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unibasic data transfer




From: rja.carnegie@excite.com (Robert Carnegie)
Subject: Re: data transfer, SCO->NT
Date: 19 Dec 2001 01:53:13 -0800
References: <df4a30f0.0112171037.56442600@posting.google.com> 

thax_1138@hotmail.com (Ryan McCullough) wrote in message news:<df4a30f0.0112171037.56442600@posting.google.com>...
> I have an old sco machine. I do not know the version. The prompt
> starts with xenix though. It has no tape drive. The networking appears
> to be a serial port.
> 
> This machine was acquired in a buyout and the information in it is
> parts numbers, prices, and company contact information. We need this
> information transfered to some sort of universal format, like a csv,
> so that it can be imported into another DB. It does not appear to be
> very big. The information is accessed through a menu system called
> unibasic.
> 
> Is anyone familiar with how unibasic stores information?

Unibasic isn't a unique name, but as a trademark in the SCO universe
it appears that www.unibasic.com is still in business selling their
interpreter or compiler (I didn't read far) for the BASIC language.
This implies that someone once wrote for or sold to you, or rather for
or to the company that you just bought, a specialised database program
written in BASIC.  I suppose that that implies that (as with other
older BASICs generally) the data might _be_ in CSV or in fixed-size
records containing plain text and binary representations of integer
floating-point decimal numbers (prices?)














> I have very little unix skills. Enough to be dangerous. I would like
> to try either copying the information to floppies in a floppy rotation
> to either a linux machine with ftp or directly to my NT machine. I
> don't know if the floppy drive even works though. Another option is to
> use the direct serial connection. Can someone point me to some
> information on this method? With a direct serial connection would I be
> able to use some sort of ftp program? Thanks for any help.

I see you're reading through http://groups.google.com/ , like me; Kermit
and Xenix were both discussed recently, with special reference to
Xenix->Windows data transfers by wire, disk, or otherwise.  I think
Kermit qualifies as "some sort of ftp program" for your purposes :-)
 

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