Hello, all:
Did Morrow make a hard disk controller? Who made controllers and
drives (if you could afford one) for these systems.
Rich
==========================
Richard A. Cini, Jr.
Congress Financial Corporation
1133 Avenue of the Americas
30th Floor
New York, NY 10036
(212) 545-4402
(212) 840-6259 (facsimile)
I got sent the virus too, by the original poster _sring. Deleted it thanks to
the warning on the list. Unfortunately I deleted it before I checked the
header.
As to Spam from CCMP. I have this one email address that I use only for the
CCMP list. I get no Spam at this address, well maybe one or less a month, and
then it is talked about a lot on the list so I know everyone got it. I use
this list as an example of an excellently run list. I do not see evidence
anyone has successfully mined the archives for addresses.
Paxton
Astoria, OR
> I took my Profile apart the other night and any hopes of
> swapping another drive in there were dashed since the ST506 has an
> Apple-specific board on it.
isn't the apple-specific board piggy-backed onto the
board that's there in a non-apple version of the drive?
-dq
> Hello, all:
>
> Did Morrow make a hard disk controller? Who made controllers and
> drives (if you could afford one) for these systems.
Yeah, I have the brochure for it somewhere; IIRC, the photo
showed one of those big Winchester drives with the transparent
plastic enclosure.
-dq
i'm looking to buy bare or populated swtpc mp-a2 and mp-s boards. i would appreciate any help on this.
thanks,
philip j gentile
1035 smith ridge road
bridgeport, ny 13030
315.476.7859 voice
315.476.7865 fax
Hello Everyone,
I have come to the conclusion that it is time to sell my entire collection
of Old microcomputers. I have collected over the last 20 years over 125
computers, including 10 Kaypro's, 5 or 6 Osbornes,plus the Original Tan
case model.
2 Original TRS-80 Model 1's Complete with just about everything ever made
for it. Also A Original Commodore PET 2001 with 8kb Ram, and built in
Cassette. The Entire Kaypro & Osborne User Group Software on Floppy disks
(About 200 ?), Hundreds if not thousands of original manuals, and tech
reference books for Osborne, Kaypro, TRS-80. A large collection of old
Computer Mags, Several hundred Games still boxed for the Commodore series
64,VIC20, 16, and Plus4.. Most all of my Commodores are in the original
boxes and in mint condition. Also have large collection of TI-994A computers
including , 2 expansion interfaces, and tons of software and extras.
TRS-80's ? Almost the entire collection of the COCO series. Apples, Mac's
and several hundred pounds of manuals and software. Lots of old printers,
external Hard drives, SCSI Cdrom's, Modems, CGA,EGA,VGA,TTL, Composite
(Color & Mono) Monitors, VGACommodore CBM's, TRS-80's.. 1000's of diskettes
of utilities, games for CPM computers.. GAD's it way to much to think about
and I'm starting to get depressed thinking of parting with it all (Smile..),
but I am moving to new things (Getting a Life) and it would be impossible
to move or keep this treasure. Again an entire bedroom is full to the
ceiling of this stuff, no furniture in that room, just my collection boxed
and stacked carefully.
Way to many items to mention here, but I have Many Thousands of Dollars
invested in my collection, and will sell it mostly at my cost to someone
willing to buy it complete. Most all of these items are in Mint condition.
You will need a large truck to move it all, as it fills an entire bedroom
full to the ceiling. All items are boxed and have been kept in a controlled
environment for many years.
If you have Several thousand dollars to spend and are serious got a big
truck and can travel to Florida to pick it up, I will email you a copy of
the list or items.. I would much rather sell this as a whole than take
several months and a Hugh amount of time boxing these items one by one.. If
interested email me at musicman38(a)mindspring.com Phil..
> I'll add that the Lisa 2 is actually an upgraded Lisa 1. When Apple's
> Twiggy drives proved troublesome, Apple apparently offered an upgrade to
> anyone with a Lisa to replace the Twiggy's with a Sony 3.5" drive. So you
> got a new drive assembly and front panel, and returned the old ones.
> Most people took advantage of this upgrade, which is why it's so hard to
> find an original Lisa these days.
It's time for a group of us to find the Utah landfill
where they dumped the Lisa inventory 15 years ago...
Since you can find undecayed hotdogs from the 1960s
in a landfill, I'm thinking the Lisas should be well
preserved...
-dq
On Nov 28, 12:38, Douglas Quebbeman wrote:
> > But the way it does it is *very* questionable.. The email is routed to
one
> > of their servers before being routed to you inbox.
No, it just runs another server on your own machine (127.0.0.1, localhost)
and redirects mail to that before giving it to Outlook.
> Network Associates' Groupshield Exchange and Computer Associates'
> eTrust InoculateIT! Exchange Option scan the mail as it comes in
> to the server and what gets put in the inbox has been sanitized...
>
> except, apparantly, the BADTRANS virus. Fortunately, the client-
> side realtime scanner caught it...
Lots of things miss it because it's fairly new. It's only been around a
few days. Most of the anti-virus sites have had updates for couple of days
or more, though.
One of the ways it works is to look through existing mail for messages that
haven't been replied to, and reply to them. That way the recipient not
only gets mail from someone whose address he recognises, it has a sensible
subject line too. That's probably why several list members have it, and
why Sellam got what he did.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
> On Wed, 28 Nov 2001, David Woyciesjes wrote:
>
> > Well, I'm running Norton Corporate Edition, with Outlook 2000, and it
> > scans my e-mail as it comes in, before I even read the message! Works
> > out nice :-)
>
> Was it prescient enough to detect Badtrans.b? If Badtrans.b is a new
> virus, it almost sounds fishy that NAV *already* knew how to
> discover it.
Heuristics.
-dq