I have a Bondwell B310 Laptop. It is in excellent condition with no visual
damage to the case, LCD, or keyboard. I do not have the power supply, so I
have not been able to boot it and test.
My company is getting ready to move to a new building and we found the
laptop in a storage closet. No one wanted it and I thought that it could go
to a good home.
If interested, please let me know and make an offer.
Thanks,
Bill Smith
wjs82(a)hotmail.com
_________________________________________________________________
Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com
On January 18, Rumi Szabolcs wrote:
> >I already own the system. I'm just seeing how much I should be asking for
> >ballpark from a reseller. FYI, I paid $1300 for the whole shabang.
>
> If you got a 7650 for $1300 then it was a gift from the Lord.
> I'd never sell such a gift...
Well actually that deal was a gift from ME, and if he sells it, I
want a cut of the take! ;) It took quite a bit of negotiating to get
that deal.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL "Less talk. More synthohol." --Lt. Worf
On January 18, Tom Uban wrote:
> Excellent cat picture! I think that the fact that there are computers
> in the picture keeps it on topic. What is the VR01 plasma display hooked
> up to?
Ahh, good catch! :-) It's attached to a VT1000 X-terminal that I've
been using primarily as a dual-port serial terminal.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL "Less talk. More synthohol." --Lt. Worf
Hello all,
Picked up a Vaxstation 4000/90 the other day and am looking for a couple
of parts for it. Does anyone here have a spare cdrom sled and the open
front panel piece for the case? I'd like to take my cdrom out of the
external case and mount it internally to free up precious physical
desktop space.
Thanks,
William
--
You better watch out What you wish for;
It better be worth it So much to die for.
Courtney Love
I am thinking about get one BULL DPX/2 system (Motorola 68020 processor)
but the system don't have OS installed. Could it be possible to obtain
a copy ? The system has one 350 SCSI Hard Disk and one QIC tape.
Thanks and Greetings
Sergio
On January 18, Julius Sridhar wrote:
> > > > > How much would you pay for a VAX 7000-650?
> > > > My mother? ;-)
> > >
> > > Seriously. I'm thinking of selling mine.
> >
> > Yes, but what would your father have to say about that? ;)
>
> Did I ever tell you you're a bastard? 8-)
Muahahahha!!!
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL "Less talk. More synthohol." --Lt. Worf
On January 18, Julius Sridhar wrote:
> > > How much would you pay for a VAX 7000-650?
> > My mother? ;-)
>
> Seriously. I'm thinking of selling mine.
Yes, but what would your father have to say about that? ;)
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL "Less talk. More synthohol." --Lt. Worf
In a message dated 1/16/02 12:29:00 PM Pacific Standard Time,
vze2wsvr(a)verizon.net writes:
> It is an ISA-16 card. It has a 68000, w/2 27128 EEPROMs, 16 1259-15 RAM
> chips
> and Intel
> chips, 82586 and 8253-5. The rest looks to be TTL, a couple of connectors
> and
> couple of
> crystals, 16 and 20 MHz.
>
> It was made by Bridge Communications, USA, in 1987. And it has a D-shell
> 15
> pin (like a
> Mac video -2 rows of pins) female connector on the back.
>
>
Could be an early AUI ethernet controller. The 82586 was intel's ethernet
co-processor. It worked with a CPU chip. Ungerman Bass used an 80186 with the
82586 in their ethernet ISA cards.
Bridge Communications also made boxes for bridging different systems and
standards.
Paxton
Astoria, OR
On January 17, Heinz Wolter wrote:
> just thought someone in the group might be interested
> in this find - only 64 megs of ram :( location SF, CA
That's respectable for an ES/9000...and that's only primary
storage..
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL "Less talk. More synthohol." --Lt. Worf
Having just looked at the Apple II Compact Flash interface link, it
suddenly dawned on me... I have stacks of Apple II disks that may be (or
heaven forbid already) passing their shelf life.
So, I figured the best place to start my quest for the best way to long
term store these disks, would be to ask the place most likely to have
people that have conquered this issue.
I have recently begun this project for all my old Mac disks (having just
come across a batch that have aged away). The Mac is WAY easier, I am
just making Disk Copy disk images, dumping those across the network, and
burning to CD.
What is the popular opinion on the best way to store Apple II disks long
term? Is there something similar to Disk Copy to make images? If so, what
is the best way to transfer those to a Mac or PC for burning to CD?
Things I have that *might* make my life easier: Super Serial card for
II+/IIe, A IIgs with both 5.25 and 3.5 drives, A IIe Emulator for the Mac
LC and a 5.25 drive for it. As well as a few II+, IIe, IIc, and IIgs
machines.
Any hints (or "this is the best way" instructions) greatly appreciated.
Be kind, my Apple II knowledge is rusty, it has been years since I used
them.
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>