I think it would work more than fine as a little bit of JavaScript running in the browser on mostly anything. After all, the era of intelligent terminals is back with vengeance. You can program them even in assembly (asm.js). And asm.js is exactly like IBM’s mainframe hardware abstraction – I’m almost identical fashion, it is translated to the platform’s machine code. And you get it for free with a cellphone :)
Cheers, Kuba
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15 nov. 2018 kl. 20:14 skrev Brad Thompson <brad.thompson@...>:
On 11/15/2018 6:14 PM, tmillermdems wrote:
Hi Brad,
I don't have any need for the book but did use the ECAP program on an IBM 1127 system back in the late 60's. The element nodes were entered on punch cards and a printout of results came pretty quickly. It was very good for filter design.
The original program ran from a removable disk pack.
Hello, Tom--
I encountered ECAP via an university's IBM 1620, which offered 24- to 36-hour
turnaround. That made for slow debugging.
Maybe someone with time on their hands could recode ECAP for a Raspberry Pi<g>.
73--
Brad AA1IP