For what it's worth... (I have no connection with this person.)
>I have tons of old AT/XT cases, motherboards, cards, hard drives, floppies,
>and other stuff!
>
>Buyer pays shipping.
>
>Need to get rid of it!
>
>Byron Smith
>byron(a)pnx.com
>
>Located in Orange, Texas
>
-Bill Richman
bill_r(a)inetnebr.com
http://incolor.inetnebr.com/bill_r
(Home of the COSMAC Elf Simulator!)
Hello All,
Well, I got my old 11/24 back which I did give away a couple of years
ago and also found an 11/34 and form another person I can get 2 more
RL02's.
Are there any PDP users using Xenix, or only Unix (V5/6/7) ?
and Oracle V2.3? One of the packs might still have this on it.
Does anybody know where to get the number buttons (specifically #2
and #3) for the RL02's, so I can use my extra units as such, or is
there another to let the units know that they should not act as unit
#0 and/or unit #1?
Thanks,
Edward
P.S. has somebody in Europe an RK05 or RK07 left over :-)
i have several aol versions starting with 1.5 as ive never seen 1.0 anywhere.
i believe quantumlink/pc link basically turned into aol. i *think* applelink
was the same or close to it. as of last year, aol 1.5 was still supported and
mac aol 2.5 still works, if only for email and file transfers which is what i
use it for.
david
In a message dated 98-06-29 13:33:09 EDT, you write:
<< This isn't quite classic, but classic enough. Does anyone have old AOL
disks they could e-mail me? Any version before 3.0 for the PC. BTW, when
was AOL 1.0 released? Wasn't AOL PC Link before? A program called
QuantumLink came with my Commodore a few years ago, and when I called
the tech number to see if they're still around, I was forwarded to AOL. >>
Well, when I read the want ads, I see Mac SE/30s going for $300 easy
("Good first computer", "Good student computer", "Served me well").
Those ads really last from week to week...
>As far as worth, well i've seen them on ebay go anywhere from $75 to
over $200
>depending on what ancillary stuff it had (orig docs, packaging, etc).
That said,
>they are relatively easily available for <$20 (I just picked up two for
$15 just an
>hour ago).
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
> I didn't think they were jokes (;) and he did have a child, I just don't
> remember what gender. But to bring this thread on topic, could someone
> tell me what the Zuse computers did, and what Zuse models there were.
> How big were they? Has anyone seen one? Do any exist now?
Big ? Hmm. The Z1 could be described as a desktop computer,
since Zuse (and his friends) bulid it on his parents kitchen
table - but it tool up the whole table.
Thru wartime tjhere have been 4 Models - Z1..Z4.
After the war I think somewhat like 40 or so designes,
and some of them had quite some success. The Zuse
company did some very unique computers some of them
even part analogue and part digital. They also did
the first computer generated graphics not only in
science lab, but also sold drawing/cartography equippment.
They also had the first plotter running. And sold
them. Also some early CNC installations are credited
to Zuse (Beside that he in fact designed the first
process controlling computer ever - for production
of V1 cruise missiles) Eventualy SIEMENS bought Zuse
in the 60s.
Some exist sill - i.e. a reproduction of the Z1 in
the Museum fur Verkehr und Technik in Berlin, or a
Z3 in the Deutsches Museum in Munich. I don't know if
any of the later (after Z11) 'usual' machines survived.
Gruss
H.
PS.: Zuse also aquired some patents in the 50s for his
ideas about the Feldrechenmaschiene (field calculating
engine) - early ideas for parallel processing and still
base for a lot of newer designs.
P.P.S.: Try
http://www.histech.rwth-aachen.de/www/quellen/Histcomp/Zuse.html
for a nice lifetime/development story.
--
Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
HRK
More questions, then:
What did they do? I guess they couldn't have been that powerful if the
ENIAC took up a whole building...
>Big ? Hmm. The Z1 could be described as a desktop computer,
>since Zuse (and his friends) bulid it on his parents kitchen
>table - but it tool up the whole table.
>
>Thru wartime tjhere have been 4 Models - Z1..Z4.
>After the war I think somewhat like 40 or so designes,
>and some of them had quite some success. The Zuse
>company did some very unique computers some of them
>even part analogue and part digital. They also did
>the first computer generated graphics not only in
>science lab, but also sold drawing/cartography equippment.
>They also had the first plotter running. And sold
>them. Also some early CNC installations are credited
>to Zuse (Beside that he in fact designed the first
>process controlling computer ever - for production
>of V1 cruise missiles) Eventualy SIEMENS bought Zuse
>in the 60s.
>
>Some exist sill - i.e. a reproduction of the Z1 in
>the Museum fur Verkehr und Technik in Berlin, or a
>Z3 in the Deutsches Museum in Munich. I don't know if
>any of the later (after Z11) 'usual' machines survived.
>
>Gruss
>H.
>
>PS.: Zuse also aquired some patents in the 50s for his
>ideas about the Feldrechenmaschiene (field calculating
>engine) - early ideas for parallel processing and still
>base for a lot of newer designs.
>
>P.P.S.: Try
>http://www.histech.rwth-aachen.de/www/quellen/Histcomp/Zuse.html
>for a nice lifetime/development story.
>
>--
>Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
>HRK
>
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
> Hi all,
Hi Kevan!
> I just have to tell everybody some good news, but anybody with a space
> problem and of a jealous disposition may want to stop reading now...
>
> We have just got to sale agreed on a house that has a 41' x 41' garage at
> the bottom of the garden. That is about 1600 sqft or 11000 cuft of storage
> space. The garage has solid floors, cavity walls, a good roof and thus dry
> and clean inside.
Having seen your collection, and the attic in which you have hitherto
kept it, all I can say is, You lucky beggar!
Philip.
> I picked up an interesting laptop from circa 1986 today, the Olivetti M22.
> So, has anybody ever seen one of these things before?
There should be plenty of 'em in Europe, (Germany, but
especialy in Italy (:), since they sold well among special
banking environments.
Gruss
H.
--
Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
HRK
>>What exactly is Bob? I've often see it mentioned, but never with any
>>background to what it actually does.
> It's a user interface. There was a little helper guy, who could be a
> puppy, smiley face, etc. Not >10 years yet. The metaphor was of a room.
> You would click on a calendar hanging on the wall to get an appointment
> book, for example.
Nice story beside:
Kaufhof (a big department store group in Germany) once delivered
a simple dektop program, using the same working room metaphor as
Bob, with all their PCs (88/286/386). Junk, but some strange guys
at SIEMENS PN (telephone systems) choosed this program as desktop
for their new service PC system. They thought this thing would
help the _proferssional_technicans_ to deal with that system ...
rotfl. Its still in use, but soon after first tests this office
thing dissapeared and only some full screen windows with simple
text/icon buttons remain ... Almost like the win 3.1 programm
manager ... strange huh ?
Gruss
H.
--
Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
HRK
I didn't think they were jokes (;) and he did have a child, I just don't
remember what gender. But to bring this thread on topic, could someone
tell me what the Zuse computers did, and what Zuse models there were.
How big were they? Has anyone seen one? Do any exist now?
>(How about bringing a thread on-topic once in a while?) No, they have
>spawned no children that I know of. (And, please, no jokes about the
>deeper meaning of "Microsoft" wrt to Bill's sexual performance, OK?)
>
>ObCC: TTY.
>
>-- Doug
>
>
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com