#24.

CRYPT NEWSLETTER 18

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 25 Feb 2024
... e, unknown technoid -3 for each quote from obscure corporate CEO scum -1 for each quote from a think tank/consultant +5 for each quote from Vice-President Gore +7 for each quote from Congressman Ed Markey +10 for each quote from Bill Gates Go to #24. The article: doesn't mention ISDN (Go to #27) mentions that the Bells (Go to #26) won't market it explains that the initials (Go to #25) stand for: "It Still Does Nothing." Stop. Send article to Mr. Badger. He won't believe it unless he ...

The Groom Lake Desert Rat: Issue 29

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 12 Feb 2024
The Groom Lake Desert Rat: Issue 29
... e would provide a means to make light of it, thereby expressing frustrations that could not otherwise be spoken. This is a respectable theory, and it could be true, but it is not the only one possible. Suppose that things happened as Jarod said in DR#24. Sometime in the late 40s or early 50s, one of the most important contacts in history was made--between real extraterrestrials and a small segment the US government. Los Alamos, as our nation's premier think tank, would have been at the center of ...

The Groom Lake Desert Rat: Issue 27

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 12 Feb 2024
The Groom Lake Desert Rat: Issue 27
... ence, just to keep its own project secret? We believe it would, and perhaps in a grand historical sense these losses might be justified. Protests "I think you've gone nuts!", writes former Desert Rat subscriber Larry@ichips.intel.com following DR#24. "First, the 'Cammo Dudes' successfully distracted your attention from doing real reporting of the Groom area. Second, somebody has turned you into today's version of the 1950s Contactee with all this crap about UFOs and aliens. In the be ...

Issue # 31 DTACK GROUNDED Newsletter - May 1984

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 6 May 2023
Issue # 31 DTACK GROUNDED Newsletter - May 1984
... is shot and then I'll show him how it's done!" Meanwhile, the newsletter editor planned to use the 16032 to drive the math chip, just in case. Page 7, Column 1 So a prototype was constructed, which is pictured on the front page of newsletter #24. It used an asynchronous clock, and worked correctly about 9,999 floating point operations out of 10,000. The (then) young project engineer improved the grounds, the +5 bypassing, he buffered the clock, he tried slower clocks. The prototype continued ...

Issue # 28 DTACK GROUNDED Newsletter - February 1984

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 6 May 2023
... 16. (They have been re-assembled and slightly modified.) Also, the first disk contains the floating-point print routine printed in issue #13, modified for use with the 62-bit FP format, and the numeric input Page 9, Column 1 routine printed in issue #24. Along with a few miscellaneous tables, that comes to a little over 4K object code. The first disk contains mostly mature code which will change infrequently. As other portions of the HALGOL code achieve mature status, they will migrate to the first ...

Issue # 25 DTACK GROUNDED Newsletter - November 1983

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 6 May 2023
Issue # 25 DTACK GROUNDED Newsletter - November 1983
... to give a private party (hacker) in Fargo, ND as good a deal as ANYBODY gets. We make no exceptions. There will be additional information in future newsletters about the QD-1W when we get the board in production. And then there's issues #1 thru #24... ) MORE ADVANCED STUFF COMING! This month we have shown how to interface the 16081 with a conventional 68000 system. Next month we will provide details on some advanced design techniques which will provide a 50% (typical) increase in floating-point ...

Issue # 12 DTACK GROUNDED Newsletter - August 1982

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 6 May 2023
... g a newsletter. After all, we had reserved the option of 'turning it off' after the first six issues. Well, we have decided to continue for yet ANOTHER six issues. We have a couple of optimists among our readers who are paid up through issue #24. If we decide to discontinue this newsletter after #18, they will be reimbursed in cash. The next six issues will hopefully include contributed material since we are beginning to develop a respectable customer base. Also, we need to avoid duplicating ...

Commodore Hacking Issue 02

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
 · 25 Apr 2019
... manipulation of the 16k or 64k block within the 8563 memory. Registers 18 and 19 point to where in VDC memory the next read or write will take place from. Register 30 specifies the number of bytes - 1 to copy or fill depending on bit # 7 of register #24. Normally, the 8563 will automatically perform the designated operation (of what bit 7 of register #24 says) when register #31 (the data byte) is written to. Registers 18 and 19 automatically update upon read or write, so that is why register #30 spe ...
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