we've recently decommisioned a couple of la120's at work. unfortunately,
the drive mechanics and motors have been pinched for a robotics project,
but the rest is sitting in a corridor waiting for a skip to pass.
does anyone have any use for the remaining bits? both units were in
working order, so the power supplies and logic boards should be fine.
--
J.F.Carter http://www.jfc.org.uk/
On November 13, John Lawson wrote:
> > Did you ever receive my money order for the Macintosh SE/30?
>
> No, and I really could use that $5,000.00 right now... holidays coming
> up, y'know.
>
> Remember that I'll throw in the original CRT *and* the actual HD out of
> it, all for just another $3,500.00.
>
> E-mail me off-list and I'll give you my bank info for wire transfer.
>
> You still interested in the Lisa manual for $800???
>
> Lemme know.
You're a bad, bad man. ;)
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
Well, all the Macs are spoken for, just have to nail down some details...
...except the LC-II. Any takers on that?
--- David A Woyciesjes
--- C & IS Support Specialist
--- Yale University Press
--- mailto:david.woyciesjes@yale.edu
--- (203) 432-0953
--- ICQ # - 905818
! -----Original Message-----
! From: David Woyciesjes [mailto:DAW@yalepress3.unipress.yale.edu]
! Sent: Monday, November 05, 2001 10:43 AM
! To: classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org (E-mail)
! Subject: For Sale/Trade... 68K Macs...
!
!
! Pardon my Off Topic post, I know this isn't quite the
! right forum,
! but I'd like these to go to someone who'll appreciate them...
!
! - Mac LCII 6 MB RAM, 80 MB HDD, OS 7.6, missing battery (1/2
! AA, 3.6 volt
! Lithium)
! - Mac SE/30, 8 MB RAM, 70 MB HDD, OS 7.1, Radius 64 KHz Full
! Page Display
! - Mac SE FDHD - Doesn't boot (yet)
! - Mac Classic II, 4 MB RAM, 140 MB HDD, OS 7.5
!
! - No mice, keyboard or monitors...
!
! I can update the software some, and might have some other Apple
! software to go with them, from the Apple Service Source CD Set...
! Everything must go, ASAP. Moving from apartment to house soon...
! Make reasonable offer.
!
! --- David A Woyciesjes
! --- C & IS Support Specialist
! --- Yale University Press
! --- mailto:david.woyciesjes@yale.edu
! --- (203) 432-0953
! --- ICQ # - 905818
!
> > On 12-Nov-2001 UberTechnoid(a)home.com wrote:
> > > As far as open architecture, ISA was very well documented and noone
> > > needed to pay IBM to use the buss. MCA was a different story. The PC
> > > wasn't an open architecture, but the effects were something of the
> > > same. Heck there are ISA slots on Amigas, Ataris, etc.....
> >
> > My MIPScomputer M/120 has ISA slots. Being big endian, it has to do some
> > fun things with byte and word swapping different parts of the IO space.
> >
>
> AFAIK Apollos (before they were bought by HP) used ISA with most of their
> M68K machines. I think they also used ISA with their risc DN10K boxen.
After, too (at least in the case of the 425t).
-dq
Hi,
As you may have noticed - I got a MicroVAX II at the weekend, and I've
been playing. I've not yet built a console cable, but that's on the way
:&)
Anyway - as the cables were damaged beyond repair before it arrived (a
2' length is missing from the middle) I'd like to know what's needed to
hook up these SMD drives (apparently M2372K and M2351AO - but I've not
checked that yet) to the Emulex QD32 controller I have :&)
This is my first encounter with SMD, and I'm quite fascinated :&) If I
can get it to access the HDD's, I'm well on the way to a working system
:&) All I need then is an ethernet card :&)
-- Matt
---
E-mail:
matt(a)pkl.net, matt(a)knm.yi.org, matt(a)printf.net
matt(a)m-techdiagnostics.ltd.uk, matthew.london(a)stud.umist.ac.uk
mattl(a)vcd.student.utwente.nl, mlondon(a)mail.talk-101.com
Web Page:
http://knm.yi.org/http://pkl.net/~matt/
PGP Key fingerprint = 00BF 19FE D5F5 8EAD 2FD5 D102 260E 8BA7 EEE4 8D7F
PGP Key http://knm.yi.org/matt-pgp.html
Lest you'all forget there is Uzi unix, a BSD styled kernal.
Allison
-----Original Message-----
From: M H Stein <mhstein(a)usa.net>
To: 'ClassicComputers' <classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org>
Date: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 5:26 AM
Subject: Xenix ?
>-----------Original Message----------
>Date: Sun, 11 Nov 2001 20:45:49 -0700
>From: Ben Franchuk <bfranchuk(a)jetnet.ab.ca>
>Subject: Re: Xenix ?
>
>Don Maslin wrote:
>> Somehow, I am inclined to question if there was a Z-80 version of Xenix
>> and, if not, then there was none for the Model II.
>
>The only OS that came close to Unix for 8 bit micros was OS/9 for the
>6809 and
><snip>
>----------------------------------------------------------
>Don't forget Z80 Cromix...
>
>mike
>
irc.stealth.net
irc.funet.fi
flute.telstra.net.au
irc.uni-erlangen.de
irc.leo.orgirc.webbernet.net
are a few you can try....
-Linc Fessenden
In The Beginning there was nothing, which exploded - Yeah right...
Calculating in binary code is as easy as 01,10,11.
Can anyone provide hosting for a scan of a Burroughs B220 manual for Eric?
Please reply to him directly.
Reply-to: wd6cmu(a)earthlink.net
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 08 Nov 2001 10:45:19 -0800
From: Eric Williams <wd6cmu(a)earthlink.net>
To: Vintage Computer Festival <vcf(a)siconic.com>
Subject: Burroughs B220
Sellam,
I've recently scanned in my copy of the operations manual for a
Burroughs B220, circa 1957. Do you know of an appropriate web site that
might like to archive it for public access? Thanks!
--
eric
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
* Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
Dear All,
Can anyone provide me with any leads on a second hand keyboard for a
RS/6000 PowerServer 520H (7013) (part no. 1394540 or 1395985), preferably a
cheap one located in Australia.
Cheers
Andrew
-------------------------------------------------------------
Andrew Vincent
Research Information Systems Officer
Research and Graduate Studies Office
La Trobe University
Bundoora, 3083
Australia
+61 3 9479 1581 (voice)
+61 3 9479 1464 (fax)
web: www.latrobe.edu.au/rgso
-------------------------------------------------------------
On Nov 12, 1:45, Jeffrey S. Sharp wrote:
> What kind of equipment/strategy do we use to lift heavy equipment into
> place in a rack so that it can be fastened to the rack? Is there some
> jack or hydraulic lift that can be used?
>
> Please tell me that the best method doesn't begin with "create a list of
> muscular friends".
Mine does :-) (Hi, James!)
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York