Blast From the Past: Facit A2400 Terminal
Key topics
Retro tech enthusiasts are buzzing about the Facit A2400 terminal, with commenters nostalgically sharing their experiences with old Unix systems and terminals. One user pointed out that the lack of an escape key was no issue, thanks to the Ctrl-[ workaround, and even suggested puzzling younger users with old HP-UX or IRIX boxes featuring non-standard key mappings. A lively discussion ensued about the historical context of these unusual settings, with some noting that they made sense on old printer terminals where backspace was non-destructive. The conversation also veered into modern-day quirks, such as GNU groff's continued use of old composition rules, and even a tip on remapping keys on Windows using SharpKeys.
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That's a lovely terminal; makes me wish I'd held onto my vt220 just to show the kids all the weird things people used to have to put up with. I remember there was something deranged about it's keyboard that I eventually came to not really mind all that much. Eventually I spent years of my life in front of a decstation 3100 and I think I eventually got used to the strange layout.
(Amusingly, TianoCore makes BS destructive, and that breaks the spinners displayed by the NetBSD boot loader.)
One other amusing thing is that the LK201 et al. are RS423 at 4800 BPS 8N1, so with suitable voltage-level-converting adapters should be easier to plug in to modern SBC kit than a (non bimodal) PS/2 keyboard is.
To this day, I use a 1990s vintage PS/2 keyboard, with a chain of adapters, on my mac (an old IBM M4-1 keyboard/trackpoint thing). At least on the mac it works perfectly because you can remap the caps lock key to command; it works pretty poorly on windows but such is life. Also, I very often, even today, use the # key as something akin to "kill" but instead in modern bash in vi mode if you're in escape mode it comments out the whole line.
But woof, watching people who'd never interacted with real (and old) sysv derived unixes instantly going insane trying to type things with @ or # and not understanding what's going on... kids that's what everyone had to fight with in the bad old days...
EDIT: and -- in old times, "backspace" and "delete" were actually different keys; bash and other modern shells hide this from you, (just as newline and carriage return were different actions) -- I guess learning how to type on a mechanical typewriter where you make the ! glyph with a ' and a backspace and a ., and where 1 and l were the same glyph, hopelessly burned the physicality of character rendering into me...
You can use SharpKeys to remap keys on Windows.
https://github.com/jdebp/nosh/blob/trunk/source/UnicodeKeybo...