>>> without an endowment or a building you are forever treading water untill you find help.
Exactly. The toughest place to start is at square one. So I urge people to emulate what we did here in NJ -- start by partnering with an existing organization. A science museum is the best place. Colleges, libraries, community centers, etc. are next. IMHO, the least desirable kind of partner is a private company.
The same overpriced goods and always without a picture. It appears
that this seller has just recently gotten a new identity. You may
want to adjust your searches to exclude the new identity as I have.
--
"The Direct3D Graphics Pipeline" -- DirectX 9 draft available for download
<http://www.xmission.com/~legalize/book/download/index.html>
Legalize Adulthood! <http://blogs.xmission.com/legalize/>
Does anyone have a DEC PC04 paper tape reader/punch that they would be
interested in letting go? I'm also looking for the matching PC8-E
(M840) UNIBUS controller card.
Thanks,
-Mardy
Richard wrote:
> In article <5107C05E-01F2-4A99-AEBB-4475E5C10E8B at comcast.net>,
> CRC <technobug at comcast.net> writes:
>
>> I was at my local scrapper recently and ran across a number of
>> manuals
>> for the IBM Grelystone Display Station in the dumpster:
>>
>> Maintenance Analysis Procedures
>> Greystone Parts Catalog
>> Maintenance Information Manual
>
> What is a "Greystone Display Station"? Googling didn't turn up
> anything obvious.
Jason T helpfully added:
> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 11:01 PM, Richard <legalize at xmission.com>
> wrote:
>
>> What is a "Greystone Display Station"? Googling didn't turn up
>> anything obvious.
>
> Ah, sometimes you have to look to the non-obvious:
>
> http://www.pmsimon.com/images/productplacement.jpg
So that everyone is not left with the wrong impression I scanned a
couple of pages from the manuals and they can be found at
<elipsoid.home.comcast.net/Greystone.html>.
The manuals appear to be drafts for a CRT display station. Again, if
interested, they are available for postage.
CRC
-- g-wright at att.net wrote:
> I think all of the Power Stack computers by Motorola where
>Power PC systems. I have 2 AViiON's here which where 88k. (Of >coarse quit large)
SO, which AViiON models do you have? I have a 400 and a 412, with
enough parts to build a 530.
The 'PowerStack' systems I was thinking of looks like this:
http://www.corestore.org/powerstack.jpg
It looks kinda like a series 900, but not quite exact. Never seen
one IRL.
____________________________________________________________
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A local business contacted me to ask if I had a parallel port card
(centronics) for an Apple //e. They apparently got "hit" and lost the
existing card. Seems they still have an old application they need to
keep running for a few more months while they convert to something
newer.
I'm not an Apple guy, but promised I'd ask around. So, list, anyone
have such a card they'd be willing to part with? Presumably they'd be
willing to pay something for it.
Mid Michigan, though such a card can presumably be mailed without too
much pain from nearly anywhere.
Thanks,
De
This is not my system, contact stan below for details:
======================================================
I have an old HP 64000 development system that I would like to sell to the appropriate person or collector of vintage computer equipment. I just don't know where to look. I am on the east coast on Long Island.
stans829 at optonline.net
Snagged a bunch of these in original packaging from a box in the
engineering department.
http://csplan9.rit.edu/users/john/archerkbd.jpghttp://csplan9.rit.edu/users/john/archerkbd-tag.jpg
Very nice key placement for a UNIX keyboard, assuming you can live
without an ALT key (although I guess that is a potential function for
the FUNCT key). Maybe I should get a microcontroller and try making a
terminal :)
John
--
Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn