Hi Doug,
We have a Gorilla Banana Printer!
It seems to be in good shape with the dust cover, manual, and old ribbon.
We also have a ton of systems and componets ,and software (the good
stuff)from that era, Commador 64, 128, 5.25 drives, Atari systems, and lots
of other equipment. Printers like the big blue, Commador vic and others. We
have the IBM PC jr system complete with monitor, printer, side parallel
car, and extensive manuals. We have a lot of stuff from the 70's and 80's
MAC performa 450 complete with software manuals modem, monitor,
printer-Image Writer II, also a Apple IIgs with lots of attachments 5.25 &
3.5 drives, printer all complete! Windows 3.1 tower system complete has
CD-rom, 5.25 1.2 mg, 3.5 1.44mg drives 2 hard drives 2.19.mg and 83.mg.
Has Sound blaster card, modem, serial and parallel cards installed. Has the
Calmira Final addition GUI (windows 95 desktop) installed. Mouse, Keyboard,
Monitor, lots of software installed like Word, Powerpoint, Excel, and more!
We have 5 - HP smartdesk Writers Color and black inkjet printers TOO! 386
boards, ISA cards lots more. We would like to sell it all if possible!
Contact us at samcgee65(a)hotmail.com
Thank you,
Mark McGee
Well, for what it's worth, my mom and her friend are janitors for banks, and
as such, I could probably get about anything... Don't leave out good old
Orange Clean, which is even made right here in my state... I'd imagine a lot
of those cleaning things are available at Grainger, too...
Will J
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On Mar 30, 19:49, Richard Erlacher wrote:
> I'm glad I don't have to explain that. There is, by the way, another
more
> "current" name for the 3-row, 'E'-shell connector commonly seen with 15
pins in
> it in VGA applications. I'm not remembering it, though.
HD-15?
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
Dept. of Computer Science
University of York
The correct term is "urinal CAKE" not cookie... it's that round thing in
urinals that is an air-freshener, etc. At least I believe thats what it
does... I sure as hell have no intention to sniff it to determine the
accuracy of this..
Will J
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Date: 16 May 2001 0:50:25 +0100
From: "Iggy Drougge" <optimus(a)canit.se>
Subject: Re: destinking the computers.
jpero skrev:
....If it stinks after this treatment, I'd have no idea what to do next.
My Sugesstion:
Pack it with a dryer sheet. Dryer sheets also repell mice. I have a friend
who does this to the interior of his 69 SS Chevelle. He covers the car on a
cement floor in his pole barn. Dryer sheets under the seats got rid musty
smell, and he also realized lack of mouse dropings. Prior years he'd find
seat stuffing packed in a nest on the intake manifold, or some other
unlikely place.
Larry Truthan Digest subscriber truthanl(a)oclc.org
Hey, I'm personally totally perplexed as to where it came from in the first
place... I just wish I could afford the 1130 but I know someone will come
out with some large amount of money and as always I'll miss out on another
opportunity... I guess I could sell my PDP-8/i and some other stuff or
something, except then I'd never have another PDP-8/i.. ugh.. I tried to
look up weights, but IBM actually doesn't have info on the 1130 in the sales
manual anymore, unfortunately.
Will J
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Good God, some of us read e-mail while we are *eating*... ugh!
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On May 16, 8:50, Norm Anheier wrote:
> I need help identifying the function (ie what is it!) of a MOSTEK chip,
> part number MK2488P with date code (?) 7429. If it's 1974, its a little
> early for my data books.
I can't find MK2488P. Nearest I can see is MK2400P (a 256-word x 10-bit
mask ROM) or MK2408P (2400 programmed as a character generator ROM).
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
On May 16, Will Jennings wrote:
> The correct term is "urinal CAKE" not cookie...
Oh, that's an entirely different product. The urinal *cookies* are
only intended as a light snack, or perhaps for...dipping.
"Stays crispy in milk!"
[dave ducks under his desk to avoid being pelted with flying fruit]
-Dave McGuire
On May 15, 20:54, Sipke de Wal wrote:
> If guess Fairchild was the company that first made the 54/74xx series
> The 54xx had mil. specs the 74xx had consumer specs.
Nope, TI made the first 54/74. Fairchild made other things, some of them
before TI, but not 54/74 TTL (a least, not before Texas).
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York