I'm looking for a Seattle Computer Products CPU Support card. It's an S-100 card with various mixed functions on it. If anyone has one or knows where I can find one, please let me know.
Barry Watzman
Watzman(a)ibm.net
I've finally gotten round to putting a page up with the pictures that I
shot at the Moffitt Field Historical Computer Collection "Visible Storage"
facility during VCF II, but have spaced a bit on the identities of some of
the artifacts.
The page is not quite ready for public consumption yet, as it is still
missing various titles and it should be a bit better organized... But, if
anyone would like to take a look, and perhaps assist with identifying the
units without titles, you can access the page at:
http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw/jcgm-mfhcc.html
Until I get this page 'finished', there won't be a link from the regular
'Computer Garage' pages, so you will need to use the direct URL above.
Thanks in advance for any assistance you can provide!
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
Computer Garage Fax - (503) 646-0174
In a message dated 12/23/98 4:22:54 PM Pacific Standard Time,
handyman(a)sprintmail.com writes:
> The Chicklet keyboard has several keys that are hard to get to
> work, I must press some of them several times to work..
> Anyone have any ideas on how to clean them.
Some of the people who clean keyboards for a living use Ultrasonic cleaners.
Years ago I got a sample of a cleaner that you mixed with water that was
formulated for ultrasonic keyboard cleaning. You also need an Ultrasonic
cleaner that you can submerge a keyboard in. Unfortunately I don't have the
name of the company anymore.
Paxton
I collect old radios, and I can definitely say differently. Just try
plugging in a metal-cabinet radio with a few bad tubes, turning it on, and
touching the case. Also, get out of the way when a shelf collapses with a
52-pound short-wave receiver on it. Other than that, you're probably right.
--
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
-----Original Message-----
From: Marty <Marty(a)itgonline.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, December 23, 1998 2:40 PM
Subject: Re: Old Radios
> Come now comrade Griffiths, an old radio never hurt anyone.
>
> Marty
>
>
>
-----Original Message-----
From: Phil Clayton <handyman(a)sprintmail.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Thursday, 24 December 1998 11:54
Subject: Commodore Pet 2001
>Well I finally got an original Commodore Pet 2001
Nice find, they are getting rare.
>8MB RAM
Ahem, do you mean 8K RAM?
Cheers
Geoff Roberts
Computer Room Internet Cafe
Port Pirie
South Australia.
netcafe(a)pirie.mtx.net.au
Well, even though I haven't tried it yet, it HAS to be faster booting than
my Toshiba 200CDS. (100MHz Pentium, 8 MB RAM, Win 95OSR2). It takes 15-20
minutes to boot, and with absolutely NOTHING running but Explorer and IE,
89% of all system resources are used. It's the worst computer I ever owned,
and make more use of the 386-20 IBM PS/2 L40sx laptop w/ 6 MB RAM. And, I
may add it only takes 1.34 minutes to boot (Win '95 OSR2) - yes, I timed it.
Only problem is that the keyboard quit. Anyone have a replacement? I don't
really feel like paying $90 for one from IBM.
Happy Holidaze,
--
-Jason Willgruber
(roblwill(a)usaor.net)
ICQ#: 1730318
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1>
-----Original Message-----
From: Max Eskin <kurtkilg(a)geocities.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, December 23, 1998 1:37 PM
Subject: Re: OT, but info needed: RAM uprade
>A _little_? How many minutes does it take to boot? I have tried booting a
>486sx/20 with 4 MB RAM from a premade Win95 setup, and it took a looong
>time! I started and finished a major meal and it still wasn't done.
>>my girlfriend runs Win95 on a 386/20 Dell laptop. a little slow, but
>actually
>>not that bad. oh, 4M of ram. the slowest thing is printing.
>>
>>Kelly
>
>
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Duell <ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Thursday, 24 December 1998 11:16
Subject: Re: Old Radios
>>
>> Come now comrade Griffiths, an old radio never hurt anyone.
>
>What, not even if you touch the chassis of an AA5 with wet hands?
Da, tovarisch.
Not to mention the exploding electrolytic effect when a radio that's sat
through about 20 Australian summers in a tin shed and is dryer than
most Middle Kingdom Egyptian Mummys is powered up for the first
time.
Cheers
Geoff Roberts
Computer Room Internet Cafe
Port Pirie
South Australia.
netcafe(a)pirie.mtx.net.au
Come now comrade Griffiths, an old radio never hurt anyone.
Marty
______________________________ Reply Separator
_________________________________
Subject: Re: Old Radios
Author: classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu at internet
Date: 12/23/98 4:54 PM
The Old Radios Trade wrote:
>
> Dear Colleagues
>
> We have for sale multitude of rare russian antiquarian radios.
> There are Zvezda 54 (RED STAR) , Belarus 53, SVD9 and many others solid
radios.
That's what we get for being an open list. Much better than any
of the ads I get when I admit my existence on Usenet, anyway.
--
Ward Griffiths <mailto:gram@cnct.com> <http://www.cnct.com/home/gram/>
WARNING: The Attorney General has determined that Alcohol, Tobacco,
and Firearms can be hazardous to your health -- and get away with it.
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Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1998 16:57:04 -0500
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From: Ward Donald Griffiths III <gram(a)cnct.com>
To: "Discussion re-collecting of classic computers"
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: Old Radios
References: <65.981224(a)radiolink.net>
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Dear Colleagues
We have for sale multitude of rare russian antiquarian radios.
There are Zvezda 54 (RED STAR) , Belarus 53, SVD9 and many others solid radios.
We have are the following portable radios:
model, year.
Gauya, 61
Neva, 60
Mir, 62
Lastochka, 62
Neva 2, 63
Kiev 7, 63
Planeta, 64
Saturn, 64
Selga, 63
Almaz, 64
Orbita, 65
Sokol 2, 65
Quartz 401, 70
Orbita 2, 70
Selga 402, 70
Yupiter, 64
Neiva, 64
Signal, 64
Etud, 67
Kosmos, 63
Orlenok, 67
Kosmos 602, 70
Rubin, 66
Surpris (Notebook), 67
Era 2M, 65
Mayak 1, 65
Mikro, 66
Atmosfera, 59
Alpinist, 64
Kosmonavt, 64
Riga 301A, 66
Geala, 68
Spidola, 62
Banga, 65
Sport 2, 66
Sokol 4, 67
Sonata, 65
Souvenir, 65
Meridian, 67
Wef 12, 67
Wega, 68
Russia 301, 70
Okean, 70
Riga 103, 68
Riga 302, 69
Also we have multitude of old russian vacuum tubes and old radio details.
We have old russian TV's, LP's, old audio articles and cameras.
Please inform what are you interested from Russia ? We will be happy to help you.
Unfortunately we can not make photos of our radios. Therefore we are sending you a photo of
Russian Red Star which made collector from England.
If you interested something please let us know.
Our e-mail is: oldradios(a)radiolink.net
Yours sincerely
The Old Radios Trade
I'll take it
-----Original Message-----
From: Daniel T. Burrows <dburrows(a)netpath.net>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Wednesday, December 23, 1998 9:59 AM
Subject: Fw: Free to museum or collector
>Found this on usenet if anyone is interested.
>Dan
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Stan Korzep <%skorzep(a)magicnet.net>
>Newsgroups: misc.forsale.computers.other.misc
>Date: Monday, December 21, 1998 7:45 PM
>Subject: Free to museum or collector
>
>
>Zenith Z100 monitor/computer/keyboard like new. Operational. ZDOS and
>CPM. All Documentation. Modem. Printer. Extra power supply. Owner was
>ready to pitch it. Free to good home if new home will pay shipping.
>
>Contact Gene at gene_grant(a)msn.com.
>