interesting links2024-03-27T14:33:06+01:00https://roland.iwasno.net/links/https://roland.iwasno.net/links/https://roland.iwasno.net/links/
LCM+L - Online Systemshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?tG223g2024-03-27T14:33:06+01:00Information on the Computers available over the Internet from the LCM through SSH.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?tG223g">Permalink</a>)
PC/XT and AT Keyboards - How Are They Different?https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?uBZ9Qg2024-02-10T22:13:58+01:00I remember the missing \-key on the XT keyboard and find it interesting that it had Ctrl left to A.<br />
See also <a href="https://www.dosdays.co.uk/topics/floppy_drives.php" rel="nofollow">https://www.dosdays.co.uk/topics/floppy_drives.php</a> for information about floppy discs.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?uBZ9Qg">Permalink</a>)
Neo6502 - Open Source Hardware Boardhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?5Pufmw2024-02-05T15:40:13+01:00Neo6502 is small computer with USB keyboard host and HDMI/DVI output.<br />
Found on <a href="https://fosdem.org/2024/schedule/event/fosdem-2024-2093-neo6502-in-the-matrix-open-source-hardware-and-software-modern-retro-computer-with-software-defined-architecture/" rel="nofollow">https://fosdem.org/2024/schedule/event/fosdem-2024-2093-neo6502-in-the-matrix-open-source-hardware-and-software-modern-retro-computer-with-software-defined-architecture/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?5Pufmw">Permalink</a>)
Quentin's posts about retro-computinghttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?cLtrSQ2024-01-30T19:45:17+01:00Most of them are about TOPS-10, found on the PiDP-10 Google group.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?cLtrSQ">Permalink</a>)
The Original Hacker's Dictionaryhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?yGjHIQ2024-01-25T10:05:04+01:00This file, jargon.txt, was maintained on MIT-AI for many years, before being published by Guy Steele and others as the Hacker's Dictionary. Many years after the original book went out of print, Eric Raymond picked it up, updated it and republished it as the New Hacker's Dictionary. Unfortunately, in the process, he essentially destroyed what held it together, in various ways: first, by changing its emphasis from Lisp-based to UNIX-based (blithely ignoring the distinctly anti-UNIX aspects of the LISP culture celebrated in the original); second, by watering down what was otherwise the fairly undiluted record of a single cultural group through this kind of mixing; and third, by adding in all sorts of terms which are "jargon" only in the sense that they're technical. This page, however, is pretty much the original, snarfed from MIT-AI around 1988. -- jpd.<br />
<br />
See also <a href="https://www.dourish.com/quotes.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.dourish.com/quotes.html</a> and <a href="https://www.dourish.com/goodies/" rel="nofollow">https://www.dourish.com/goodies/</a><br />
<br />
Found on <a href="https://mumble.net/" rel="nofollow">https://mumble.net/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?yGjHIQ">Permalink</a>)
VAX floating point formatshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?Ek520Q2024-01-15T23:57:21+01:00(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?Ek520Q">Permalink</a>)
Open Dylanhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?0e0clg2024-01-11T15:42:17+01:00Found via <a href="https://www.theregister.com/2023/12/25/the_war_of_the_workstations/" rel="nofollow">https://www.theregister.com/2023/12/25/the_war_of_the_workstations/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?0e0clg">Permalink</a>)
Clustered Pi Picos made to run original Transputer codehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?8KmB8A2023-12-24T10:47:56+01:00The PIO programmable I/O unit can be used to emulate transputer links and presumably (<a href="http://www.inmos.com/inmos_legacy.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.inmos.com/inmos_legacy.html</a>) SpaceWire links.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?8KmB8A">Permalink</a>)
Greaseweazle V4 USB Floppy Adapter – Flux Reader Writer – Ultimate Mister FPGAhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?cSWYBQ2023-12-14T15:24:14+01:00Greaseweazle allows versatile floppy drive control over USB. Read and write your vintage floppy disks from your PC/Linux/Mac computer. This USB device lets you to connect an old floppy disk drive to your modern computer to read/write floppy disks from any system with Shugart standard drives (Amiga, Atarí, Commodore, Amstrad, Sinclair, PC, CNC machines, musical instruments, industrial equipment, and more.)<br />
<br />
By extracting the raw flux transitions from a drive, any disk format can be captured and analyzed. The Greaseweazle also supports writing to floppy disks, from a range of image file formats including those commonly used for online preservation (ADF, IPF, DSK, IMG, HFE, …).<br />
<br />
Greaseweazle V4 is the latest version, updated for mass production and with the following features:<br />
<br />
Reads and writes 3″, 3.5″, 5.25″, 8″ disks (with suitable drive and cable)<br />
Buffered outputs, for communicating with older 5.25″ and 8″ disk drives<br />
Integrated power connector for directly powering most 3.5″ disk drives<br />
Write-enable jumper can be removed for safer preservation of precious vintage disks<br />
Supports floppy-modded 5.25″ drives<br />
Supports Disk-Change detection as used by Rob Smith’s integration into the WinUAE Amiga emulator<br />
3 user-definable outputs (eg. 8″ interface REDWC signal)<br />
100% factory tested, and tested again by me before shipping<br />
<br />
Found via <a href="https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2023-January/027510.html" rel="nofollow">https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2023-January/027510.html</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?cSWYBQ">Permalink</a>)
CodeArtNow - MACSimizing TECOhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?EwlDGQ2023-11-30T10:18:10+01:00MACSimizing TECO: A Note on the Invention of EMACS<br />
by Adrienne Gaye Thompson [1] 2009-11-02<br />
Found on <a href="https://dbpedia.org/page/Emacs" rel="nofollow">https://dbpedia.org/page/Emacs</a>, where the incorrect URL <a href="http://www.codeartnow.com/hacker-art-1/macsimizing-teco" rel="nofollow">http://www.codeartnow.com/hacker-art-1/macsimizing-teco</a> is used<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?EwlDGQ">Permalink</a>)
Open source flash emulationhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?X-HqNg2023-11-03T16:34:01+01:00Hardware to emulate the SPI memory in PCs to speed up the development of free BIOS firmware.<br />
Found on the Oberon mailing list.<br />
See also the articles about retrocomputing and security, e.g. <a href="https://trmm.net/Cosign/" rel="nofollow">https://trmm.net/Cosign/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?X-HqNg">Permalink</a>)
Introducing the Smalltalk Zoo - CHMhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?ofcNug2023-04-20T12:11:37+02:00Mentioned in the Medley Interlisp 2023 video and on <a href="https://interlisp.org/about/partners/" rel="nofollow">https://interlisp.org/about/partners/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?ofcNug">Permalink</a>)
LM-3 --- resurrecting the MIT CADR Lisp machinehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?wOzC4A2023-04-17T00:37:51+02:00Found via <a href="https://groups.google.com/g/lispcore/c/S3JKR_k_uKY" rel="nofollow">https://groups.google.com/g/lispcore/c/S3JKR_k_uKY</a><br />
See also <a href="https://tumbleweed.nu/r/bug-lispm/forumpost/546e31bb40" rel="nofollow">https://tumbleweed.nu/r/bug-lispm/forumpost/546e31bb40</a> for the announcement "System 100.0 is now released!"<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?wOzC4A">Permalink</a>)
Welcome to transputer.nethttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?eM81Dg2023-03-29T11:29:37+02:00Documentation and description of projects using Inmos Transputer processors.<br />
Found via a link on <a href="http://www.chilton-computing.org.uk/inf/transputers/overview.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.chilton-computing.org.uk/inf/transputers/overview.htm</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?eM81Dg">Permalink</a>)
Signs of Triviality - Opinions, mostly my own, on the importance of being and other things.https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?6ry7gA2023-03-22T11:45:04+01:00Blog, mostly about network-related things. Found via <a href="https://www.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2023-March/028267.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2023-March/028267.html</a><br />
Time is an illusion, Unix time doubly so... <a href="https://www.netmeister.org/blog/epoch.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.netmeister.org/blog/epoch.html</a><br />
Sharing Secrets <a href="https://www.netmeister.org/blog/sharing-secrets.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.netmeister.org/blog/sharing-secrets.html</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?6ry7gA">Permalink</a>)
Rob Austein's pageshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?zu8Mng2023-03-04T11:09:40+01:00Found when <a href="https://www.hactrn.net/sra/alice/index.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.hactrn.net/sra/alice/index.html</a> was mentioned on the TUHS mailing list.<br />
<a href="https://www.hactrn.net/blog/2019/04/17/threads-considered-harmful/" rel="nofollow">https://www.hactrn.net/blog/2019/04/17/threads-considered-harmful/</a> links to <a href="https://glyph.twistedmatrix.com/2014/02/unyielding.html" rel="nofollow">https://glyph.twistedmatrix.com/2014/02/unyielding.html</a><br />
The plan in <a href="https://www.cs.toronto.edu/~sme/CSC340F/humour.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.cs.toronto.edu/~sme/CSC340F/humour.html</a> sounds all too familiar.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?zu8Mng">Permalink</a>)
The Inmos Legacy - transputer links and SpaceWirehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?oND-gA2023-01-24T10:21:40+01:00After reading <a href="https://forums.theregister.com/forum/all/2022/05/06/pi_pico_transputer_code/" rel="nofollow">https://forums.theregister.com/forum/all/2022/05/06/pi_pico_transputer_code/</a>, I was looking for information related to transputers and found this page.<br />
<br />
The point-to-point technology to link transputers was formalised in the IEEE 1355 standard. This was further developed under the ESA into SpaceWire, which is now designed into a number of space missions under development in Europe, the USA and Japan. A key player in developing SpaceWire was Paul Walker from the transputer team whose company, 4Links, is now selling SpaceWire test equipment.<br />
<br />
XMOS mentioned on the page can be found on <a href="https://www.xmos.ai" rel="nofollow">https://www.xmos.ai</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?oND-gA">Permalink</a>)
Links to emulators of historic computershttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?5zXO5A2023-01-06T23:21:55+01:00Found via <a href="http://www.bobeager.uk/emas/index.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.bobeager.uk/emas/index.html</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?5zXO5A">Permalink</a>)
The wild world of non-C operating systemshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?Y_espg2022-12-31T23:28:09+01:00Mentioned on the Interlisp mailing list.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?Y_espg">Permalink</a>)
Emacs /ˈiːmæks/, originally named EMACS (an acronym for "Editor MACroS"), is a family of text editorshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?CBzcrw2022-12-24T00:29:01+01:00Emacs /ˈiːmæks/, originally named EMACS (an acronym for "Editor MACroS"), is a family of text editors that are characterized by their extensibility. The manual for the most widely used variant, GNU Emacs, describes it as "the extensible, customizable, self-documenting, real-time display editor". Development of the first Emacs began in the mid-1970s, and work on its direct descendant, GNU Emacs, continues actively; the latest version is 28.2, released in September 2022.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?CBzcrw">Permalink</a>)
Melinda Varian’s Home Pagehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?gs_3ng2022-12-19T10:53:16+01:00Besides "VM and the VM Community: Past, Present, and Future", which I have started to read, it also has other documents, including "What Mother Never Told You About VM Service, 1983", which was mentioned in<br />
<a href="https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2022-December/026996.html" rel="nofollow">https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2022-December/026996.html</a><br />
"What Mother Never Told You" is still the best document about system maintenance ever written.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?gs_3ng">Permalink</a>)
where did mark and space come from?https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?zE8eRA2022-12-04T01:01:18+01:00Nice story, including bits about the history of serial interfaces going back to Samuel Morse.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?zE8eRA">Permalink</a>)
se is a screen oriented version of the classic UNIX text editor edhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?aXOokw2022-09-25T10:14:32+02:00Found via <a href="https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2022-September/026476.html" rel="nofollow">https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2022-September/026476.html</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?aXOokw">Permalink</a>)
TENEX-style user experience for Unixhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?kua2xQ2022-09-25T10:03:18+02:00Interesting reference to the The Harvard/Radcliffe Student Time-sharing System Terminal Users Guide,<br />
1st edition, September 10, 1974, Center for Research in Computing Technology, Harvard University<br />
On 2023-07-12, the original URL <a href="https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2022-September/026512.html" rel="nofollow">https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2022-September/026512.html</a> is not working, replacing minnie by www corrects that.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?kua2xQ">Permalink</a>)
technikum29 - computer museumhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?bTl_pw2022-07-15T20:13:37+02:00Found via <a href="https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-18562-post-162245.html#pid162245" rel="nofollow">https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-18562-post-162245.html#pid162245</a><br />
Located in Germany, close to Frankfurt am Main, it has a number of historic computers, calculators and other electronic devices, many of them still working.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?bTl_pw">Permalink</a>)
[TUHS] forgotten versionshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?3vyFNg2022-06-22T13:25:32+02:00ssh unix50 at unix50.org<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?3vyFNg">Permalink</a>)
Joe Smith's PDP-10 pagehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?DnLyQA2022-06-20T16:19:26+02:00Collection of links with information about, simulators of and software for the pdp-10.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?DnLyQA">Permalink</a>)
Spare time gizmoshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?tcvcsg2022-06-20T15:01:41+02:00AC Frequency Monitor<br />
Panda display panel for a simulated pdp-10 <a href="http://sparetimegizmos.com/Hardware/Panda.htm" rel="nofollow">http://sparetimegizmos.com/Hardware/Panda.htm</a> found on <a href="http://panda.trailing-edge.com/" rel="nofollow">http://panda.trailing-edge.com/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?tcvcsg">Permalink</a>)
athornton | The UNIX-HATERS Handbook, a reviewhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?s7paQg2022-05-18T10:00:53+02:00Just what it says. The author had read the handbook soon after it came out and has revisited it 25 years later. He also offers interesting comments about most of the competing operating systems. See also<br />
Making old systems accessible via the web <a href="https://athornton.dreamwidth.org/14733.html" rel="nofollow">https://athornton.dreamwidth.org/14733.html</a><br />
Exploring old unixes <a href="https://athornton.dreamwidth.org/14340.html" rel="nofollow">https://athornton.dreamwidth.org/14340.html</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?s7paQg">Permalink</a>)
Some useful functions for a Raspberry Pi Pico | Notes on Linuxhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?R-hOIQ2022-01-27T12:37:40+01:00Found via <a href="https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-17957-post-156688.html#pid156688" rel="nofollow">https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum/thread-17957-post-156688.html#pid156688</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?R-hOIQ">Permalink</a>)
Phil Budnehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?7bO5JQ2022-01-17T12:57:51+01:00Lot of information about the PDP-10 and other early computers.<br />
<a href="http://www.ultimate.com/phil/lil/" rel="nofollow">http://www.ultimate.com/phil/lil/</a><br />
Has a nice icon "This Web page is Lynx friendly!"<br />
<a href="http://www.ultimate.com/phil/images/lynx_friendly.gif" rel="nofollow">http://www.ultimate.com/phil/images/lynx_friendly.gif</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?7bO5JQ">Permalink</a>)
Seth Morabito's bloghttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?o7P0UQ2021-12-29T10:49:17+01:00Found via the TUHS mailing list <a href="https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2021-December/024902.html" rel="nofollow">https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2021-December/024902.html</a><br />
This post describes his org-mode setup, but other entries about his work on various emulators are interesting too.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?o7P0UQ">Permalink</a>)
Wayback Machinehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?BiW8mA2021-11-09T13:23:31+01:00(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?BiW8mA">Permalink</a>)
Viral Attacks On UNIX System Securityhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?BcZfjg2021-10-14T21:29:40+02:00Article from Tom Duff, August 1987<br />
Executable files in the Ninth Edition of the UNIX system contain small amounts of unused space, allowing small code sequences to be added to them without noticeably affecting their functionality. A program fragment that looks for binaries and introduces copies of itself into their slack space will transitively spread like a virus. Such a virus program could, like the Trojan Horse, harbor Greeks set to attack the system when run by sufficiently privileged users or from infected set-userid programs.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?BcZfjg">Permalink</a>)
Phil's PDP10 Miscellany Pagehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?3FVp8g2021-10-14T10:59:41+02:00Lots of information about pdp-10, operating systems and other computers from the same age.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?3FVp8g">Permalink</a>)
GitHub - johnsonjh/pmince: pmince: Portable MINCE (MINCE is Not Complete[ly] EMACS)https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?o-GUkg2021-08-17T16:29:56+02:00License is vague:<br />
MINCE (version 2.5, 2.6, and 2.63), DIFF (version 1.1), Scribble (version 1.3), Pencil (version 1.3), and Crayon (version 1.3), along with any associated documentation (the "Materials"), are Copyright © 1980—1985 by Mark of the Unicorn, Inc.<br />
<br />
These Materials are provided in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, and distributed without profit, in original and unmodified form, for non-commercial research and educational purposes, for use by those who have expressed a prior general interest in receiving the Materials.<br />
<br />
The Portable MINCE authors claim no affiliation, endorsement, or sponsorship whatsoever by the originators of the Materials.<br />
<br />
If you wish to use these copyrighted Materials for any purposes beyond "fair use", you MUST locate and obtain permission from the current copyright owner.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?o-GUkg">Permalink</a>)
THE DECSYSTEM-20 AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY (1977-1988)https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?5QSWjw2021-08-01T18:42:55+02:00A nontechnical reminiscence written in 1988 (on the occasion of unplugging Columbia University's last DECSYSTEM-20) for a Digital Press book that was to commemorate DEC's 36-bit machines with a series of articles, but was never published.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?5QSWjw">Permalink</a>)
PDP-11 C stack operation - Computer History Wikihttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?wQlUFA2021-06-29T17:36:50+02:00Detailed description of the stack layout, use of R5 as frame pointer by the (V6) Unix C compiler on the pdp-11.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?wQlUFA">Permalink</a>)
The Multics MACLISP Compilerhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?grhrpQ2021-06-28T01:10:37+02:00Found in <a href="https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2018-February/014546.html" rel="nofollow">https://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2018-February/014546.html</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?grhrpQ">Permalink</a>)
Scripts for installing V8 UNIX from tapehttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?20RIFQ2021-06-05T14:51:11+02:00See also <a href="https://github.com/timnewsham/myv6" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/timnewsham/myv6</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?20RIFQ">Permalink</a>)
CERN 2019 WorldWideWeb Rebuildhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?my3zXg2021-05-06T11:23:29+02:00In December 1990, an application called WorldWideWeb was developed on a NeXT machine at The European Organization for Nuclear Research (known as CERN) just outside of Geneva. This program – WorldWideWeb — is the antecedent of most of what we consider or know of as "the web" today.<br />
<br />
In February 2019, in celebration of the thirtieth anniversary of the development of WorldWideWeb, a group of developers and designers convened at CERN to rebuild the original browser within a contemporary browser, allowing users around the world to experience the rather humble origins of this transformative technology.<br />
<br />
Found on <a href="https://www.11ty.dev/" rel="nofollow">https://www.11ty.dev/</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?my3zXg">Permalink</a>)
[TUHS] Re: ancient unix filesystemshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?aIIPHQ2021-04-20T09:09:50+02:00A version of a Unix 5th (and 6th) Edition filesystem for Linux. It is read only, and was written for Linux 2.0 on an x86 and so will require a little work to install on other systems and newer kernels, but it is fun to be able to mount old disk images.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?aIIPHQ">Permalink</a>)
Bug fixes for v6 unix, SimH tape toolshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?0vmq6A2021-04-15T20:17:22+02:00(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?0vmq6A">Permalink</a>)
macro-11 for V7-Unixhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?mfe6qQ2021-04-13T23:48:40+02:00Information about a macroassembler for pdp-11 running v7 unix.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?mfe6qQ">Permalink</a>)
Building a 2.11BSD tape for SimHhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?OEDe5Q2021-04-12T23:48:45+02:00Program and instructions for creating files to be read as tapes by SimH.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?OEDe5Q">Permalink</a>)
Ancient Unix tape archive formatshttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?wCqdsg2021-04-09T21:20:51+02:00Description of tape archive and date formats in early versions of Unix.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?wCqdsg">Permalink</a>)
Reading and writing v7 filesystems from Linuxhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?rj_s4A2021-04-07T18:57:18+02:00The TUHS archive mirror <a href="https://unixarchive.cn-k.de/PDP-11/Tools/Filesys/" rel="nofollow">https://unixarchive.cn-k.de/PDP-11/Tools/Filesys/</a> contains v7fs-0.1.tar.gz and<br />
bostic_tools.tar.gz<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?rj_s4A">Permalink</a>)
http://9legacy.org/9legacy/doc/simh/v8https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?8_87gg2021-04-07T13:48:12+02:00Instructions for the installation of v8 unix on SimH.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?8_87gg">Permalink</a>)
The Interim Computer Museumhttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?9Vm7_g2021-03-19T12:36:56+01:00Includes links to on-line emulators for various unices, ITS and TOPS-20.<br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?9Vm7_g">Permalink</a>)
[TUHS] retro-fuse projecthttps://roland.iwasno.net/links/?u7sADg2021-02-22T19:42:44+01:00FUSE-based filesystem capable of both reading and writing v6 disk images.<br />
<a href="https://github.com/jaylogue/retro-fuse" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/jaylogue/retro-fuse</a><br>(<a href="https://roland.iwasno.net/links/?u7sADg">Permalink</a>)