At 02:32 PM 7/2/98 -0700, you wrote:
>Wern't the original Altair 8 inch drives hard sectored?
Yes...
-jim
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
Computer Garage Fax - (503) 646-0174
I'm looking for a reason why they went to the trouble of making it. What
are the voltages on it? I don't actually have any of the hardware, just
wondering.
>the DIN connector on the back of the machine? Exactly for that. Is max
>looking for a 12v mono amber monitor for one?
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Russ Blakeman
> RB Custom Services / Rt. 1 Box 62E / Harned, KY USA 40144
> Phone: (502) 756-1749 Data/Fax:(502) 756-6991
> Email: rhblake(a)bbtel.com or rhblake(a)bigfoot.com
> Website: http://members.tripod.com/~RHBLAKE/
> ICQ UIN #1714857
> AOL Instant Messenger "RHBLAKEMAN"
> * Parts/Service/Upgrades and more for MOST Computers*
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
Max:
I saw a copy at Bookman's on INA in Tucson AZ for 10.00 yesterday. Maybe someone could get you a phone number, I know they'd ship it. I'm back home now, or I'd pick it up for you....
Mike
----------
From: Max Eskin
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 1998 12:23 PM
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
Subject: OS/2 Warp
I know this is less than 10 yrs. old, but somone offered OS/2 warp
here and I forget who it was. I'll take if it's not too expensive.
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
On 2 Jul 98 at 17:43, R. Stricklin (kjaeros) wrote:
> I just picked up a ROM v01 //gs at a thrift shop.
>
> The colour composite video it generates is very badly artifacted. On my
> ][plus, there is a 'colour trim' adjustment which I would expect to
> correct this on the mainboard, but I didn't see anything like this on the
> //gs.
Sorry, I can't help with this bit.
> Also, the colours are pale and incorrect when I use my Apple // RGB
> monitor (the one with the electric tilt) on the RGB port. This monitor
> doesn't work on the RGB port of my //c at all, so I'm wondering if it's
> just a matter of not being quite the right monitor for the //gs (which
> has, if I recall, a monitor more closely styled along Mac lines).
Apple IIGS RGB port = analogue signal at NTSC frequency. This port
requires the specific RGB display for the IIGS, early multi sync
displays from Sony and NEC, many Amiga and Atari displays etc but
NOT VGA.
Apple // RGB tilt monitor = digital display, surely. You'll get some
display from the IIGS on it but as you say the colours are wrong.
Apple //c RGB port = raw RGB signal. It requires an adapter to
convert it to something a monitor will understand. Alltech
Electronics sell adapters for analogue and digital displays, I
understand.
Phil
**************************************************************
Phil Beesley -- Computer Officer -- Distributed Systems Suppport
University of Leicester
Tel (0)116 252-2231
E-Mail pb14(a)le.ac.uk
I went back to the Salvation Army store where I picked up the Wang PC last
week, and was shocked to find that ALL of the computer junk had been
replaced by shelves full of lamp shades!
I am NOT joking, they actually had shelves full of lamp shades where only
one week earlier they had too much cool old electronic junk for me to
carry, or even to look at properly. I was really happy a couple of months
ago when the place 'reawakened' and started filling up with interesting
stuff again. But now I know that the SOURCE of the computer stuff has
probably always been there, it's just that the Salvation Army store has
been keeping it from me!
I asked the employees what had happened to all that 'old computer junk',
and was told that it had all been THROWN OUT LAST WEEK. :( I was assured
that it was already gone, not just sitting in a dumpster outside.
I now feel really badly that I didn't go back on Friday morning to
rescue that IBM-PC that was full of cards, that Tandy 1000TX, those
magnetic strip card readers, the VIC 1541, and that cool-looking grey
and rounded Olivetti screen.
In my defense all I can say is that I assumed I'd have another chance at
them this week, and that I expected the biggest threat to be someone else
buying them before I got back.
But my competition is my friend, not my enemy. Unfortunately, my
competition seems only to be interested in the VIC-20s, Commodore 64s,
Atari 800s, and Apple //s, which all tended to disappear from the shelves
fairly quickly.
Now I'm hoping someone else DID pick up some of that stuff before it was
thrown in the dumpster.
I guess that Wang came to within two days of the end of its electronic
life, and I am grateful that at least I was able to rescue it. But I
would have liked to have had a good look at all of the monitors and
terminals before they were turfed, because the one that was used with the
Wang may have been among them.
I'm feeling really depressed about this.
And one thing that pisses me off is that they've still got a large shelf
full of speakers, turntables, 8-track decks, old stereos etc. Why the
hell would they keep that stuff, but toss the computers? There's a
funky-looking 8-track + stereo receiver thing that has been in the store
for YEARS, yet they won't hold onto old computers for more than a couple
of months before the whole lot gets tossed into the trash?
Well DAMN THEM TO HELL, and damn ME for not being more vigilant.
I went back for the PC yesterday, despite the fact that I hadn't had ANY
sleep the night before, and the fact that I'd have to carry it with me to
work and then to class afterward. I thought I was going a little crazy
for even considering it (I'm built like Stick Man), but now I wish I had
attempted to rescue MORE stuff last week.
Dammit, I wish I had dragged ALL the stuff I wanted to the desk and paid
for it, and had them sit it in a back room until I could come back for it.
Dammit, I wish there had been some sort of warning.
Anyway, the total lack of anything interesting on the junk shelves did get
me to look through the books. And I did find a few interesting things
there (but nothing that'll make me any happier about those trashed
computers).
I guess I'm going to have to find out where those trashed computers GO.
Anyway, the books I picked up were:
Programmer's Guide to GEM (Balma & Filter, SYBEX 1986)
Programming in Assembly Language: MACRO-11 (Edward F. Sowell,
Addison-Wesley 1984)
PC to VAX: A Communications Guide (Sandler & Badgett, Scott, Foresman and
Company, 1990)
Getting Started With Color BASIC (1981 Tandy Corporation)
I think I may have to have a garage sale to sell some of the non-computer
books I have, so that I can do something better with the computer books I
keep buying than stacking them on the floor.
Doug Spence
ds_spenc(a)alcor.concordia.ca
http://alcor.concordia.ca/~ds_spenc/
> From: Tom Owad <tomowad(a)earthlink.net>
> Subject: Re: old AOL disks
>
> .... (Bill von Meister had been one
> >of the founders of The Source which was bought by
> >Readers Digest)
>
> What ever happened to The Source? When did they shut down and why?
I think they were bought out by Compuserve (or possibly America On-Line). And
they were shut down in favor of their new owner's already existing services.
>
>
> Video game crash of '83? Would you please explain?
In the early 80s there was a home video game boom started by the home game
PONG and all it's clones then Atari produced one of the first popular
cartridge programmable games, the 2600. Not soon after that there were
probably a dozen competitors including Matell (Intellivisaion), Magnavox
(Oddesy), Balley (Astrocade), etc. By about 1983 there was a major glut of
game machines and cartridges, too many to support the market...
Then the bottom fell out around 1983 with the avent of cheaper home computers
with just as good (if not better) game playing ability, which started
capturing the attenetion of the masses and the gamers stopped buying video
games in favor of computers, many of the game companies were hit REALLY hard
and some folded. Of course this was the start of the home computer wars. :)
Some were able to 're-tool' for home computer games and did quite well.
I still miss the old Electronic Games Magazine that folded in around 1984 or
so... One of the few magazines that did good reviews on the home and arcade
game machines.
--
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
Larry Anderson - Sysop of Silicon Realms BBS (300-2400bd) (209) 754-1363
Visit my Commodore 8-Bit web page at:
http://www.goldrush.com/~foxnhare/commodore.html
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
Well I had been holding some older terminals for a guy that I'd already
shipped some things to in the past to find that he's going to have to
move and the items I had on hold won't be going to him after all. They
all work and look good and they're going for FREE but you get to pay
shipping, advance.
I have the following (again)
Visual 102 with keyboard
DEC VT 220, no keyboard
DEC VT 1xx (I have to check to see if it's a 100 or 131), no keyboard
I need to hear from someone and get a firm answer by Friday July 5th or
they go the way of the dead TV - to the dump.
I also have one last HP 700/44 terminal with keyboard/cable like new and
very functional, amber screen, current loop and serial connections,
emaulates a few terminal types that I would like $15 plus shipping for.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Russ Blakeman
RB Custom Services / Rt. 1 Box 62E / Harned, KY USA 40144
Phone: (502) 756-1749 Data/Fax:(502) 756-6991
Email: rhblake(a)bbtel.com or rhblake(a)bigfoot.com
Website: http://members.tripod.com/~RHBLAKE/
ICQ UIN #1714857
AOL Instant Messenger "RHBLAKEMAN"
* Parts/Service/Upgrades and more for MOST Computers*
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, I am letting three Compaq deskpros rot in the rain outside-
I just have nothing for them to do. I'm sure they still work.
Anyone know what compaq made that godforsaken power interface for?
>Saved a Compaq Portable(w/5.25" FD and unknown 5.25" FH HD) from a
>dumpster... AFTER a 10 foot flight into it! Plugged it in and it still
>works... Needs some repairs, I can hear stuff rattling around inside,
but
>it does work... Booted from the hard drive with Compaq DOS 3.31. Also
got a
>MasterSport 386SL(386SX-20, 4MB RAM, 63MB HD) and a 486
motherboard(gonna
>set it up with Linux or something). Also getting a 1970 VW Bug for my
>birthday next week... I suppose this makes it a good day despite the
belt
>clip on my radio breaking this morning(now I get to make a nice metal
one
>to replace the broken plastic one).
>
>--------------------------------------------------------------
>| http://members.tripod.com/~jrollins/index.html - Computers |
>| http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Lair/1681/ - Star Trek |
>| Orham(a)qth.net list admin KD7BCY |
>--------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
I know this is less than 10 yrs. old, but somone offered OS/2 warp
here and I forget who it was. I'll take if it's not too expensive.
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
This is not sure-fire, but I've found that if the big label on the back does
NOT have the notice "contains copyrighted code..." that it's most likely an
original version.
Kai
-----Original Message-----
From: Doug Spence [mailto:ds_spenc@alcor.concordia.ca]
Sent: Friday, June 26, 1998 2:01 AM
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
Subject: Way to identify original IBM-PC?
Hi,
I was wondering if there's a surefire way of telling if an IBM-PC has its
original motherboard, without opening the case. I saw one at the
Salvation Army today and was considering dragging it home (though I
decided to take another machine instead).
The machine did have a cassette port in the back, with a femal DIN
connector. Is this attached to the motherboard?
The machine also had a full complement of cards in its slots, with lots of
ports coming out of it. And a 3.5" drive that was poorly fitted into the
case.
I'm wondering if I should make a trip downtown sometime this weekend, with
the car.
Doug Spence
ds_spenc(a)alcor.concordia.ca
http://alcor.concordia.ca/~ds_spenc/
At 02:51 AM 6/20/98 -0500, you wrote:
>> For Sale:
>>
>> IMSAI 8080 Microcomputer
>[...]
>> Asking price: $300
>
>After a round of email bidding, the seller sez:
>> IT SOLD FOR $1000. THAMKS FOR THE RESPONSE.
>
>Somebody recently suggested that it would be better to offer stuff
>directly to readers of this list rather than advertising them via online
>auction. The last IMSAI that sold on eBay went for around $650, I think.
>
>FWIW,
>Doug (still IMSAI-less)
Well... while it may not improve the price, it may improve the audience...
B^}
While trying to NOT reignite another flame war (which I probably contribute
to), the qualifier on this idea might be that when you post something, post
it with an acceptable price. IMHO that should not be a difficult
proposition for someone who is looking for a good home for a piece of
equipment. If you are just going to relocate an auction, then you are
probably only in it for the money! (boy, am I gonna get yelled at for THAT
one)
What really scrapes my oxide is an approach that I am starting to see more
often in postings in and newsgroups. (it has happened to me twice now in
the last month)
Someone posts an item with an asking price. I respond to the message with
a counter offer. The seller responds with a counter-counter offer that I
find acceptable. I respond to the message with my acceptance and provide
shipping details. The seller then responded back indicating that he has
received a higher offer and that the unit has been sold without so much as
an opportunity for further response.
Now, maybe it is just me... But from my view when responded with a counter
to my offer, we were in the midst of transacting a deal and I should have
'right of first refusal' until the point that either we make the deal or I
decide I don't want it.
I don't appreciate multi-thread dealing going on without being informed.
And it was not like there were any extended delays between these messages.
The entire series of exchanges occurred over less than 24 hours. Very
similar for the second occurrance I mentioned above...
BTW: a HERO-2000 auction just closed on eBay for $4027.78... (sheesh!)
-jim (the obviously overly idealistic one...)
---
jimw(a)agora.rdrop.com
The Computer Garage - http://www.rdrop.com/~jimw
Computer Garage Fax - (503) 646-0174
>>> Hint: Windows98 is Windows95 with the '5' replaced with an '8'.
>> It should be only a minor correction - just adding a 2^1 bit to
>> get Win97, but due a litte mathematical problem they realy inverted
>> the lower nibble before inverting the 2^1 .... :)
> Am I missing something?
Ya
> 95 = 1011111
> 98 = 1100010
95 = 00111001 00110101 (ASCII) or 10010101 (BCD)
98 = 00111001 00111000 (ASCII)or 10011000 (BCD)
Or do you realy belive they have changed any code beside this byte ?
>> The rest is history:)
Gruss
H.
--
Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
HRK
Hi
Yes a reality, and a nic name I got from some friends.
I don't remember the key stroke to open a new file or to save to disk, but
it had some thing to do whith function key 3 or 4 I think remember it's been
a while, after the function key a letter I am not sure whitch letter opened
a new fiel whith a prompt for a file name: you typed in the file name
pressed enter and you wore in the word prosessor, and could type what ever
in.
I used it mostly to write messages on from calls ect, I would leave it on
all day, and get some help later on some one would read it back to me so I
could braille it out.
The drive was ten MB and had Wang dos on it and the word prosser was also
on it.
The monotor was a Wang monotor, I don't know if they are still available.
This Wang I had was baught at a flee market, a fellow had 20 or 30 of them
he was selling complete for $25 about ten years ago.
A friend saw it and snagged one for me he knew I was interested in
computers, and thought it would make a interesting birthday present for me.
I sold it eventually because I couldn't het a sinthasiser that would work
in the card slots, they worent ISA or any thing like that, not sure what
they wore.
Pete
Net-Tamer V 1.11 - Registered
Hi Ethan and all,
At 01:44 AM 7/3/98 -0400, you wrote:
>Yo,
>
> Z80 Starter Kit
> SDS SD Systems
> (C) 1978 MICRO DESIGN CONCEPTS
>
>It packs a Z80 w/PIO and CTC, 8 socketed 2101L RAMs (and room for 8 more!),
>a prototyping area (with labeled address and data bits right there), and two
>(unpopulated) S-100 slots (with pads for -/+16V and +8V) In addition, there's
>jacks for a cassette tape drive (and buttons labelled "cass load" and "cass
>dump"), and below the ROM socket (w/masked programmed ROM "Z-BUG"), a toggle
>switch ("PGM"/"READ") and a 24-pin DIP socket marked "PRO PROGRAMMER".
>
>With all that, I still have questions:
>
> o Is there any info on this? It looks much like a SYM-1 or Elf
> of the day, but with a Z-80.
>
> o What ROMs might it program? 1702? (unlikely because of a lack of
> odd power supply voltages) 2708? There is a pad at one edge of
> the board that snakes over to the PGM/READ button, marked +25V.
> I simply do not know which particular 1978 ROMs used that particular
> programming voltage.
>
> o Why might I have heard of "Z-BUG"? Was it a famous monitor program
> for the Z-80 boards of the late 70's?
>
> o If I can't find a good use for this, does anyone want to make me
> an offer for it? I promise that I won't just go out and post it
> on E-overpay.
>
>Thanks for any hints. I'd love to learn more about the history of this
>thing. I just got it because it was a) affordable, b) a 1970's SBC, and
>c) it has a place to add cards and my own circuits, should I decide that's
>worth the effort. I could always wire on a 6164 RAM and a SCSI chip, but
>then what would I do?
>
>-ethan
>
If you don't find a use for it, I'd be interested. I remember some ads from
SD Sales in old issues of BYTES's, but the single board Z-80 computer didn't
have any S-100 connectors, etc, IIRC.
I enjoy and would like to
a) figure out the monitor code
b) find out what EPROM it would program. If the circuit is simple, it
probably is for a 2716. What size EPROM is the "Z-BUG" in?
c) Find out if it can use or test various S-100 boards, depending on what
signals are provided. Would be an upgrade for my simple S-100 tester.
Thanks,
-Dave
Hello,
At 03:09 PM 7/2/98 -0400, you wrote:
>Howdy, all,
>
>I'm in sunny Glendale for the weekend, staying with a friend, and would love
>to take the opportunity to scour the area for goodies. Any suggestions? I'd
>rather take a planned approach than wander around the valley, looking for
>Goodwills. I realize that the Bay Areais better pickings than Los Angeles,
>but here is where I am.
>
There is C and H on Cororado Blvd. in Pasadena, but don't know if they have
anything. There is also ECSC in Gardena, if you want to go that far. Their
web site is www.eio.com
The best bets seem to be the Ham radio swap meets, (not the commercial
computer shows). The only one I know of on July 4 is in Santee, near San
Diego. I enjoy the TRW meet the last Saturday of every month. I don't know
if there are any gemeral or antique swap meets this weekend. Once per month
there is one in the Rose Bowl.
Wish I knew other places.
I plan to visit the San Jose area in a few weeks, are there any suggestions
for looking there? I know of Haltek in Mountain View and Halted + Weird
Stuff in Santa Clara.
-Dave
> Subject: NEW 8" Disks Available for sale
> To: classicmp(a)u.washington.edu
> Date: Thu, 2 Jul 1998 21:49:02 -0700 (PDT)
> X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.5 PL0b2]
> MIME-Version: 1.0
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
> Greetings, I have been watching the traffic about 8" disks while recovering
> from an ugly bit of doctoring, (2 months plus under care..sigh) and being
> without insurance, I feel its time to sell some stuff...
>
> I have NEW 8" disks still in the original Boxes Both Single and Double
> sided.
> Either Memorex for the Single or Intel Brand (at least its their Label) for
> the Double sided. I was going to put them on the Auction net but wanted to
> give the list a shot first.
>
> Figure $5 a box and we will negotiate on the shipping.
> Its the original Hard Cardbox for the disks so there is a little weight
> there.
>
> I have also 3 different of DYSAN alignment disks, but let me get to the
> storage unit to be precise on the descriptions.
>
> Like I say at the swap meets, the more you buy the cheaper they get. and if
> you do not like my prices tell me I will change them.
>
> I got a LOT of Disks,,gotta pay for the storage unit and I been off work for
> 2 months...
> Let me know..
>
> thanks
>
> Bill
> shipping from Portland, or
>
> --VAA20658.899441345/smtp2.teleport.com--
>
Hi Doug,
why that? It is at least a nice X-terminal ....
cheers,
emanuel
----------
> From: Doug Yowza <yowza(a)yowza.com>
> To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
> Subject: Re: DECStation 3100 available
> Date: Thursday, July 02, 1998 6:25 PM
>
> On Thu, 2 Jul 1998, emanuel stiebler wrote:
>
> > THIS IS A VAXSTATION, NOT A DECSTATION.
>
> If anybody was disappointed, and really wants a DECStation 3100
> (MIPS-based unix box), I've got one that is free as long as you pick it
up
> from Santa Clara, Ca.
>
> -- Doug
> Didn't AOL get its start by being bundled with PC-GEOS?
>Before it was known as Applelink it was called "Samuel" and worked with
>the apple ][ as well.
>Q-Link or Quantum link came first for the C64 and then was expanded
>to include the Apple II.
Once upon a time in the early 80's a man named
Bill von Meister started a company called Control
Video Corporation. (Bill von Meister had been one
of the founders of The Source which was bought by
Readers Digest) CVC started a service for Atari
2600 users called GameLine. Users would plug a
large modem cartridge into their 2600 and could
download a game and play it until they turned
their 2600 off. This service was kill by the Video
game crash of '83.
Next they developed proprietary modems for the
C64 and the Apple II and started a service called
MasterLine. Same thing, you could download and
try software before buying it. This is when I
started with CVC (about the end of 1983 I think)
MasterLine lasted 3 months.
Next they acquired the software from a small
on-line service called Playnet and in 6 months
launched QuantumLink (Q-Link for short). At
some point in here they also changed their
name to Quantum Computer Services. Q-Link was
a C64 only service.
About 1987 they started AppleLink: Personal
Edition (not to be confused with Apple's tech
support service AppleLink) for Apple II, and
IIgs. And about the same time they also started
PCLink running under Tandy's DeskMate GUI.
This is also the point where I left the company
and moved to California. In California I ported
Q-Link's Rabbit Jack's Casino Games to run on
AppleLink but other than that I lost track of
the company. I believe they changed their name
and the service's name to America On Line in 1989.
=========================================
Doug Coward dcoward(a)pressstart.com
Senior Software Engineer
Press Start Inc.
Sunnyvale,CA
Curator
Museum of Personal Computing Machinery
http://www.best.com/~dcoward/museum
=========================================
> Once upon a time in the early 80's a man named
>Bill von Meister started a company called Control
>Video Corporation. (Bill von Meister had been one
>of the founders of The Source which was bought by
>Readers Digest)
What ever happened to The Source? When did they shut down and why?
> CVC started a service for Atari
>2600 users called GameLine. Users would plug a
>large modem cartridge into their 2600 and could
>download a game and play it until they turned
>their 2600 off. This service was kill by the Video
>game crash of '83.
Video game crash of '83? Would you please explain?
Thanks,
Tom
--
Sysop of Caesarville Online
Client software at: <http://home.earthlink.net/~tomowad/>
I have an unused and unregistered copy, complete, of Zenith Data
Systems/Heath Company's "Breakthrough Timeline" which appears to be a
timeline creator/project manager. It has the original box, manuals, key
template, registration certificate and the original 5.25" 360k floppies
(still in the envelope). From scanning the manual it's roughly 1986/87
vintage and should run on most any machine from 8086/8088 up through our
present array of hardware.
Really good condition visually too, might be good as part of a
collection.
Need $12 for it which includes mailing in the 48 CONUS states. First
come, first serve. Email me direct for info.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Russ Blakeman
RB Custom Services / Rt. 1 Box 62E / Harned, KY USA 40144
Phone: (502) 756-1749 Data/Fax:(502) 756-6991
Email: rhblake(a)bbtel.com or rhblake(a)bigfoot.com
Website: http://members.tripod.com/~RHBLAKE/
ICQ UIN #1714857
AOL Instant Messenger "RHBLAKEMAN"
* Parts/Service/Upgrades and more for MOST Computers*
--------------------------------------------------------------------
I hope the list will take this while I'm unsubscribed...
This fellow wants to sell a DECStation 3100. If interested, please
contact him directly.
Have a great holiday! Attachment follows.
-=-=- <snip> -=-=-
On Thu, 02 Jul 1998 10:19:53 -0400, in comp.sys.dec you wrote:
>>From: "a.banerjee" <a.banerjee(a)larc.nasa.gov>
>>Newsgroups: comp.sys.dec
>>Subject: FS or trade: Digital Vaxstation 3100
>>Date: Thu, 02 Jul 1998 10:19:53 -0400
>>Organization: NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, USA
>>Lines: 10
>>Message-ID: <359B9709.99D5E77F(a)larc.nasa.gov>
>>Reply-To: a.banerjee(a)larc.nasa.gov
>>NNTP-Posting-Host: satest2.larc.nasa.gov
>>Mime-Version: 1.0
>>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>>X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.04 [en] (WinNT; I)
>>Path: blushng.jps.net!news.eli.net!news-out.internetmci.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!199.0.154.208!ais.net!NewsNG.Chicago.Qual.Net!jamie!Qual.Net!newsspool.doit.wisc.edu!night.primate.wisc.edu!reznor.larc.nasa.gov!not-for-mail
>>
>>not a dec person so any help identifying would be appreciated.
>>
>>digital vaxstation 3100 (no keyboard, mouse, disk or monitor)
>>back has model # vs42a-bc
>>
>>make an offer or trade.
>>
>>please reply to bigshoe(a)erols.com
>>thanks
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Bruce Lane, Sysop, The Dragon's Cave (Fido 1:343/272)
http://table.jps.net/~kyrrin -- also kyrrin [A-t] Jps {D=o=t} Net
Spam is bad. Spam is theft of service. Spam wastes resources. Don't spam, period.
I am a WASHINGTON STATE resident. Spam charged $500.00 per incident per Chapter 19 RCW.
I aquired HPscanjet 9190A.
I have the flatbed scanner and the cable but, I do not know if there is
an additional interface needed for PC or? use. the cable looks like
parallel printer cable. Any info may help.
Allison