>Maybe a better question; are they any cards worth saving?
>I am keeping all the disk controller cards, memory expansion cards, and
>any specialized cards. Are they any Apple IIx cards worth saving? My
>general rule there has been that if I have the docs, they are worth
>saving.
I can't tell you what is worth saving, as only you know what your
interests are... but if you do end up with any Apple II series cards you
decide to dump, I'd be willing to cover shipping to send them to me (plus
a few bucks for your time/effort to pack them up).
-chris
<http://www.mythtech.net>
I'm looking for some UNIBUS memory to go with an 11/04 CPU I purchased
recently. ATM, I don't care much about the size; enought to be able to
run RT-11 would be wonderful.
Pat
--
Purdue University ITAP/RCAC --- http://www.rcac.purdue.edu/
The Computer Refuge --- http://computer-refuge.org
Hello,
Anyone from the Pittsburgh area that's also into vintage computer
collecting ?
I started a newsgroup on Yahoo for Pittsburgh (since there wasn't one yet)
where we could swap info.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pghvintagecomp/
Hope to see you there,
Dan
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[ My Corner of Cyberspace Pittsburgh Robotics Society ]
[ http://ragooman.home.comcast.net/http://www.pghrobotics.org/ ]
[ Got Robot ? ]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.3 - Release Date: 4/25/2005
I'm trying to put the write the two emulator images from the
following source
http://www.iosphere.net/%7eeric/wizardry/weeping_snows.htm
to 5.25" floppies.
I downloaded them and DSK2FILE.SHK on my G5, copied them to a FAT
floppy on my G5, and then read the floppy on my PowerBook 540c, which
I then used to write the files out to a 800KB ProDOS floppy. I
booted System 6 on my //gs from its SyQuest 44, and copied the floppy
to the disk cartridge. Then I unshrunk the DSK2FILE.SHK and used the
app to write the two Weeping Snows files to 5.25" floppy. Each one
took ~10-15 minutes to write, and now that I'm done, I can't seem to
access them.
Any idea on how on earth I should get these written to floppy?
Zane
--
--
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Administrator |
| healyzh at aracnet.com (primary) | OpenVMS Enthusiast |
| | Classic Computer Collector |
+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
| Empire of the Petal Throne and Traveller Role Playing, |
| PDP-10 Emulation and Zane's Computer Museum. |
| http://www.aracnet.com/~healyzh/ |
Hello,
Anyone from the Pittsburgh area that's also into vintage computer
collecting ?
I started a newsgroup on Yahoo for Pittsburgh (since there wasn't one
yet) where we could swap info.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pghvintagecomp/
Hope to see you there,
Dan
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[ My Corner of Cyberspace Pittsburgh Robotics Society ]
[ http://ragooman.home.comcast.net/http://www.pghrobotics.org/ ]
[ Got Robot ? ]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.3 - Release Date: 4/25/2005
Hello,
Anyone from the Pittsburgh area that's also into vintage computer
collecting ?
I started a newsgroup on Yahoo for Pittsburgh (since there wasn't one
yet) where we could swap info.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pghvintagecomp/
Hope to see you there,
Dan
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[ My Corner of Cyberspace Pittsburgh Robotics Society ]
[ http://ragooman.home.comcast.net/http://www.pghrobotics.org/ ]
[ Got Robot ? ]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.3 - Release Date: 4/25/2005
The software's been claimed, however the following is still available:
Wyse WY-150 terminal
Silicon Graphics Indigo2 IMPACT R4k/250 Solid/ [one Solid/Extreme]
Indy R5k 150 SC/ XL8
disks went out, but copies of install media can be made.
HP 9000/800 H50, >500MB RAM
IBM P-200 20" with 13W3 cable
Computone ISA multiport serial card
SyQuest 44MB SCSI drive
several unmentionables (ASUS I---l P-----m boards w/233MHz and RAM, AT
factor).
Interested in identification, will entertain offers if you
can use.
http://wsudbrink.dyndns.org:8080/images/protobds/
Descriptions:
----------------------------------------------------------
This is an unused socket pin wire wrap board that I think
(based on the "B" logo) is a Burroughs. Each of the card
edge connectors is 3 inches across. The top edge is rough
(hack saw man again) but the board looks pretty complete
anyway.
P1010001.JPG - Pin side, pins W57, W58 and three pins on
row Z1 are broken off (4th, 5th and 6th
from the right)
P1010003.JPG - Socket side, note the B logo upper left
P1010009.JPG - Close up of the B logo
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
This is an unused, unidentified proto board. Each of the
card edge connectors is 4 inches across.
P1010011.JPG - (Front?)
P1010012.JPG - (Back?)
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
I got a bunch of each of these. There are 5 different
"styles" of boards in this picture. They are only clad on
one side and there are no markings of any kind on the "back"
sides. The more narrow boards on the right side of the
picture have holes drilled through on the row of pads at the
end. The narrow board with the IC pads at the center has
holes drilled through on those pads as well. The bigger
board on the left only has holes drilled through on the
small round pads at its right side. All of the ovals on this
board have holes through the foil only. It's hard to see in
the picture, but all of the boards are on relatively modern
looking green board with the exception of the lower right
board. That one is on a dark red/brown board I'm used to
seeing in old radios. Someone also hand drilled a couple of
holes on the pads at the right end of this board. The narrow
boards are 2 1/8 inches wide, the short ones are 4 inches long,
the long ones are 6 inches. The big board on the left is
4 x 5 1/4 inches.
P1010014.JPG - Foil sides
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
This board (I got three) is solid clad on both sides (Obviously
intended to be etched). It is 10 inches long by 4 1/2 inches
wide. The "narrowed" end (intended for card edge?) is 4 1/4
inches wide. There are four rows of holes drilled through at
that end in a staggered pattern. The short rows have 20 holes,
the long rows have 21.
P1010015.JPG
----------------------------------------------------------
Bill