now dead? :-) typewriter division.
Peter S.  23
12-09-2004 01:33 PM ET (US)
There's a big memory hole that's developing here. Am I the only one who remembers when IBM was the leading manufacturer of electric typewriters? Wasn't that office equipment, too?
Randy Beck  22
12-07-2004 10:59 PM ET (US)
Let's not forget that IBM didn't really want a standard either. They were just too big that whatever they did would become it.

If IBM had based their PC on CP/M then we'd have seen the same effort by others to reverse engineer and make their systems compatible with that. It's probably a good thing that Microsoft was able to sell to other hardware companies, but I think we'd have had a standard regardless.

And I still do batch files.
David Mercer  21
12-07-2004 05:50 PM ET (US)
At 02:07 PM 12/7/2004, you wrote:
>David: in case you've forgotten the nightmare that was CP/M ...

Alas, no, I can't seem to purge the last memories of it from my mind!
>a different BIOS for every manufacturer's machine was only the
>start. There was then the problem that every manufacturer picked
>a different floppy disk formatting scheme, the better to
>lock out their competitors.

Yeah, that one had me pretty cheesed...and it wasn't just the CP/M folks, either. All the freakin' other systems all had totally
whacked formats, too. Apple ][ floppies different that C-64 floppies different that Atari 400/800 floppies...but yeah the CP/M universe was that madness writ large.

> Not to mention using different TTY
>control codes.

I blame the terminal manufacturers for starting that fine tradition!
> This wasn't too bad for the software
>developers if they restricted themselves to writing code that
>used the BDOS and no undocumented or proprietary BIOS calls and
>which had some sort of bastard cousin of Termcap to figure out
>how to address the screen, but for high-performance stuff it was
>a nightmare of market fragmentation.

Early MS-DOS wasn't a lot better in this regard, but not QUITE as nightmarish...christ I'm having flashbacks to writing assembler
graphics routines back in the day now.

>It meant the business
>computer market (at least, for S-100 based CP/M boxen) was as
>fragmented as the UNIX market was, a decade later.
>
>The one unequivocally good thing that the IBM PC brought
>was a measure of standards-based sanity, because even crap
>standards are better than deliberate market-sequestrating
>incompatability.

Well I suppose jacking around with batch files and config.sys
endlessly IS at least do-able for mortals, compared to "you need
to fix this BIOS call in assembler" :-)

-David
Charlie StrossPerson was signed in when posted  20
12-07-2004 04:07 PM ET (US)
David: in case you've forgotten the nightmare that was CP/M ... a different BIOS for every manufacturer's machine was only the start. There was then the problem that every manufacturer picked a different floppy disk formatting scheme, the better to lock out their competitors. Not to mention using different TTY control codes. This wasn't too bad for the software developers if they restricted themselves to writing code that used the BDOS and no undocumented or proprietary BIOS calls and which had some sort of bastard cousin of Termcap to figure out how to address the screen, but for high-performance stuff it was a nightmare of market fragmentation. It meant the business computer market (at least, for S-100 based CP/M boxen) was as fragmented as the UNIX market was, a decade later.

The one unequivocally good thing that the IBM PC brought was a measure of standards-based sanity, because even crap standards are better than deliberate market-sequestrating incompatability.
Jack Foy  19
12-07-2004 01:25 AM ET (US)
My office mates were reminiscing about this recently. They're a bunch of IBM mainframe geeks and were lamenting IBM's decision to go with the 8086 running a CP/M clone, rather than the S/370-on-a-chip running MVS. Would this have been OS/2 ten years early? It probably would have had the same cost problems as the real-world Unix-based architectures did, but it's fun to imagine worlds where powerful software tech won in the market. (It could still happen.)
David Mercer  18
12-05-2004 11:04 PM ET (US)
At 04:07 PM 12/5/2004, you wrote:
>Alan: forget the architecture and think of the externalities --
>namely, standardization. (Or would you rather live in a world
>where CP/M-style incompatability reigned unchallenged?)

How is the PC as we got it much different from CP/M-style
incompatibility? :-)

>I'll grant you that an IBM PC design that came out a year later
>and used the 68000, VMEbus, and Xenix would have been one whole
>lot nicer. But it would also have cost too much to compete with
>the offerings from companies like ACT (remember them?) or
>Apricot (in the UK). A good idea? You be the judge ...

Various manufacturers did release many machines in the 80's that
were effectively what you describe, a 68K and some form of Unix,
and you're right, they were all way too expensive.
Charlie StrossPerson was signed in when posted  17
12-05-2004 06:07 PM ET (US)
Alan: forget the architecture and think of the externalities -- namely, standardization. (Or would you rather live in a world where CP/M-style incompatability reigned unchallenged?)

I'll grant you that an IBM PC design that came out a year later and used the 68000, VMEbus, and Xenix would have been one whole lot nicer. But it would also have cost too much to compete with the offerings from companies like ACT (remember them?) or Apricot (in the UK). A good idea? You be the judge ...
Orc  16
12-05-2004 03:49 PM ET (US)
> Would Linux have ever gotten anywhere if IBM hadn't been the company it was and is?

Well, the reason that IBM jumped on the Linux bandwagon was because Linux was already going somewhere. If having a good Unix clone for free was the only consideration, I'd think that one of the BSD family would have been picked on [narrowly] technical and licensing grounds.

It's been so long since I've used an IBM PC keyboard that I don't even remember the keys on it (I've got a stack of about 40 IBM AT keyboards at home, and, maybe, one PC keyboard, and that only because I've got a couple of old 5150 motherboards floating around.
Randy Beck  15
12-05-2004 01:29 PM ET (US)
Remember the IBM PCjr? Now that was deliberately crippled.

They sold those things with a monitor for about $1000. It wasn't really a bad deal at the time, although you'd need to buy software like Lotus 1-2-3 on a cartridge not unlike a C64. The non-geeks might have been happy with it.

It was a terrible deal for computer stores because it brought in a completely different set of customers who'd expect the same quality of service.
Dave Bell  14
12-05-2004 01:26 PM ET (US)
Would Linux have ever gotten anywhere if IBM hadn't been the company it was and is?
Alan Bostick  13
12-05-2004 12:14 PM ET (US)
Ah, yes, the IBM PC, that used a busted CPU that used busted memory addressing, whose keyboard was deliberately busted so as not to compete with their own division that sold turnkey wordprocessing systems -- creating repetitive-strain injuries in generations of office workers.

The 'legacy of a standard BIOS' is a legacy of a standardized crippled architecture.
Charlie StrossPerson was signed in when posted  12
12-05-2004 08:17 AM ET (US)
Orc -- absolutely. What did I say about the razor-thin margins in the PC world? IBM doesn't do razor-thin margins.

I wouldn't, however, be surprised to see IBM still selling PCs in a couple of years' time. They'll be branded "IBM" and you'll be able to buy them via IBMs e-commerce front end, but it'll actually just be a franchise job for whoever buys the PC business from them, with IBM skimming a percentage off the top simply for providing the trademark and the website.

Meanwhile, as usual, if you want a real IBM computer you'll go to IBM and show them your wallet and they'll book a time to fly the engineers in and assemble the components in your dinosaur pen.
Orc  11
12-05-2004 01:40 AM ET (US)
I don't think IBM leaving the PC market means that they're getting out of the x86 market. The company I work for uses (and leases systems based on...) large IBM servers running Linux, and there's not been one peep from anyone about IBM selling off their x series line.

I think that "leaving the PC market" means "getting out of Windows machines", leaving IBM as a vendor of expensive PCs that are labelled "server" because they ship with Linux instead of Windows.
serraphin  10
12-04-2004 08:43 PM ET (US)
They've left us a legacy of a standard BIOS (bles their hearts and reverse engineers) and a bunch of dumb quotes on how Mainframes will never be outdone by desktops.

But they got us where we are now.

Big Blue - a tip of the hat to you.
Trejkaz  9
11-08-2004 09:46 PM ET (US)
As of right now, it looks like 1GB is the cheapest per unit of storage for SD memory. How times change!

Wikipedia's text is supposedly 380MB, which compresses to 100-200 or so, but nobody seems to be able to get it to work on Plucker (am looking around for a solution to the same problem, right now.) So perhaps I can even include some images in there, if I get the right solution to the problem.
Jon H  8
10-15-2004 05:23 PM ET (US)
Charlie,

I used to work at Britannica. Some of the files in the structure of the DVD look familiar to me - it looks like they're reusing elements of the online site's architecture.

Unfortunately, there appears to be some kind of encryption on the data.

I'd love to be able to get at the data and do a native Cocoa implementation for OS X.
Dave Bell  7
10-13-2004 03:13 PM ET (US)
Charlie prompted me to check the usual suspects for CompactFlash memory...

64MB is a ripoff, 128MB is only a quid more. The best price/size ratio seems to be 256MB, but that looks to be down to UK VAT on imports.

For my use, a digital camera, I wouldn't get anything bigger than 512MB. It keeps the job of copying the pics to a CD-ROM from getting complicated.
David Mercer  6
10-12-2004 08:04 PM ET (US)
At 11:55 AM 10/12/2004, you wrote:
>And if anyone has any idea how to extract the data from the OED
>CD-ROM ...It needs doing, even
>for use on my desktop, because the OED's interface *sucks*, and
>because it only works in Windows.

Yeah, that'd be a great thing to stick on some DarkNet or another, wouldn't it?
Michael the Impressive  5
10-12-2004 02:55 PM ET (US)
And if anyone has any idea how to extract the data from the OED CD-ROM ...

I intend to have another go at it soon. It needs doing, even for use on my desktop, because the OED's interface *sucks*, and because it only works in Windows.
TJIC  4
10-12-2004 11:37 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 10-12-2004 11:37 AM
Speaking of massaging wikipedia SQL dumps, you might be interested to know that I'm doing a contract gig that demands large samples of texts in various languages. Gutenberg is insufficient for many languages...so I wrote a bit of perl that downloads the Wiki dumps, discards the formatting, and generates large monolithic texts that have the odd property of jumping from topic to topic in an alphanetical fashion.

Long live free data!
Max Kaehn  3
10-11-2004 08:07 PM ET (US)
That's pretty nifty, and probably beats the Britannica MMC for sheer amount of information. I wonder if they'll start selling prebuilt versions of that as a way to support Wikipedia?
David MercerPerson was signed in when posted  2
05-23-2003 06:24 AM ET (US)
Yes, and the fact that the security hole that Mitnick used to smack Shinomura would have been closed had Shinomura even read Cochran and Wood (Unix System Security) and not been running rlogin, didn't stop him from making major dollars as an "expert" selling his ghostwritten book about it.

Back in the glory days of the dot-bubble, I only had one large client (a bank) who was even thinking of having us (jet set "fixer" subcontractors for big consulting practices) go through after JD Edwards finished their big, professional looking security review and shoot holes in it.

They do indeed NOT want to know what's wrong at a certain level, they might have to change things! :-)
David Bell  1
05-15-2003 01:23 PM ET (US)
I can remember doing stuff about passwords and encryption in 1977, back when microprocessors were new and wonderful. There was all sorts of stuff buried in the pages of Byte and Dr. Dobbs Journal about this sort of stuff.

And my ISP uses the same password for the POP3 servers as for the service which provides access to mail via webpages, so that you can check your email from a cybercafe.
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