Found this in another newsgroup; thought it might be of interest to
some on this list. I have no connection whatsoever with this person.
FWIW...
>Macintosh II system.
>8 Megs of Ram
>80-to-120 meg HDD
>Mouse
>Keyboard (extended )
>Color Mac Monitor
>2400 External Zoom Modem
>Macintosh SE
>4 Megs of Ram
>20 Meg HDD
>Keyboard
>Mouse
>Built-in 9 inch BW monitor
>External Disk Drive
>Hayes Smartmodem ( 2400 ) external
>Okimate 20 color/bw thermal printer.
>Atari 800XL Computer System
>1020 printer with 2 carts
>Tape Drive
>Intro Tapes
>All manuals and an extra programming book
>Power supplies for every thing
>Intellivison System
>53 games
>Intellivision ECS ( computer add-on )
>ECS computer keyboard
>Manuals for the ECS
>Manuals for some of the games
>TI-99 4A computer system
>RF-converter, no power cord
>1 386 motherboard
>1 486 motherboard with overdrive, built in floppy and IDE controllers
>1 486 motherboard
>Various Games on CD and Floppy
>2 Video Seven video cards
>1 Video Flex Card
>Other Cards, some unknown
>1 IBM 5150 computer
>Quad board ( mem card )
>2400 bps modem
>IBM keyboard
>10 meg Plus Hard Card
>Various other cards for this system.
>Programs on 5.25 inch disks
>
>Will sell parts or whole systems or 450.00 + shipping for the whole package.
>Some of this stuff is and will be worth money in a few years.
>
>Please Reply via e-mail
>The Basement: Computer Org.
>swolfe1(a)mindspring.com
>or Call: 301-463-2812
>
-Bill Richman
bill_r(a)inetnebr.com
http://incolor.inetnebr.com/bill_r
(Home of the COSMAC Elf Simulator!)
For one thing, this IS on topic, just as classic computer books.
I only saw it now because I was born a year before its release, and
left the USSR, where it was not available, in 1991.
>I think this movie was out in early 80's I think because I saw it on
>tape back in roughly '84. And I recalled that very well even I was
>at tender age. :)
>
>Jason D.
>email: jpero(a)cgo.wave.ca
>Pero, Jason D.
>
______________________________________________________
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Russ Blakeman wrote:
>
>> >I just saw Wargames; what an excellent movie! I encourage
>> Look for another movie sometime, "Dr. Strangelove". The
crazed
>
>Is it just me or have these movies been out and already been
tossed in
>the bargain rental area at the video stores? You guys need to
get out
>more ;-)
And here I was trying to be on topic, considering only movies
with computers more than 10 years old. Which reminds me, what
was the computer in "Dr. Strangelove", the scene where Peter
Sellers is the British officer in the computer room at the
Alaska airbase? Was it an IBM 1401? (now this is real computer
trivia)
Jack Peacock
OK. What exactly does a language card do? (Sorry, I'm new at this)..
Tim D. Hotze
-----Original Message-----
From: SUPRDAVE <SUPRDAVE(a)aol.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Sunday, March 22, 1998 4:47 AM
Subject: Re: Wanted: Apple ][ Card Info
>In a message dated 98-03-21 11:33:13 EST, you write:
>
><< OK... could it allow for me to write in C? (Or any other languages in
> particular) What are the chances of finding another 64K RAM upgrade to
> boost it to the max 128KB?
> Thanks again, >>
>
>there were certain 128k ram cards for the ][+ and similar but i dont think
>programs could use the extra memory. early versions of appleworks could be
>patched to use it and dos 3.3 could use the mem as a virtual disk. the
pocket
>rocket's memory cannot be upgraded.
I just saw Wargames; what an excellent movie! I encourage everyone who
hasn't seen it already to see it.
I ask this question when seeing any technology-based movie;
how much of the technology is actually possible? Who was Professor
Falken in the movie based upon? Can a JOSHUA be built?
Lastly, was there any meaning to the launch code CPE1704?
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
>I remember reading a Byte article that told how to build a
computer that
>used a variant of the Z80 by Hatichi (I think that's how you
spell it).
>The computer was about the size of a lunch box. Apparently I
have misplaced
>that particular issue an was wondering if any one had it and
was willing to
>tell me where I could find the printed circuit board and the
boot disks or at
>least send me the art work and the parts list for this
particular beast.
The part is a Hitachi 64180, an improved Z80. Zilog also makes
a similar part, the Z180. I recall the article, It was from
Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar series. I think his company sold the
kits, MicroMint (?).
The 64180 was a nice improvement, made it much easier to add
DRAM to a Z80. The drawbacks were the odd pin spacing on the
DIP (70 mil centers instead of 100) and a less than perfect fit
to the newer Zilog peripherals like the SCC or CIO. I believe
the Zilog version fixed up the signal problems with cascading
interrupts and also added one more address line (to a full 1MB).
Aside from the faster clock rates and built-in peripherals, the
nicest feature of the '180s was the memory management. The CPU
had an integrated memory management unit to extend the 64K
address of a regular Z80 out to either 512K or 1M, using three
bank-switched regions.
I still have a homemade CP/M system using the 64180, 256K DRAM,
16KB EPROM, two CIOs, one SCC, a National 58167 clock calendar,
and a WD MFM hard/floppy controller card. It runs CP/M V3 and
used the MMU to access all of the 256K RAM. I built it before
Ciarcia came out with his board, chances are I would have used
his for the project instead of doing a custom card.
I keep it running for sentimental value, it was the first card I
ever designed (and got working) with dynamic RAMs.
Jack Peacock
>>pocket rocket is applied engineering's equivalent to apple's language
card.
>OK... could it allow for me to write in C? (Or any other languages in
>particular) What are the chances of finding another 64K RAM upgrade to
>boost it to the max 128KB?
They were called "Language Cards" because you could switch between Applesoft
and Integer Basic. It never had anything to do with any other programming
language. If you want to program in C, try Hyper C from ground at
ftp://liquefy.isca.uiowa.edu/8/ground/apple2/apple8/Languages/Hyperc
-- Kirk
My Atari 1050 disk drive crashed. When I try to boot a disk from it I
get beep boot error beep beep boot error etc. I think I remember
somthing about the beeps being a message when a boot error happens if so
could somone tell me what it means and how to fix it since I don't see
anything physicaly worng with the drive on the inside.
Need a cartridge based interface for an Epson "Homewriter 10" for
Commodore - or any other machine they made a cartridge for the printer
for. I have the manual for the Commie cart but no cartridge so the
printer is kaput. It's essentially an LX-86 with a modification to make
it accept cartridges for an interface in place of the serial or parallel
inputs. The Centronics connector isn't even there although the board
could accept it but one of the main chips is removed to accept a plug in
connector for the "CATI" board.
If anyone has this or even a good logic board for an LX-86 (maybe you
have a printer with a dead printhead?) let me know and we'll work
something out. I hate to have the thing lying around if it's not
useable.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Russ Blakeman
RB Custom Services / Rt. 1 Box 62E / Harned, KY USA 40144
Phone: (502) 756-1749 / Data/Fax:(502) 756-6991
Email: rhblake(a)bbtel.com or rhblake(a)bigfoot.com
Website: http://members.tripod.com/~RHBLAKE/
* Parts/Service/Upgrades and more for MOST Computers*
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