Command Line For IE?




CiscoGuy


I would like to setup a hyperlink on a website that tells the computer to run command line to execute the command. For instance I would like to setup a link that says traceroute. The link needs to open command line (and leave it open) and run the command.
I should mention that the web server that it is running on is a microsoft server and is internal only.



Answer
This depends entirely on the web server and the computer platform the server runs on. A brief search shows that there is a Java traceroute servlet that would run on Apache with mod_java, and a perl version that runs with mod_perl, but the server has to run on a Unix/Linux platform.

If you don't run your own server, your best bet is to contact your ISPs technical support folks and ask them about it. We Yahoo Answerers don't have enough info to give you a useful answer.

Need detailed info on the LGP-30 computer.?




tyki_mo


Hello,
I'm doing a summative assignment for computer engineering. And I need some deatiled and hard to find information on the LGP-30 computer that will put me on top of the others. Any input will be helpful.
Thank you



Answer
The LGP-30, standing for Librascope General Precision, was an early "off the shelf" computer manufactured and sold by Royal Precision Electronic Computer Company. It was first manufactured in 1956 with a retail price of about $40,000.

The LGP-30 was commonly referred to as a desk computer. It was 26 inches deep, 33 inches high, and 44 inches long, exclusive of the typewriter shelf. The computer weighed approximately 740 pounds and was mounted on sturdy casters which facilitated movement of the computer.

Librascope built a usable computer with a minimal amount of hardware. The single address instruction set had only 16 commands. Not only was the main memory on magnetic drum, but so were the CPU registers, timing information and the master bit clock, each on a dedicated track. The number of vacuum tubes were kept to a minimum by using solid-state diode logic, a bit-serial architecture and multiple usage of each of the 15 flip-flops.

It was a binary, 31 bit word computer with a 4096 word drum. Standard inputs were the Flexowriter keyboard and paper tape (ten 6-bit characters/second). The only printing output was the Flexowriter printer (typewriter, working at 10 characters/second). An optional higher speed paper tape reader and punch was available as a separate peripheral.

The computer contained 113 electronic tubes and 1450 diodes. The 113 electronic tubes were mounted on 34 etched circuit pluggable cards which also contain associated components. Although 34 pluggable cards were used, there were only 12 different types of such cards. Card-extenders were available to permit dynamic testing of all machine functions. Six hundred and eighty of the 1450 diodes were mounted on one pluggable logic board.

The LGP-30 required 1500 watts when operating under full load. The power inlet cord was plugged into any standard 115 volt 60 cycle single phase line. The computer contained internal voltage regulation against power line variations of voltages from 95 to 130 volts. In addition to regulation of power line variations, the computer also contained the circuitry required to permit a warm-up stage. This warm-up stage minimized thermal shock to tubes to ensure long component life. The computer contains its own blower unit and directs filtered air, through ducts, to tubes and diodes, in order to ensure component life and proper operation. No expensive air conditioning needed to be installed if operated within a reasonable temperature range.

There were 32 bit locations per drum word, but only 31 were used, permitting a "restoration of magnetic flux in the head" at the 32nd bit time. Since there was only one address per instruction, a method was needed to optimise allocation of operands. Otherwise, each instruction would wait a complete drum (or disk) revolution each time a data reference was made. The LGP-30 provided for operand-location optimization by interlacing the logical addresses on the drum so that two adjacent addresses (e.g., 00 and 01) were separated by nine physical locations. These spaces allowed for operands to be located next to the instructions which use them. There are 64 tracks, each with 64 words (sectors). The time between two adjacent physical words was approximately 0.260 millisecond, and the time between two adjacent addresses was 9 x 0.260 or 2.340 milliseconds. The actual maximum what? -noun needed access time was 16.66 ms.

Half of the instruction (15 bits) was unused. The unused half could be used for extra instructions, indexing, indirect addressing, or a second (+1) address to locate the next instruction, each of which could increase program performance.

To further reduce costs, the traditional front panel lights showing internal registers were absent. Instead, Librascope mounted a small oscilloscope on the front panel. It displayed the output from the three register read heads, one above the other, allowing the operator to "see" actually read bits. Horizontal and vertical size controls let the operator adjust the display to match a plastic overlay engraved with the bit numbers. To read bits the operator counted the up- and down- transitions of the oscilloscope trace.

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