Using a 1978 terminal in 2026 (DEC VT-100)(nikhiljha.com) |
Using a 1978 terminal in 2026 (DEC VT-100)(nikhiljha.com) |
Here are my links for roms and docs:
http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/terminal/
https://github.com/larsbrinkhoff/terminal-simulator/issues/1
https://www.mail-archive.com/simh@trailing-edge.com/msg09086...
https://forums.bannister.org/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Num...
https://simh.trailing-edge.narkive.com/qgzCvrl8/dec-vt-emula...
I have a bunch of PDFs in along with this, and a vt240.zip that must have come from one of the above.
I also used this command line call to get the terminal running with "bitbanger."
mame -rp . vt240 -window -nothrottle -host null_modem -bitb socket.localhost:2323But most programs ignore termcap these days which is a huge issue. Running stuff through tmux helps but it's not ideal.
I apologize for my very faulting memory, likely was just the 45" Sony, otherwise it was a one off from the SGI labs.
That'll be SIGINT, but I understand, he just tests whether we pay attention.
But if you are going to use a VT-100 keyboard you might as well try an editor actually designed for that keyboard, which I remember really loving at the time. KED:
https://avitech.com.au/?page_id=959
Also, if you want efficient and fast displays on that screen, remember to use scrolling regions. They scroll the sections of the screen in hardware. By using them correctly you can insert and delete single lines without repainting the screen.
By that point the most common failure due to age was from cobwebs that had formed internally between the high-voltage CRT circuitry and the PCB containing the low-voltage logic.
For anybody reusing or restoring vintage CRT units, I would blow them out with compressed air to get rid of stuff like this.
Otherwise in a flash with a final scream and a slightly different smell than normal, it's an instant cadaver :(