Yup. It was. I was just starting to get out of A2 stuff when it came
out, and given that the early drivers couldn't deal with routing (the
brilliant (cough) tcp stack was the problem, actually, the subsequent
driver codes around it) I couldn't bring myself to spend that much on
a system I was decomissioning. It's still tempting, since I still have
one GS that probably works in the basement...
>
> I've been drooling over the LanceGS card lately - gotta save up. What
> makes the En-Link unusual is its apparent release date (1984), meaning
> that it was specifically designed for the IIe (& II+ maybe?); the GS
> wasn't released until 86 or 87 (IIRC). Maybe the fact that the card
> cost almost as much as the computer it was designed for prevented
> mainstream acceptance. Skimming the doco on the LanceGS, it looks like
> that card is relatively new, having been released Sept last year.
>
> Mike
>
> http://tarnover.dyndns.org/
> Tarnover - The Apple II Repository
>
> Jim Strickland wrote:
>
> > THe LanceGS was the card I was refering to. I don't know anything about
> > En-Link, but remember that when I was into Apple2s any mention of an
> > ethernet card was enough to make me salivate. Alas the lance GS came
> > out too late for me.
> >
> >
> >>I found a couple of Apple II Ethernet project sites with a quick Google
> >>search:
> >>
> >>http://aiiethernet.tripod.com/
> >>http://lancegs.a2central.com/
> >>http://www.apple2.org/AIIEthernet.html
> >>
> >>I was hoping to be able to play with this card I found though. None of
> >>the aforementioned sites mentions the En-Link. I get the idea that not
> >>many of these things sold, or possibly, were even made.
> >>
> >>Mike
> >>
> >>http://tarnover.dyndns.org/
> >>Tarnover - The Apple II Repository
> >>
> >>
> >>Jim Strickland wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>>Just fyi, some bright spark in the apple2 world has created an
> >>>aftermarket ethernet board for the apple2 bus. If anyone's
> >>>interested enough I'll dig up the URL. If you have a GS,
> >>>they've got a driver for the Marinetti tcpip stack, too.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>On Mon, 25 Jun 2001, Michael Maginnis wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Found a card in the local thrift store's '99-cent grab-box-o-cards',
> >>>>>labelled 'En-link Apple II Interface'. On the back is a rubber-stamped
> >>>>>'Protoype' label. A Google search turned up nothing - the only thing I
> >>>>>could find was an obscure reference to the board in my Softalk article
> >>>>>database:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>July 84, P 68
> >>>>>'Marketalk News'
> >>>>>
> >>>>>"An Ethernet-compatible interface that can make the Apple an intelligent
> >>>>>terminal in a local-area network has been manufactured by En-Link (4706
> >>>>>Bond Street, Shawnee, KS 66203; 913-268-6606). Utilizing current
> >>>>>standard LSI integrated circuits designed for Ethernet, the board
> >>>>>performs the necessary framing, retries, and error checking required of
> >>>>>the system. Other applications for the board include communication with
> >>>>>remote printers and terminals, $1,250. $750 each in quantities of 100
> >>>>>or more."
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>Damn! Bitchin find!
> >>>>
> >>>>Good luck finding the drivers though. Talk about obscure Apple II cards.
> >>>>Let us know if you ever come up with anything.
> >>>>
> >>>>Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
> >>>>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >>>>International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
--
Jim Strickland
jim_at_DIESPAMMERSCUMcalico.litterbox.com
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Received on Mon Jun 25 2001 - 22:18:56 BST