On Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 01:21:15AM +0400, Hiisi wrote: > Dear List! > Recently I've found a nice old computer. It's called Convergent > Technology. Some 80's machine without any decoration signs. The problem > is I have only box with motherboard and processor and a keyboard - no > display. The display was main link between keyboard and box. So, I can't > run it. What I actually want to do, is to use its keyboard on my modern > computer (Celeron 510 MHz with 256 MB memory running FC 7). The > keyboard has some strange plug. It looks like network (LAN) plug, but > board. Pictures of the keyboard and plug can be found at the address: > http://kampela.ru/kuvat/index.php?offset=1 > If I'll solder a PS or PS/2 plug to it is it possible to run this old > beauty? I vainly googled for the information about old keyboards. And > found only stuff of how to make a valet from it. > Thanks for attention, > Hiisi I know just enough about old Convergent Technology machines to know that I don't know very much. Having said that, I'll step out on a limb here: They made a number of different kinds of computers. Back when I used to work at Prime Computer (remember them?) we used their "NGen" system as part of our office system. It was a cute little thing made of a bunch of boxes that plugged into each other side-by-side, each with another component in it. You wanted another hard drive, you plugged it into the side. Modem? Plug it into the side. and so on.There was also an older system with a flat base and a CRT attached to one end of it and another similar-sized device on the other that contained the computer itself. As I recall, the keyboard plugged into the system, somewhere, and it had other connectors on it for daisy-chaining other devices (but I don't recall that we ever used those other devices). I doubt that the monitor would be PC-compatible, though I don't know either way. And I doubt the keyboard was, either, since it probably originated in designs from pre-IBM PC. The NGen models we used had a screamin' 10 Mhz 80186 chip, later models had 286 and 386 processors also. They ran CT's own OS, as I recall named "CTOS". No graphics on the display, only character-cell display, but it was reprogrammable. Someone had written a game for it (named Rats) that made excelelnt use of the reprogrammable fonts in the display hardware to LOOK like you were moving around in a maze with various denizens you had to shoot before they ate you. My son still mentions that game as one of his favorites. I'm also vaguely aware of other higher-end systems, perhaps some multi-processor server machines, or some such, but have no personal knowledge. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- .---- Fred Smith / ( /__ ,__. __ __ / __ : / / / / /__) / / /__) .+' Home: fredex@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx / / (__ (___ (__(_ (___ / :__ 781-438-5471 -------------------------------- Jude 1:24,25 ---------------------------------
Attachment:
pgp0mJFaDCOAm.pgp
Description: PGP signature
-- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines