If i cannot work it out on my own you are the man i will come to to convert the 2 on the right of this picture
EDIT. De-sock
Do they still have the TX-0 there ? did you get to see that ? Or the PDP-1?XMIT wrote: Heh. If only the controller were written in Lisp too.
This is great, thank you so much for sharing.
Five years at MIT and I never once saw a Space Cadet keyboard. Though, I didn't work with Tom Knight. I did work a little bit with folks like Hal Abelson and have met Richard Stallman. I even took the then-mandatory freshman Scheme programming class, and saw an actual Lisp machine. But no keyboard. It was the stuff of legends, one of the fraternities had a song that featured it and its many modifiers.
I'm just waiting for the obligatory joke about how they converters themselves use a Read-Eval-Print Loop.
Not sure if we'll find out but MMcM obviously managed to convert his three Hall Effects. He mentioned that:
Do you have that GitHub link? I PM'd him about this let's see if he answers.
I would have a look here:
Honest question: for typing (not gaming) ... why would it be unusable?
So, my typing style often involves having a few keys in flight, or, pressing a new key as I'm releasing another. For example, when typing the triplet "tre", I tend to not release the T until I've pressed the E. (Old Thinkpads had a fun bug under Windows where they would make an annoying beep if these keys were held down - the solution was to go into Device Manager and disable a "Beep" device...)
Of course it would not be unusable, it would be suboptimal. The question as so often is if it's better to have nothing than to have something less desirable to work with.