PROTOCOL: ALT COMPRESSION: NONE CONNECT 2400/ARQ CBBS(R) 4.0.3b 01/15/93 21:51:50 Y/N: want CBBS "1st time user" info?^U ?^U ?^U ?n;ward;christensen;odraw;;fullc;piss Logging name to disk... You are caller 228589; next msg =46028; 374 active msgs. Prev. call 01/12/93 @ 23:08, next msg was 46021 Recording logon for next time. Use FULL? to check assignments ?^U ?xxxxx You asked for 5 more NULLS (pressed N while CBBS typed) Nulls were: 0 How many wanted:?0 "Mine" command checking for msgs TO you, ^K >Function:?dir c:log;dir c:killed;dir summary;type-20 log,ward c;or;*;short LOG. 9 KILLED. 21 SUMMARY. 24 type-30 log,ward c;or;*;short 01/12/93,23:08:06,228564,2,WARD CHRISTENSEN,,1 01/13/93,01:28:53,228565,1,DAVID JOHNSON,, E#46021,9 01/13/93,03:57:30,228566,1,ROY LIPSCOMB,, E#46022,5 01/13/93,10:48:40,228567,2,KEN STOX,, E#46023,6 01/13/93,12:27:43,228568,2,ANDY SHAPIRO,,3 01/13/93,12:45:04,228569,2,DAVID JOHNSON,,2 01/13/93,13:03:41,228570,2,ANDREW LAWRENCE,Chicago,3 01/13/93,14:25:02,228571,2,CHRIS RACHAL,+++0, 01/13/93,15:30:10,228572,2,DENNIS STAHL,,1 01/13/93,19:01:31,228573,2,BERNARD GOLDLUST,,1 01/13/93,19:41:04,228574,2,BENJAMIN COHEN,, E#46024,6 ]Ward, when I tried to enter a message subject I was told ++LINE > 4 LONG etc regardless of the length (even 8 characters), but when I entered "FOR SALE" even though I got the same message it took the whole subject.... BENJAMIN COHEN, 01/14/93,08:51:02,228575,2,MURRAY ARNOW,,3 01/14/93,09:01:10,228576,1,WARD CHRISTENSEN,, E#46025, E#46026,19 01/14/93,16:00:22,228577,1,ROY LIPSCOMB,,4 01/14/93,16:46:34,228578,2,DAVID GIBBS,,1 01/14/93,19:09:34,228579,2,AL HIGGINS,,3 01/14/93,23:55:08,228580,1,GREG SANDERS,,15 ]Congratulations on making it to 15 years. Good to see this CBBS system still up! GREG SANDERS, 01/15/93,00:36:36,228581,2,DAVID JOHNSON,,2 01/15/93,00:55:40,228582,2,BILL MATTSON,,1 01/15/93,06:40:08,228583,2,BEN TEIFELD,,6 01/15/93,08:33:01,228584,2,MURRAY ARNOW,,3 01/15/93,11:21:12,228585,2,BERNARD GOLDLUST,,1 01/15/93,12:23:10,228586,2,TONY ANTONUCCI,,11 01/15/93,20:17:25,228587,1,BOB SULLIVAN,, E#46027,7 01/15/93,20:47:32,228588,1,JOE HAAG,,18 01/15/93,21:51:54,228589,2,WARD CHRISTENSEN,, 46021 01/13/93 DAVID JOHNSON => WARD CHRISTENSEN: "R/DISK CLEANUP" 46022 01/13/93 ROY LIPSCOMB => ALL: "WHY DO 486'S GET HOT?" 46023 01/13/93 KEN STOX => ROY LIPSCOMB: "RE: WHY DO 486'S GET HOT" 46024 01/13/93 BENJAMIN COHEN => ALL: "FOR SALE" 46025 01/14/93 WARD CHRISTENSEN => ROY LIPSCOMB: "R/WHY DO 486'S GET HOT?" 46026 01/14/93 WARD CHRISTENSEN => BENJAMIN COHEN: "R/FOR SALE" 46027 01/15/93 BOB SULLIVAN => ALL: "REQUEST HELP - VISUAL 102" - End of summary - Retrieving flagged msgs: C skips, K aborts. Msg 46021 is 10 line(s) on 01/13/93 from DAVID JOHNSON to WARD CHRISTENSEN re: R/DISK CLEANUP I found the file for PCMANAGE. As for the TSR overhead, I don't know what it is specifically, but the program that is loaded as a TSR is about 28k. The way the program keeps track of the last access date of the files is by creating a file in each directory called INDEX.CMP. The program can handle 100 directories/files per directory/and child directories, and allows you to specify any files (up to 100) that you don't want to be touched by the program (config.sys, command.com, etc). It also notes that you shouldn't compress any OS/2 files (system ones, I believe). The archive is fairly small, about 36k zipped. I'll upload it to your directory on Chinet. Msg 46022 is 08 line(s) on 01/13/93 from ROY LIPSCOMB to ALL re: WHY DO 486'S GET HOT? A fellow I know says that 486 DX2s run at better than 200 degrees Fahrenheit. I'm curious as to what specifically causes a chip to generate heat, given a fixed operating voltage. Is it due to the narrowness of the interconnections between the transistors? Is it due to the number of transistors? Is it due to the speed of the on/off switching of the transistors? (Perhaps a better question is, How much is due to each of these factors, and how much is due to others.) Msg 46023 is 06 line(s) on 01/13/93 from KEN STOX to ROY LIPSCOMB re: RE: WHY DO 486'S GET HOT The newer generation of CPU's run hot for two reasons: 1) Speed, the faster you switch, the more heat you generate. 2) There are Xx10e6 components in a very small area. I would think that the biggest factor is a function of both, but really is just of function of speed, since that is also a driving factor towards smaller sizes. Msg 46024 is 06 line(s) on 01/13/93 from BENJAMIN COHEN to ALL re: FOR SALE For Sale: 286-10 mother board with 1 meg, Intel above board plus with piggy back board and 4 mg RAM, 80 meg Seagate ST-4096 with Western Digital controller card, AT I/O card (2s, 1p, 1game), Stacker 2 co-processor board. Leave message here or call 312-726-3555 days, 708-965-8142 eves, wkends (if no answer, lv message on ans mach at 965-8144). No reasonable offer refused. Msg 46025 is 12 line(s) on 01/14/93 from WARD CHRISTENSEN to ROY LIPSCOMB re: R/WHY DO 486'S GET HOT? It is due to the number of transistors and the speed of on/off switching. The technology is probably CMOS, which means "Complimentary Metal Oxide Semiconductor". Unlike traditional transistors, MOS means that there is an insulator (the oxide) between the controlling signal and the Input and output signals. Like a capacitor, it is inherently an AC device, in that electrons get pushed into one side of the capacitor, but don't cross the insulating barrier. When you turn it off the electronc go back out, when you turn it on again, they get pushed in again, etc. Like DC resistance causing heat, all these electrons moving around cause heat. The big difference is that speed is totally related to the heat - if you clock the chip at 2mhz, it might take forever to get something done, but a 486 would run quite a bit cooler. Msg 46026 is 10 line(s) on 01/14/93 from WARD CHRISTENSEN to BENJAMIN COHEN re: R/FOR SALE All I can think of the problem you had entering your message is that you put one too many fields in the input line. The syntax for expert users is l;whoto;subject;password but if you stuck in one too many "fields", as I did in this by putting in "whatever", you are then putting the subject into the password field. You gave me the clue when you said "> 4 long" because that's the length (4) of the password field: >Function:?e;all;whatever;for sale Msg 46026 +LINE > 4 LONG - truncated, return to ACCEPT, ^U to RE-ENTER: FOR^U Msg 46027 is 07 line(s) on 01/15/93 from BOB SULLIVAN to ALL re: REQUEST HELP - VISUAL 102 I am trying to get a VISUAL 102 TERMINAL to send data out to an OKIDATA printer. Does anybody know of: where I can get hold of a VISUAL 102 Manual with port specs, or does anybody locally still use Visual 102 ( I already tried IIT ), or does anybody know if the company still exists and where it is? Any help will be aprreciated. dup. chars. >Function:?