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Bad, old memory: "Every transaction must have a line written to the printer"

Tracking down "why is the antique system suddenly slow". Power went out, system came back up fine, everything but the one ancient but vital app is fine. Dig, dig dig, there's this old dot matrix printer in another room (because it used to be loud and annoying) that no on has fed or looked at in years.

It finally died with that outage, and it not accepting data was the problem. It had cheerfully printed the ribbon through, then fed out the rest of the box of paper it had, and that might've been several years before i saw it.

The roller the paper was supposed to ride had been eroded. The metal rods the print head rode on had a perceptible bump at the ends of the normal stroke.

The fix was a little dongle for the printer port that held the appropriate "i'm alive" lines up. hardware /dev/null. I'm thinking it was 25 pin rs232 because I remember a lot of cussing over it.



Holy cow how old was this system, circa 1975 or something?


I saw a dot matrix printer logging the chemical composition of the flue gas at a chemical research place in about 2002.

That kind of thing is probably fairly common in the industry.


Dot matrix printers still make up a lot of the flight manifest printers at airport gates. Listen for them right before they close the doors. They print off the list of passengers checked in as boarded


I want to say it was probably installed in '85 and I saw it in '94; but i wouldn't swear to those dates.

I'm pretty sure it was the only dot matrix printer with a serial port i ever saw. Even daisy wheels were parallel port by the time this went in; but they had a like 50ft cable to move it to the other room. Someone worked hard and paid large to set that up originally.




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