7-Jun-89 06:50:39-MDT,2994;000000000000 Return-Path: Received: from ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU by WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL with TCP; Wed, 7 Jun 89 06:50:10 MDT Received: by ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (5.61/1.36) id AA15436; Wed, 7 Jun 89 05:41:37 -0700 Received: from USENET by ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU with netnews for northstar-users@wsmr-simtel20.army.mil (northstar-users@wsmr-simtel20.army.mil) (contact usenet@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU if you have questions) Date: 6 Jun 89 13:59:08 GMT From: aablue!jb@uunet.uu.net (John B Scalia) Organization: A A Blueprint Co., Inc. - Akron Subject: &$%#$ mailers!!! Message-Id: <594@aablue.UUCP> Sender: northstar-users-request@wsmr-simtel20.army.mil To: northstar-users@wsmr-simtel20.army.mil This message is intended for cpsvax!schon. The idiot mailer bounced twice, and I'm hoping he's still reading reading this group. If you're not interested in Northstar problems and you're not the intended "victim" hit "N" now ... PS. if you are still going to read this, comp.sys.northstar is more appropriate to follow-up. Hi, saw your posting about the Northstar problem. I had to do something very similar a couple of years ago. (BTW, I used to work for a Northstar dealer.) Basically, I had to move the data from a Horizon up into this *nix box, a Convergent Technology S/640. I solved the problem fairly easily because the S/640 has a dedicated CPU for I/O processing allowing communication rates up to 56K baud. Basically, I just told the Horizon to copy the datafile out a printer port which was attached to the input of a Wyse (Yuck!:-) terminal. The terminal was set to receive data on its aux port and allowed the keyboard to remain active. Thus, prior to transfer, I typed "cat > datafile", and initiated the transfer from another terminal still hanging on the Horizon. Easy, but you're still not in a PC format, though the principles might be the same. Another solution, since you didn't indicate whether the requred datafiles were printing ASCII only or otherwise, would be to port the 'nets programs uuencode and uudecode to both machines. You could encode the datafile on the Horizon, break it up into chunks, and copy it reliably using floppies to the Dimension where it would be reassembled and uudecoded. I would assume that your friend still has whatever programming languages they used still available on the Horizon, but if they don't, drop me a line. I still have an old Horizon here in my office with Turbo Pascal on it and I could send a real live executable on a Horizon format diskette. PS. My Horizon ran under TurboDos - the CP/M look-alike. That may be different from your friend's unit, but they should still be compatible (the techniques that is). Good Luck and let me know if you need any help. John B. Scalia -- A A Blueprint Co., Inc. - Akron, Ohio +1 216 794-8803 voice UUCP: {uunet!}aablue!jb Sometimes they do let me speak for the company, not today though.