PROTOCOL: ALT CONNECT 2400 CBBS(R) 4.0.3b 12/14/93 22:32:05 Y/N: want CBBS "1st time user" info?^U ?^U ?^U ?n;ward;christensen;odraw;;fullc;piss Logging name to disk... You are caller 231418; next msg =46530; 378 active msgs. Prev. call 12/08/93 @ 20:12, next msg was 46522 Recording logon for next time. Use FULL? to check assignments ?^U ?xxxxx "Mine" command checking for msgs TO you, ^K to abor >Function:?dir c:log;dir c:killed;dir summary;type-20 log,ward c;or;*;short LOG. 4 KILLED. 5 SUMMARY. 25 12/08/93,20:12:06,231379,2,WARD CHRISTENSEN,, E#46522, 12/08/93,20:40:39,231380,2,ANDY SHAPIRO,, E#46523,3 12/08/93,22:33:33,231381,2,ROY LIPSCOMB,,1 12/08/93,22:55:22,231382,2,PHIL SCHUMAN,,3 12/08/93,23:18:39,231383,2,MURRAY ARNOW,,1 12/09/93,01:42:51,231384,2,DAVID JOHNSON,,5 12/09/93,08:21:42,231385,2,ERIC BOHLMAN,,1 12/09/93,09:36:28,231386,2,RICHARD PAQUETTE,, ]>> got Flash<< E#46524,2 12/09/93,23:31:21,231387,2,DAVID RAJ,chicago, 12/09/93,23:51:20,231388,2,MICHAEL SHARTIAG,, E#46525,9 12/10/93,03:16:28,231389,2,STEVE RYAN,, 12/10/93,08:53:58,231390,2,DENNIS STAHL,,2 12/10/93,11:10:59,231391,2,CHUCK JONES,,8 12/10/93,14:12:19,231392,2,JOE THOMAS,Chicago/ IL,7 12/10/93,20:36:20,231393,2,RC LOPEZ,[D, >Help: ALL, >Help: [D,7 12/10/93,22:57:04,231394,2,MICHAEL SHARTIAG,,2 12/11/93,04:39:52,231395,2,ALEX ZELL,, 12/11/93,16:37:34,231396,2,BILL MATTSON,,3 12/11/93,16:43:50,231397,2,BILL MATTSON,,1 12/11/93,17:15:04,231398,2,KEN STOX,,33 12/11/93,17:32:04,231399,2,RC LOPEZ,, >Help: [D??,2 12/11/93,20:26:04,231400,2,STEVE FARMILANT,, E#46526,3 12/11/93,22:41:04,231401,2,DARCY EMERY,,1 12/11/93,22:47:46,231402,2,MICHAEL SHARTIAG,, E#46527,10 12/11/93,23:14:58,231403,2,DONNIE STUHLMAN,,3 12/12/93,00:37:04,231404,2,MURRAY ARNOW,,2 12/12/93,08:45:40,231405,2,FRANK VAN,Chicago/IL,1 12/12/93,15:53:58,231406,2,STEVE RYAN,, 12/12/93,19:16:08,231407,2,ANDY SHAPIRO,,2 12/12/93,21:49:06,231408,2,LARRY GLASSMAN,,2 12/13/93,01:33:09,231409,2,BILL MATTSON,,4 12/13/93,04:10:53,231410,2,ALEX ZELL,, 12/13/93,17:39:34,231411,2,RC LOPEZ,,2 12/13/93,19:24:36,231412,2,STEVE FARMILANT,, E#46528,5 12/14/93,01:34:25,231413,2,ROY LIPSCOMB,,2 12/14/93,07:55:34,231414,2,ALEX ZELL,, 12/14/93,12:10:35,231415,2,RICHARD PAQUETTE,,0 12/14/93,14:39:19,231416,2,MIKE KAVADIAS,,1 12/14/93,16:35:09,231417,2,ANDY SHAPIRO,, E#46529,4 12/14/93,22:32:08,231418,2,WARD CHRISTENSEN,, 46522 12/08/93 WARD CHRISTENSEN => MICHAEL SHARTIAG: "R/HEAT & NOTEBOOKS" 46523 12/08/93 ANDY SHAPIRO => WARD: "HOT NOTEBOOKS" 46524 12/09/93 RICHARD PAQUETTE => WARD CHRISTENSEN: "THANKS" 46525 12/09/93 MICHAEL SHARTIAG => ALL: "MEMORY >16MEG" 46526 12/11/93 STEVE FARMILANT => PETER ZELCHENKO: "R/CPM BASIC TO DOS BASIC?" 46527 12/11/93 MICHAEL SHARTIAG => ALL: "MEMORY >16MEG" 46528 12/13/93 STEVE FARMILANT => ANDY SHAPIRO: "R/CPM BASIC TO DOS BASIC?" 46529 12/14/93 ANDY SHAPIRO => STEVE FARMILANT: "R/CPM BASIC TO DOS BASIC?" - End of summary - Retrieving flagged msgs: C skips, K aborts. Msg 46522 is 05 line(s) on 12/08/93 from WARD CHRISTENSEN to MICHAEL SHARTIAG re: R/HEAT & NOTEBOOKS I'm wondering if perhaps there is an SL vers of the DX2 - perhaps Intel has taken some of the SL-learned knowledge of low power, and applied it. I'm supposed to be getting a 486 SLC-2 (25/50) notebook soon. Otherwise, whoo-ie! That suckah is going to be HOT! I think we won't be seeing Pentium laptops for a while! Msg 46523 is 07 line(s) on 12/08/93 from ANDY SHAPIRO to WARD re: HOT NOTEBOOKS Well, a friend of mine refers to his DX2 (66) as a room heater with a built-in computer, but on portables.? The remarkable thing about the '486 portables is not just the fact that they don't melt, but that their claimed battery lives are quite long, comparatively speaking. All that heat means wasted energy, and anything THAT fast is going to eat power in any event. So what's going on? Have motherboard designs improved all THAT much? Msg 46524 is 06 line(s) on 12/09/93 from RICHARD PAQUETTE to WARD CHRISTENSEN re: THANKS Ward. Thanks for the number. will trying calling a little later today and hopefully you would have glanced through the issues. Richard Paquette Msg 46525 is 15 line(s) on 12/09/93 from MICHAEL SHARTIAG to ALL re: MEMORY >16MEG I have begun reading up on memory limitations above 16MEG and am getting a little confused. 1) Is this a problem with ALL ISA machines ?? 2) Does it only apply to certain cards and/or disk controllers 3) DOes it only occur when using virtual memory ??? I have a couple of IBM files and INternet traffic on the subject and they seem to read that is a problem with certain disk controllers. It also has problems with DMA/ bus mastering cards ( any type) Now my PC has an option to set memory >16M as non-cacheable. also what if you have 20MEG and set up NO swap file on disk. Or finally, is the limitation more generic than all of this, and lies in the address lines available in an ISA slot (can'nt even find a pin-out right now). sort of how some 8 bit cards get confused by the addressing of a 16 bit card ( I had a lot of problems with S3 chips and 8 bit I/O cards) Msg 46526 is 01 line(s) on 12/11/93 from STEVE FARMILANT to PETER ZELCHENKO re: R/CPM BASIC TO DOS BASIC? She's my sister. Msg 46527 is 17 line(s) on 12/11/93 from MICHAEL SHARTIAG to ALL re: MEMORY >16MEG As I have tried to increae my understanding of this memory limitation a little more, I am starting to get this picture: Some (usually older) hard disk controllers used to use DMA to transfer data back directly to memory. (we are talking ISA problem here only) The ISA bus only supports 16 bits of data and 24 bits of addressing. ASking for a file or data to be loaded (DMA'd) at an address above 16MEG requires 25-32 bits; no 25th bit hence data is overwritten at the lower 24bit address. It seems that this is also a big problem with SCSI cards. Now, Istill don;t have a handle onthe following: 1) is it a problem with IDE drives ( do they DMA)? 2) HOw about VESA-LB controllers; they supposedly have direct 32 bit access to the CPU and memory? 3) WOuld any oother DMA cards ( tape controllers, network adapters) have this same problem, or do on-board buffers, orlower memory boundaries clear this problem. ( do the tape backups, Colorado card for example die in over) 16Meg systems. Msg 46528 is 12 line(s) on 12/13/93 from STEVE FARMILANT to ANDY SHAPIRO re: R/CPM BASIC TO DOS BASIC? Andy- Well, it worked. I'd tried that in the past, but kept getting error messages when I ran the program. This time, however, I ASCII'd and DOS'd all the chained files in the program before running, and Voila!, it worked. I appreciate the suggestion, and the comments about pushing and popping whcih compelled me to translate all the .bas files before running. Thanks. But I have another question.do you know how to change the program to initialize a different printer? I can't find it in any of the Basic references I have. Lastly, how would one go about printing a report generated by this program to disk, in stead of to the printer? Thanks! s Msg 46529 is 13 line(s) on 12/14/93 from ANDY SHAPIRO to STEVE FARMILANT re: R/CPM BASIC TO DOS BASIC? Well, one step at a time. First, what do you mean by 'initialize'? Unless you're running a serial printer, the output just goes to LPT1. If you want to set up the printer to do something fancy, like tiny fonts or whatever, you'll need to add some LPRINT statements to pump out the appropriate code. As for getting the output to disk instead of a printer, it depends. If the thing is just LPRINTing it to a printer, I believe that you can just open a file for sequential writes and change the LPRINT statements so that the output goes to that file. It's in the BASIC manual, which I don't have, and in the code for your program, which I also don't have. What is the software that you are trying to convert, anyway? dup. chars. >Function:?