At 09:22 AM 11/17/97 -0600, you wrote:
>> excellent PS/2 '87 era series that can be ripped apart with bare
>> hands except for motherboard and PSU screws.
>
>FWIW, my absolute favorite box of all time is the VAXstation 4000/60 or /96;
>you can get everything out of the box quickly with no tools. In contrast,
>it's only been in the last few years that I've gotten coordinated enough to
>keep from mutilating my knuckles every time I go into a VAXstation 2000...
I dunno if it's my favorite, but I do like the Mac IIci (intro'd in '89 --
almost 10 years) beacuse it too comes apart with no tools (mostly.)
My first computer, the Atari 600XL was great because the cartridge slot was
in exactly the right position to use it as a handle.
The one downside of the m100 is it had no handle, nor did it's little
slipcover. (And the RS blue case was too expensive -- then; I've got one
now.)
Any other thoughts on case designs? I still think the Lisa was beautiful,
and I'll have to check out the 3b1.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
<Take that 800 mA pulse, and multiply it by the length of all the wires
<hooked to each drive line. What you end up with is a rather good radiator
<of high-frequency hash! Many machines housed the entire core assembly,
<including drivers, in a different box than the CPU for this reason.
<PDP-8/E's and -8/F's, where the memory does sit in the CPU box, have a
<special shielding card that segregates the memory from the rest of cards
<to keep this hash out of the CPU circuitry.
also to keep out of local TVs. Some of the core systems were boxed to keep
a constant temperature as ferrites are temerature sensitive.
Allison
<800mA to switch! Ouch! No wonder the PSU was so bulky.
Actually its 800ma per bit, the half select lines were some 400ma each
plus sense inhibit signals. A large memory could easily be in the several
tens of amps with all the surrounding logic. Typical power systems for code
machines were very robust and heavy.
<Truth. Trying to time right time to catch the bounce back and avoid
<the read pulse that is there on the sense wire. Yeah, it's read in
<serially fashion because that one wire is strung back and forth
<through all cores just once. You have to fashion the circuit to
<retore the orignal bits because the read process destroys the data.
Sensing the read data is fairly easy as it will occur in a fixed point
(all other things being constant) in time after the coincident
select pulse. Coincident selection takes half the total current needed
to switch the magnetic state of the core and divides it between two wires
of the matrix where the two coincide is the selected core and the resulting
magnetic field causes it to switch state. Writing is a matter of causing
it to switch to the reverse state.
ONE core in a larger array. Typical arrays are 16x16 or 64x64. A memory
typically would contain many arrays organized as 4096 by 12 or 4096 by 16
or wider and possibly larger. One such machine the MIT/Lincoln TX2 had
a main memory of 65536 38 bit words (2.5megabits).
\ /---inhibit wire
\|/
-----+----X SELECT wire
/|\
/ | \-----sense wire
y
--SELECTwire
This is a single bit of a core plane, the + could be a doughnut of ferrite
that can be magnetized in either direction depending on direction of
current. The sense wire as that is a serpentine single wire that goes
through each core. It's routing is such that for half the plane its
sense is reverse to suppress induced noise from the select wires. Some
planes use a forth wire threaded in the same way as an inhibit. Inhibit
is so a one or zero representation can be forced. So we can select a core
and read it's results and the selection process is in effect and erasure
meaning we have to put back data. Reading is done by selecting a core
using the X and Y select lines with thenough current to make the core
magnetic filed to change if it was previosly different. This
change or lack there of induces a current in the sense wire that we
can detect. If there is no change in the magnetic field there will be a
small pulse if there is a change in the field there will be a bigger pulse.
Comparators are used to compare that pulse to a known reference and if big
enough sends a pulse on to a latch (flipflop) to save that. Writing is
like reading we select a core with the currents reversed to force the
magnetization the other way, if we do not want to write we also force
current through the inhibit wire so that it counters the magnetic field of
the selection and inhibits the reversal.
Before more detail is given it's sufficient to say that a core memory
system is actually a goodly portion of the then current computers timing
and cost. I have only glossed over the reson core works and the logic
to do so is fairly involved as it requires sequential activities to occur
precisely every time and at the correct time.
Yes, core is destructive read out and the data read out must be stored
written back. Most CPUs of the time would do a read/modify/write to
take advantage of that. Living exampes of that include PDP-1 through
PDP-11, TI990 and I believe NOVA.
There is a whole class of logic that uses cores to propagate logic pulses
and even perform logical operations on combinations of pulses. Cores have
inherant memory from teh magnetization. There was a few computers built
to exploit that and had few active devices(transistors or tubes). They
are faster than relays but slower than tube or later transistor cicuits.
Allison
A whole lot, and all of it for $20!
Any info on these appreciated.
So, how close am I to building a 780? :)
PDP-8
M8320 BUS LOADS
M8315 KK8-A OMNIBUS CPU, 8/E INSTRUCTION SET
M8317 OPTION BOARD #2, MEM EXT & TIMESHARE, BOOTSTRAP, PWR FAIL
START
SOME UNNUMBVERED VAX NETWORK BOARD, INTERFACED TO A APOLLO.
M7769 KFQSA. (A SCSI adpater?)
UNKNOWN:
M8013 RLV11 DISK CONTROL
X2 M8014 RLV11 BUS CONTROL
EMULEX SC03
EMULEX TC12
X2 EMULEX CS02
DLV11-J (I know what THIS is!)
M7138 QBUS TO LASER PRINTER DMA INTERFACE MODULE
VAX 780:
X3 M8210 32K X 72BIT MOS RAM [MS780]
M8212 MS780-A MDT MEMORY DATA
M8218 KA780, SBI LOW BITS INTERFACE
M8226-C KA780, DEP, CPU DATA PATH E
M8227 KA780, CPU DATA PATH D
M8228 KA780, CPU DATA PATH C
M8229 KA780, CPU DATA PATH A
m8230 KA780, CEH CONDITION CODES, EXCPETIONS, HI BITS
M8231 KA780, ICL, INTERRUPT CONTROL, LOW BITS
M8232 KA780, CLK, CPU CLOCK
M8233 KU780, WCS, WRITABLE CONTROL STORE
M8234 KA780-A, PCS, PROM CONTROL STORE
M8236 KA780, CIB, CPU CONSOLE INTERFACE
M8238 KU780-A, 2K WCS
X2 M8270 DW780-A USI, UNIBUS ADAPTER SBI INTERFACE
X2 M8271 DW780-A, UNIBUS ADAPTER CONTROL
M8272 DW780-A UNIBUS ADAPTER MAP & DATA PATH
X2 M8273 DW780-A, UNIBUS ADAPTER ADDR
m9040 11780, TRM SBI TERMINATOR
VAX ???
L0007 11/750 MBA MASSBUS ADAPTER
X8 L0200 4MB MOS ARRAY [MS86]
X3 L0222 (MTM) MEM ARRAY TERMINAL BOARD [KA86]
L0224 SBI/A-BUS TERMINATOR [KA86]
X2 L0104 SBI INTERFACE FOR CI PORT
L0100 CI LINK INTERFACE
L0101 IPB (CI CONTROL STORE + PKT BUFF)
L0201 CONSOLE CONTROL KA86]
L0204 MBOX DATA PATH [KA86]
L0206 IBOX DATA PATH [KA86]
X2 L0207 IBOX CONTROL A [KA86]
L0208 IBOX INST BUFF [KA86]
L0212 SBIA SBI INTERFACE [KA86]
X2 L0214 IBOX CONTROL B [KA86]
L0215 CSA CONTROL STORE ARRAY [KA86]
L9200 MEM LOAD FOR 8600
Whew!
<Are there any obvious choices of better cores for a simple homemade
<core plane? I might try playing with steel 0-80 (and smaller) nuts
Permalloy was a common one and the size was generally 50 mils or smaller.
TX2 used this with 80mil od and 50 mil ID, it switch time was 1uS and
required 800ma to switch and yeilded 100mv if it switched. There was
no data given if it didn't switch but I'd bet 20mv would be believable.
Cycle time for a memory with cores like that would be 3-5us. The TX2
ran them at 5uS.
Other materials can be used but a good sharp B-H curve is desired and
saturable ferrites were used for the smaller 30-40 mil cores. Saturable
ferrites are used in power conversion in current designs so they exist.
There is a relationship between core size, material and speed.
<this weekend, but I doubt they'll be particularly good - probably it'll
<take a rather sizable current*turns product to magnetize these.
Turns are 1, and the current from some of the older stuff was around
400-800ma and the smaller later stuff in the 100-200ma region.
<Assuming I do find a readily available material that works, would others
<be interested in a write-up about building your own core memory plane?
<I'm envisioning circuitry to allow one to toggle in bits to various
<locations and read them out again. The logic driving it is likely
<to be simple TTL (maybe some 74LS138's or 74154's for X-Y decoders)
<plus some analog electronics for the drivers and sense/inhibit
<circuitry. If I'm clever enough, it'll be be doable with readily
<available (i.e. Radio Shack) parts.
This would be interesting. Additionally if it could be applied to some
of the core planes out there with ??? characteristics and origins it may
help. there was an article written back in the late 70s in BYTE on using
CC core memories.
FYI the TX2 used 64x64(4kbit) core planes for main memory to make a larger
256x256x38 bit memory. The fast memory(registers) were 64x19bits using two
cores per bit (bigger signal less noise). the array was 8x8 using 128
cores.
A small 8x8 or 16x16 array would be trivial to wire and drive. It's the
timing for the read pulse and keeing noise out of things that is twitchy.
Allison
> From: Philip.Belben(a)powertech.co.uk
> Subject: Re[2]: Talk Of Building A Computer...
(Don't react until you read this first part through:)
You can of course never build a real classic computer, by definition its
not a real classic unless its really old and was built by people who
were, at the time, working with state of the art components and
techniques. Part of the attraction of the old machines is that they
subtly document the skills, preconceptions and ignorance of their
designers and the prevailing conventional wisdom. Another part of the
attraction is to have a piece of equipment that has been in existence
for so long and still works.
So the best you could ever do is come close. Any attempt will be a
compromise of some sort, so an interesting question is how close is
close enough? The closest I think is to attempt to exactly recreate a
particular early machine. Chris Burton is doing this with the Manchester
SSEM and Tony Sale with the Colossus, both with significant help from
other folks in the Computer Conservation Society. I've seen them in
progress, they are both fabulously, meticulously accurate (as far as I
can tell) and very nearly as much fun as if the original machines still
existed. And despite all the help they are largely one-man projects, or
could have been, which shows that its actually possible to consider
doing it "right" by yourself if you have the time. Sort of like building
a boat or an airplane. People can do that.
All this having been said, I'm sure you feel as I do that it would be
fun to build a machine in the classic style but an exact recreation is
too much. So how authentic do you have to be? My point is this -
*** Its up to you ***.
Since any such project is necessarily a compromise, the exact tradeoffs
are not really important. Your project should reflect what you want from
it, other people's opinion doesn't matter unless its a group effort.
Here are a some projects I personnally find interesting:
1. A small Williams-tube memory. Designed and built from scratch using
6SN7's and a common 5" oscilloscope CRT like maybe a 5GP1.
(Chris has beaten me to this but it doesn't matter - for that matter,
Williams beat us both; the fun part is doing it yourself.)
2. A complete 32-bit CPU and memory in the classic style, an accumulator
machine, built in just 4 parts: a FPGA, DRAM, EPROM and clock. This is
easily possible with existing technology. It would also have a 2.5" IDE
disk drive for mass storage and a small printer and keyboard for user
I/O. It would be fun to do and would demonstrate the incredible
miniaturization of electronics when compared with my room sized IBM
7094.
3. Emulators for all my old machines, and machines I wish I had. This is
the only project I've actually made any progress on.
So do what you find most compelling.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Here are some thoughts on the current proposal (building a machine in
the classic style of a tube machine but with discrete transistors to be
more practical), some of these reinforce comments others have already
made:
Your main problem is not the logic, it is the memory. There is no old
memory that is anywhere near as easy to use as, say, SRAM. Your major
choices are core, magnetic drum/disk, or delay line. Core is going to be
a lot of work. Drum or disk will require expertise in mechanical
fabrication but is pretty attractive otherwise. Acoustic delay line (the
only kind with reasonable capacity) may be best but will require some
research and experimentation. I would recommend magnetostrictive wire
acoustic delay line memory if you can figure out how to build it and
don't mind having a very small memory.
About the logic, while very early tube circuits were strange using
multiple grids, in most tube computer circuits the actual logic was done
with diodes. The tubes then invert and drive the next stage. Flip-flops
were used for temporary state storage and sometimes for registers. A
very common computer tube in the US was the 5965 dual triode. To see
some IBM 705 circuit drawings (all but the inverter, which apparently
wasn't used much in this machine but was used in others such as the 709)
look at http://www.teleport.com/~prp/collect/705dwg/
The diode/tube logic translates very nicely into common early transistor
circuits such as RTL, RCTL and DTL.
For a project like this I would recommend building a serial accumulator
machine, one which works on one bit at a time and has a single
architecturally visible register, like the PDP-8. It will have much less
logic than a parallel or multiple register machine and will be very
classic. A serial CPU will be a good match with serial memory such as
drum or delay line memory. A good, pretty clean example is the Royal
McBee LGP-30. Better is the SWAC which had a very good clean minimal
architecture but was parallel, a serial version would be pretty easy.
Note that small tube machines like the LGP-30 and Bendix G-15 have only
around 300 tubes.
To get an idea of how big it would be, the Packard Bell PB250 (see
http://www.teleport.com/~prp/collect/mini.html ) is just what I've been
talking about - serial, transistors (RCTL) and delay line memory. It
takes up half a 19" rack, same as a PDP-8 but I think the logic is
physically less dense. About a quarter of the volume is taken up by the
memory.
Paul
At 05:56 AM 11/21/97 +0000, you wrote:
>Okay.... possibly keyboard, but probably HDD. I tried my current keyboard...
>it's a Windows 95, and I still got that error.
Try <http://www.searchlight.com/$WEBMSG.Read.SLBBS-R.3631.read> -- it's a
listing of the various POST (Power-On Self Test) error codes. (Or, do a
search at AltaVista (<http://altavista.digital.com/>) on <"power on self
test" and error> (with quotes, no <>'s.))
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
> > You mean, there's still another educational institution that uses VAX
> > Notes as a major means of mass communication?
> >
> > What's your mailer?
>
> One thing, Notes is kind of internal "newsgroups" that you can
> subscribe while as authorized users logged on there.
I know all about it. I'm required to use it daily, both for work and for
class. I was just surprised to hear of a fellow Notes-user.
> The vax email
> program that you write and reply to is PMDF and has POP3 server as
> well.
We have no POP server here (or we do, but we have no dialup PPP service,
so it's useless unless you're connected to the network). We use Dreams as
an interface to PMDF, which has its nice features.
> Also it has newsgroups reader on there but it's too clumsy and
> hard to use.
SLRN can be compiled under VMS (at least, 0.9.0.0 could be). I find it a
lot easier to use than NEWSRDR.
--
Ben Coakley http://www.math.grin.edu/~coakley coakley(a)ac.grin.edu
Station Manager, KDIC 88.5 FM CBEL: Xavier OH
It is good to rock. It is very good to rock wearing a big ass pumpkin on your
head. It is very, very good if that pumpkin is on fire. --Jessica Stern
<> > You mean, there's still another educational institution that uses VAX
<> > Notes as a major means of mass communication?
<I know all about it. I'm required to use it daily, both for work and for
<class. I was just surprised to hear of a fellow Notes-user.
<
<> The vax email
I have VAXnotes up and running on my collection of vaxen here. Trying to
workup CMUip slip or slirp.
What I like about Vaxnotes was you coul have public conferences or private
authorized people only conferences.
Allison
Thus wrote: <Robert M. (Bob) Donan E-mail: donan(a)utk.edu
<The Tandy TRS80 Model III, as delivered, did not come with a green
<screen. Either the machine has been upgraded (requiring a different
<video board) or it is not a Model III. I may be able to help you either
<way as I have been repairing Radio Shack computers since 1979. You
<could help me answer your questions by answering the following
<questions:
There were at the time several companies offering replacement CRTs to go
>from white to Green or amber. they were same tube different phosphor with
no other alterations required.
H19s and a few other terminals/systems were modified that was as well.
Robert, Did you work for tandy? I was up in PA when the TRS80 hit.
Allison
IT runs again, boots RT-11. The decision to stop screwing with it came
when I realized I didn't have any 18b RAM boards, and RSTS won't run in
64KW of core. (128KB). So, I'll have to get something lighter for it to
run if it's to be timesharing. Or get RAM. I may do that today.
All the RAM I have is 22b boards from the '44. My next project will be to
get that running, then maybe the VAX 750.
I just got my XT working!!! (My first classic) Well... not really
working... I get a "601 Error", and then it says "Press F1 To Resume" I
remember a similiar error w/my current computer... I replaced the
keyboard when all was done. Just for a little interesting bit, the
manufacturer of the chip (I forget the term) on the keyboard is
Zilog.... same neon light style logo as way back when. Well anyway, I
would like to thank Max, who sent me the processor that got it working,
(Sorry, tried to e-mail him, and got an error) and I would like to know
if anyone can help w/ the 601 error.
Thanks,
Tim D. Hotze
The Tandy TRS80 Model III, as delivered, did not come with a green
screen. Either the machine has been upgraded (requiring a different
video board) or it is not a Model III. I may be able to help you either
way as I have been repairing Radio Shack computers since 1979. You
could help me answer your questions by answering the following
questions:
1. Does the computer have a silver or cream coloured cabinet? If the
cabinet is silver in coulur, it is a Model III cabinet and the innards
may have been renewed. As the Model III and Model IV (non-gate array)
use the same footprint for their internal circuit boards and drive
towers, they are easily interchanged.
2. If the cabinet is cream couloured it is most likely a Model IV
gate-array.
Robert M. (Bob) Donan E-mail: donan(a)utk.edu
Graduate Teaching Associate
Department of Human Resource Development
The University of Tennessee
310 Jessie Harris
Knoxville, TN 37996-1900
(423) 974-2574 Department.
(423) 579-2808 Residence
Well, I managed to trash my e-mail and lose everything in my inbox. (1000+
messages) So, if anyone wrote to me recently, please resend it. Sorry!
Further, I am getting rid of my CRL account, so if you have my e-mail
address as <sinasohn(a)crl.com>, please change it to either
<sinasohn(a)ricochet.net> or <roger(a)sinasohn.com>. Thanks!
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
roger(a)sinasohn.com that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
On Wed, 19 Nov 1997 06:42:28 GMT, Bill Richman inquired:
> [...] And does anyone have an Intecolor in their collection?
Yep. I've got an ISC 8001 with 24 kB of user memory, 48-line
option, dual 5 1/4" floppy drives, and ROM BASIC. It's a nice box.
______________________________________________________________________
| | |
| Carl Richard Friend (UNIX Sysadmin) | West Boylston |
| Minicomputer Collector / Enthusiast | Massachusetts, USA |
| mailto:carl.friend@stoneweb.com | |
| http://www.ultranet.com/~engelbrt/carl/museum/ | ICBM: N42:21 W71:46 |
|________________________________________________|_____________________|
I have an interestin quad-height board labelled Dilog CQ2010.
It has a 50-pin plug (Like a SCSI plug), and a few DIP switch blocks.
What is it? Anyone know?
Kevin McQuiggin wrote:
> Hi Tim:
>
> If you're going to try this, I'd suggest starting with something simple
> like an adder or a flip flop, or a register. You'd get an idea of what
> would be involved with a simple processor. But I think it would end up
> being pretty expensive.
[...]
Tim Hotze had written:
>Hello... some time ago, there was talk of building a computer, and now I
>think that I've got a (bad, possibly) idea. In the earlier half of this
>century, transistors weren't avaible... vaccum tubes... huge ones, but
>now, the transistor has made small ones possible. My point: If we were
>to take a tubed design, and re-build it with transistors, we could
>probably make it a decent size.
> So, what da ya think?
I think there is something even more fundamental here. Valves
(thermionic, in tubes) have quite different behaviour to trannies.
A JFET behaves fairly like a triode, but designs that use pentodes and
nonodes and things as multi-input gates are going to be very difficult
to translate.
Of course by the 1960s there were somve very nice valves around that
weren't available to the 1940s computer pioneers - the 7586 nuvistor
springs to mind: a very nice triode in a metal can about 1 inch tall
including pins, and less than half an inch in diameter. Can't remember
the spec, though. Such devices could make a valve machine quite a bit
smaller than Colossus, Eniac, Edsac, etc.
Or if you want to be way out, what about tubes with several valves in?
Things like double diode triodes are quite common, and someone even put
most of a radio set into one tube (passive components and all).
So how about making our own. A tube containing, say, a 4-bit D-type
latch? Make a few in that range and a valve computer becomes almost
manageable! Besides, the smaller it is, the faster you can make it...
Philip.
<The main memory of the DEUCE was built form mercury delay lines of 1024
<bits, and the 1024 bit shift register chip had just become available.
<The connection was obvious and we spent hours discussing the rebuilding
<a TTL version of DEUCE, for which he still had the logic diagrams. Alas
<the project was never completed but I have dreams of doing it one day.
With current parts the Turing machine could almost be practical/useful as
it would be easy to provide enough memory to simulate a very long tape
and enough speed to transverse it quickly.
It's been a long time since I've looked at that machine.
<Take the idea even further : the technology exists today to build most
<if not all first generations machines on a single chip. Indeed I wonder
<if an FPGA might not be able to be reconfigurable to build many of these
In most cases yes. Some are quite simple when reduced a logical
description. The PDP-8 has seen this treatment many times using the 6100.
6120 and even gate-arrays.
Allison
From: HOTZE <photze(a)batelco.com.bh>
<Hello... some time ago, there was talk of building a computer, and now I
<think that I've got a (bad, possibly) idea. In the earlier half of this
Not a bad idea but, it appears you have no technical concept of the extent
of it.
<century, transistors weren't avaible... vaccum tubes... huge ones, but
<now, the transistor has made small ones possible. My point: If we were
<to take a tubed design, and re-build it with transistors, we could
<probably make it a decent size.
< So, what da ya think?
The operating characteristics of tube and transistors are far enough apart
that circuit techniques applied to one donot apply well to the other.
The redesign would not be tivial
For most of the tube designs drum memory and mercury filled acoustic delay
lines were memory. a few used williams tubes. You would find that
difficult to duplicate.
To further make a point most of the early transistor designs were
evlotionary results of tube designs.
One of the first transistor designs was TX1 and TX2(early 50s, MIT/lincoln
labs) and theywere not small. Later ones in the 60s were PDP-1, Perkin
Elmer, CDC, to name a few and these were large as large machines(fast, big)
were the goal. The first small machines were the LINC and PDP-8.
Figure 5-10 thousand transistors and thousands of diodes, resistors,
capacitors. A foot print for a typical transistor -8 is aroung 20 square
feet plus access space.
The closest you could come and expect to complete on a singular basis would
be a to copy the archectecture of an older machine using ICs. It wouldn't
be the real thing, original peripherals would be hard to come by and there
may be a base of software if you elect to copy something like a PDP-8.
I'd do it as an engineering exercise and beacuse I happen to like certain
old archetectures. The result would not be a classic by any means.
Allison
From: Philip.Belben(a)powertech.co.uk
<So how about making our own. A tube containing, say, a 4-bit D-type
<latch? Make a few in that range and a valve computer becomes almost
<manageable! Besides, the smaller it is, the faster you can make it...
A four bit latch using valves would require not less than 8 triodes plus
buffers. Very hard to do in one envelope...
Also tubes had some characteristics that made it very hard to design fast
enough logic that distance(size) was a factor.
I have a few 7586 and 6ds4/6cw4 nuvistors and they are 0.8" tall and 0.45
dia and make really good rf amplifiers but slow switches.
Allison
<If you're going to try this, I'd suggest starting with something simple
<like an adder or a flip flop, or a register. You'd get an idea of what
<would be involved with a simple processor. But I think it would end up
<being pretty expensive.
I have some partial designs for transistor hardware. A flipflop design
used for the TX2 required 10 transistors, 22 resistors, 8 capacitors, two
inductors and three operating voltages. A register 8 bits wide would require
8 of these plus gating logic possibly doubling the number of components
needed. You can now see why early machines were register sparse.
FYI I have an article for a TIC-TAC-TOE computer using tubes and Neon lamps
and it required some nine 2d21 thyratron tubes and 190 neon lamps(serve as
gate logic mostly and two per box for display). This is a very limited
fixed logic machine and it required a lot.
Allison
HI, I'VE GOT A KAYPRO 10 AND IT'S BEEN A MILD CHALLENGE TO ENDEVOR TO
OPERATE.IF YOU COULD PART WITH THE OPERATING MANUALS I'D BE
BLESSED.THANKS BERNIE
There's a few slots up by the CPU labled MUD. I think I know what it
means. But I want to make sure. Does it mean Modified Unibus Device?
And does that mean DMA slot? And does that mean all the screwing with the
backplane I did was unneccesary?
HEATH Computer Enthusiasts:
In September I picked up a Western Union Telegraph Company Model 102
Teleprinter for our museum. It and a complete Heathkit Computer system
were the belongings of Charlie Eheman,K6ESN "K6 Every Saturday Night" of
San Diego. Charlie was a WWII Navy Chief Radioman; he passed away on August
20, 1997. His brother, Ed Eheman of Texas was in San Diego cleaning out
Charlies house.
I am looking for someone to actually put the Heathkit system to GOOD use;
in its day it was the "cat's meow." It is all in good shape with EXTENSIVE
documentation.
H9 Video display terminal
H10 Paper tape reader and perforator
H11 Digital computer (a DEC PDP11)
H14 Dot matrix printer
H19 Video display terminal
H27 Dual 8" Floppy Drive
Complete with cables and all manuals, builders notes, including the
programming courses, paper tape, 8" floppy disks, etc.
Don Robert House, N.S.E. NO JOB IS SO IMPORTANT
NADCOMM AND NO SERVICE IS SO URGENT-
3841 Reche Road THAT WE CANNOT TAKE TIME
Fallbrook, CA 92028-3810 TO PERFORM OUR WORK SAFELY.
e-mail: dhouse(a)abac.com BELL SYSTEM
http://www.hem.com/nadcomm
760-723-9959 Telephone
760-781-5161 Facsimile
ok, now that everyone's finished hashing out the 10 year rule...
I was going through some of my old junk and discovered the above mentioned
card. I need the utilities disk; i think it was called superpak or something
like that which had the clock driver, print spooler, and ramdisk setup. I
also have a copy of the super pak utilies disk user's guide if anyone wants
it. it's the first edition, as i am keeping the second edition that i also
got.
david
I would like a list of the items jrkeys(a)concentric.net
At 08:45 AM 11/19/97 +0000, you wrote:
>Found on comp.sys.tandy
>
> Greetings:
>
> I have acquired a pile of boxes from an estate sale. Numerous old
> computer pieces-parts that I thought might be of some value, but I
> don't know where to 'advertise' them -- and now they must go.
>
> Included are
> computers - TI & Radio Shack, some in perfect condition -- one is
> in a heavy steel case, RS keybd, could be home brew from misc
> parts but I can't tell, could it possibly be a stock TRS 80?
> software - cartridges & 5 1/4 floppies
> printers - are ribbons & print heads still available?
> ref books - old, specialized, probably junk
> monitors - USI, PI2, mono, unfamiliar connectors
> {also 2 non-computer antiques: 1) an old Associated Press
> linotype machine, with ribbons, very heavy. 2) 3M copier.}
> chips - small, many, stored in plastic tubes
> LNW Research products - look like large keybds but may be
> more than that -- one box is different as follows
>
> You should see this manual, it is beautiful. Yes, Virginia, there is
> such a thing as an Antique Computer. Wish it had a date in it; ref is
> made to a CA sales tax of 6%. "System Expansion for the TRS-80 [pc
> board & user manual] w/ serial RS232C / 20mA I/O
> floppy controller
> 32K bytes memory" (awesome)
> etc....
> Found a date. Guess! Answer to follow at signature.
>
> So please, somebody, send me a clue, what can I do.
> Anyone know an address where I can list these? Are old puters
> so plentiful as to not have any value as collector's items?
>
> Thanks much.
>
> ---mikey
>
> DON'T PEEK THE1ANSWER9IS8DON'T1PEEK
>
>
>
>Found on comp.sys.ti
>
>I have a couple TI99/4As, an expansion box with a disk drive and other
>stuff (very heavy), another disk drive, and some carts that a coworker
>was going to throw away. I live in Gilroy, CA and work in San Jose,
>CA. Anyone interested?
>
>Bostone1
>
>Bostone1(a)aol.com
>
>
<Speaking of Alpha's, is there any chance that I can put my own together? A
<agree... it's just plain stupid, and I hate Intel anyway... kind of like in
Sure, you can buy them used for prices that aren't all that expensive
compared to late model 486 or early p5s. The older ones are now some 4-5
years old. The OS for it will cost you. You have three choices that I
know of, OpenVMS (my favorite), Digital Unix, or NT. I don't know that
anyone has done a UNIX port outside of digital.
Allison
Hi all!
I?m afraid this computer is off-topic (dated 1988). Sorry.
An IBM 5363-I has recently been given to me, but I don?t know anything
at all about its internal architecture or capabilities. I only own the
Central Unit; no cables, no floppies, no tapes, no manuals, no
terminals.
* It has two 15-pin sub-d connectors in one expansion card. They seem to
be for attaching two serial terminals (syncronous? type 5250?)
* In another expansion board it has a 9-pin sub-d connector.
* There are too four twin-axial connectors.
Can anybody help me on this subject?
Thanks in advance.
--
Sergio Izquierdo Garcia
mailto:henrio@edu.tsai.es
At 08:45 AM 11/19/97 +0000, you wrote:
>Found on comp.sys.ti
>
>I have a couple TI99/4As, an expansion box with a disk drive and other
>stuff (very heavy), another disk drive, and some carts that a coworker
>was going to throw away. I live in Gilroy, CA and work in San Jose,
>CA. Anyone interested?
If only I had some way to get to the south bay on a weekday (or time on a
weekend)... Oh well, surely someone will save this...?
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
At 11:40 AM 11/19/97 -0600, you wrote:
>> >Heck, if I was in somebody else's house I'd probably have my trusty
>> >Leatherman with me.
> ^^^^^^^^^^
>Well, I know it's a LART of some kind... What's a leatherman exactly?
One of the Village People... 8^)
Sorry -- couldn't resist. (Saw them in concert a year or so ago.) Anyway,
a Leatherman is a multi-tool -- pliers with various blades, saws,
screwdrivers, etc that fold into the handle. Whole thing folds up into an
innocuos little rectangle. Kind of a modern-day swiss-army knife.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
> It's going as long as we have newbies comes in, even happens on other
> newsgroups and in our notes on vax at my college. Sheesh!
You mean, there's still another educational institution that uses VAX
Notes as a major means of mass communication?
What's your mailer?
--
Ben Coakley http://www.math.grin.edu/~coakley coakley(a)ac.grin.edu
Station Manager, KDIC 88.5 FM CBEL: Xavier OH
It is good to rock. It is very good to rock wearing a big ass pumpkin on your
head. It is very, very good if that pumpkin is on fire. --Jessica Stern
I'm quite happy with the ten-year-plus-flexibility definition,
as described by Bill Whitson. Remember the sign-on message from
when you first subscribed? (Maybe it changes from time to time?
I'll include the one I got at the end of this.)
He specifically states that the main intent of the ten-year limit
is to avoid "discussion of technical problems with the standard PCs
and Macs, other than the really old stuff". Perfect. No WinDoze
d00dz begging for warez, but talk about fixing up the older critters
is explicitly 100% in-bounds. By the "not-heavy-handed" clause,
talk about the unusual not-yet-ten-year-old machine is okay too.
Unless you are insisting on discussing current PCs and Macs, or
want to be more restrictive, there is nothing that needs adjusting.
(I personally wouldn't mind ruling out all PC/Mac talk, but that's
just me, and I wouldn't actively push for that.)
Can we please drop this now?
Bill.
] NAQ (Never Asked Questions) 0.1
]
] What is it?
]
] This list is for the discussion of Classic Computers -
] primarily for those people who collect and restore
] old machines. It is brand new - no subscribers yet
] so sign up. The collection and restoration of computers
] is becoming a big enough hobby that I felt a need for
] a place to talk about it.
]
] What is a classic computer?
]
] Well that's hard to say but since I created the list I'll
] do it anyway. A classic computer is a machine that has not
] been produced for 10 years or more. It's an arbitrary
] definition but at least uncomplicated.
]
] What are the guidelines?
]
] The list is designed for discussion of collecting, restoring,
] and maintaining old computers. I'm not going to be heavy
] handed with restricting discussion. I'd just like it to be
] clear that the list is not the proper place for discussion
] of technical problems with the standard PCs and Macs (other
] than the really old stuff). Anyone can lurk - if you're
] going to post, just use your own good judgement.
]
] This IS NOT and will NEVER BE a list for discussion of "which
] computer is best?" and anyone who posts the ubiquitous "why
] don't you just go buy a PC you moron" will be immediately
] unsubbed.
]
] Beyond this - have fun! That what keeps us going with these
] old machines.
Are there any archaeologists in the house? Not being one myself,
I wouldn't be too surprised if some archaeological treasures had
been lost forever in the process of some enthusiastic 18th-century
archaeologist applying 18th-century state-of-the-art technology
to the study of some artifact. Maybe some singular fossil got
dissolved in acid in an attempt to determine its chemical
composition, where we could now pop the thing under an electron
microscope and learn about its cell-structure. (Of course, maybe
our electron microscope would do some damage that would prevent
later generations from bringing that thing back to life! Who
knows?) Had that guy just left the thing alone a couple centuries
ago, we might now be able to extract much more knowledge from it.
And/or, if we leave it alone now, it might be much more valuable
after a couple more centuries.
So, which will be more valuable a couple centuries down the road,
another set of used floppies plus easily-readable copies of the
software that was on them, or decayed but pristine floppies? I
think I know which will be rarer. And maybe, just maybe they'll
be able to read them even after the oxide coating has become so
much dust. (Anyone care to speculate on the technology to do that?)
I have the impression that museums generally collect things with
the goal of having them available as needed to extract knowledge
>from them; scientists often take samples, even destructively when
the utility is great. Are we in this group yet? Is there really
any knowledge to be gained from these, that is otherwise unavailable?
If we are pretending to be museums, should we have the same goals?
Personally, I am not a museum; there are only a handful of systems
I am interested in, and I want to keep them running, and even make
new hardware/software for them. But I might think twice about that
if I got a never-used never-even-opened system dropped in my lap.
Maybe I'd contact a real museum.
Enough talk. Back to hacking.
Cheers,
Bill.
At 12:41 11/19/97 +0000, ARD wrote:
>> where I'm at someone's house for dinner, and they say "Oh, BTW, my
>> computer's not working," and I didn't bring a screwdriver and they don't
>> own a #2 Phillips.
>
>And just what are you going to do when you've pulled the cover? Unless
>it's just a board/cable that needs reseating you're going to need some
>test equipment, a soldering iron, etc., anyway. I have _never_ been anywhere
>with that sort of equipment and not had a screwdriver with me.
>
>Heck, if I was in somebody else's house I'd probably have my trusty
>Leatherman with me.
Certainly I take your point, but the context here is one of unrivaled
banality. Your "just a board/cable that needs reseating" covers about 90%
of the "emergencies" of this type that come anywhere near me. Both 5.25
floppies and MFM hard disks have connectors that loosen spontaneously. IDE
"controllers" pop out of their sockets, for some reason. And there was
always the lady who thought her computer "didn't work" because the
connector to the hard disk LED had popped off -- even though that was all
that was wrong.
__________________________________________
Kip Crosby engine(a)chac.org
http://www.chac.org/index.html
Computer History Association of California
At 12:50 AM 11/19/97 GMT, you wrote:
>successful. I agree with Jeff in that the thing that makes most of
>the systems "special" to me is the fact that not everybody could just
>go down to the local Best Buy/Circuit City/Sears store, buy one, plug
>it in, and use it. It took some determination, some ingenuity, and a
I bought my Atari 600XL from Sears, and I would have to say that not
everybody at the time could have put that to use.
btw, the HP3000 has been produced for, what, 20+ years continuously, and
some of the various models are extremely collectible.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
At 08:50 PM 11/17/97 -0800, you wrote:
>Personally I think some of the cooliest designs are the 68k based Atari's.
>The perfect example is my Atari TT030. Couple the case design with TOS,
I had forgotten about the TT... Definitely cool. Don't have one, though.
Didn't they open up pretty easily?
>the ROM based windowed OS, and you've got a cool design. The only down
>sides are TOS's single task nature, and the mouse again.
But multi-tasking is available as an add-on.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
At 03:51 PM 11/18/97 -0600, you wrote:
[much interesting introduction snipped]
>In another area of the JCM, I've begun to collect ancient ASCII art
>from the 60s and 70s: Einstein, Spock, Snoopy, etc. I've written a
>more, and I'd like to record personal anecdotes about the creation
>of these old artworks. I'd also like to get an actual print sample
Hi! An anecdote for you... When I was in high school, one of our little
gang of computer hoodlums managed to come up with an ascii printout of a
naked woman. During lunch, we hung it up behind the pull-down projector
screen. When classes resumed, we were (naturally) giggling like mad about
how witty and clever we were to have not only obtained this delectable bit
of naughtiness, but also at outsmarting the teacher.
Well, he (the teacher) figured out something was up, and inquired about it.
Somehow he learned of our devilry and went over to check it out. Well,
rather than tearing it down and punishing us, dirty old man that he was, he
promptly rolled the screen up and left it hanging there for all to see!
Ah, to be young again...
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
I'd like to introduce myself to the list.
I maintain the somewhat imaginary "Jefferson Computer Museum" at
<http://www.threedee.com/jcm>, which has info about my several
Terak systems. The Terak was a PDP-11/03-based graphics workstation
circa 1978-85. My "Terak Museum" web page is the proud recipient of
the "Geek Site of the Day" award for October 16, 1996.
I also have historical info about the UCSD P-System, including an
emulator, source code and very early Pascal compilers. In the months
to come, I will add info about other systems I have, including a
Zilog MCZ Z-80 development system, CBM PET and NEC systems.
I've also been given permission by Claus Giloi to distribute the
C source to his Windows-based Altair and IMSAI emulators. If you haven't
seen this, it's a nifty graphical recreation, letting you click on
the toggle switches to drive the emulator and watch the LEDs blink.
In the years to come, I'd like to enhance it to include virtual
peripherals, or with inexpensive recreations like an opto paper
tape reader.
Recently, I've been researching the possibility of reviving old
audio cassette tape storage of computer data. With today's PC
audio digitizers and a little software, it should be possible to
decode and synthesize tapes in formats such as Tarbell tapes for
S-100 systems, 88-ACR, Commodore PET, VIC and C-64, Bell 103
recordings, etc. A software approach would have several
advantages: you don't need the original hardware, and it has
a better chance of restoring out-of-spec data.
A little digging revealed the "soundmodem", a driver for Linux and DOS
that is a software-based FSK modem that can handle 300 to 9600 baud
in real-time using a SoundBlaster as the digitizer / DSP. It is
used by ham radio operators.
To experiment, I digitized an old wobbly CBM PET tape and did a bit of
post-processing in contemporary sound software and it normalized the
volume quite well. I suspect with commercial audio software, one
could even invoke filters to remove print-through.
At 22 or 44 kHz mono 8-bit samples, there's certainly enough
headroom to distinguish these relatively slow-speed signals. I'm
sure with some formats, just watching the zero-crossing timing would
work. I wonder if this technique could be used to rescue old N-track
reel tapes that have become unreadable over the years, by intercepting,
digitizing, and post-processing the tape-head signal.
What would help the most is to get specifications for the old
standards. I don't have any documentation, although I'm digging through
the basement to find my old Kilobauds. I sent an e-mail
to Don Tarbell, who is apparently still on the Internet, but
no response so far. It would also help to see more samples!
If you have any old cassettes, please consider digitizing them
and sending them to me.
In another area of the JCM, I've begun to collect ancient ASCII art
>from the 60s and 70s: Einstein, Spock, Snoopy, etc. I've written a
program that converts teletype-style overstrike art into Adobe Illustrator
documents, which are easy to re-size and print on today's laser printers.
I have dozens of pictures from DECUS tapes, but I'm always looking for
more, and I'd like to record personal anecdotes about the creation
of these old artworks. I'd also like to get an actual print sample
of the entire printable font from an ASR-33 teletype, in order to
scan and convert it into an authentic Postscript bitmap font.
- John
At 12:48 11/19/97 +0000, you wrote:
>The Rainbow, Pro series and DECmate 2 are very easy to pull to bits,
>agreed. I once dismantled one on a train, much to the amazement of the
>people sitting near me.
ROTFL! Only you, Tony, or at the very least, you first among equals.
____________________________________________________________
Kip Crosby, honcho, mechanic and sole proprietor, Kip's Garage
http://www.kipsgarage.com: rumors, tech tips and philosophy for the trenches
Coming Spring '98: The Windows 98 Bible by Kip Crosby and Fred Davis!
<They're still going. Their modern stuff is not _as good_, but it's still
<very well built. Oh, and the electronic design is up to the same high
<standards.
there is some truth and a fair amount of fiction. Some of the older
stuff was overbuilt and it cost. The Barco had everything out front
for a reason, when was the last time you have to converge a new monitor?
Some of the older stuff that was a fairly common adjustment. Alos how
much of the stuff made before say 1983/4 would pass FCC/DOC/TUV RF
radiation requiments.
Some of those new cases that come off easy are even RF tight, no small
trick. Years ago it was box in box construction to get that. Some things
in racks are still expensive as the racks and the system then support
collectively have to be RF tight without being airtight.
In addition you pay for weight, in shipping, cost of materials and
sometimes time to produce.
Now for a reality check. The last generation of transistor computers were
fairly small. PDP-8, PDP12 being examples. All that quality. Well one
of the itelms in that are a plastic/ceramic packaged transistor used in
heaping piles. Electrically a decent enough device for the time and cheap
too. One little problem, the transistor die is glued to a ceramic pad
then wire bonds from the leads to the die and a drop of epoxy to enclose
the component. Problem, epoxy is not hermetic and the bonds go from the
affixed die to lead posts via they epoxy and as things heat and cool
sometimes the forces are great enough to lift the lead right off the die.
The result is transistors that work when cool and quit when warm. Needless
to say that case design would disappear after a few years. Why use it to
build a computer? Well in the 60s it would take say 10,000 of them and
the same part in a metal case was several times the price as in $0.25 VS
more than $1.00. It was the best option at that time.
An aside for the crazies like me. If a straight-8 were built using modern
surface mount transistors and components to the same electronic printset
and current multilayer board and packaging techniques it would shrink by a
factor of 5-10 without resorting to ICs not available at that time. The
only challenge would be the core memory (the raw cores would be hard to
find and expensive to assemble). Electronic packaging and construction
has undergone considerable advancement and is more than wrapping metal or
plastic around it.
Some items like the cheap screws were also common with a few altair kits
when MITS was having trouble. Or some of the other near vapor machines.
I may add that I can buy a minitower box with PS these days for well under
$100 but at the time of the altair the RAW cabinate from the vendor like
that one was well over $100 and you still had to cut holes in it and fill
it. I may add the Altair (8800) box was actually pretty flimsy compared
to IMSAI or the later Horizon, Vector MX or CompuPro boxes.
Allison
<in, regardless of how long it was produced. Were the others you
<mentioned all produced for more than 2 years running? Sometimes I
All of them were over two years. How about PDP-11s manufactured for
over 25years and the older members are easily 20+ years old yet some
members of the line are near impossible to find. Like Ford falcons they
were cranked out but that doesn't mean they still abound.
<"Really" think that the only place you'd find more attitude than in
<this group would be in a flock of "Valley Girls".
It's New York Girl to you!
Bottom line, despite some peoples wishes the owner of the list has set the
standard and it's reasonable enough to work well. Leave it alone.
Allison
From: bill_r(a)inetnebr.com (Bill Richman)
<How about making the rule something to the effect of "Systems older
<than 20 years, or which were actively produced for less than _x_ (2?)
<years running" ? Too complicated? At least it would cover almost all
<of the "unique" machines. If they were made for more than 2 years,
Really. Lets see the LINC was over twenty years ago and made for more
than two years. There are very few of them. Back then (64-66ish) a
couple dozen were a lot of any machine! It would also eliminate the
Altair, Imsai, KIM-1, PDP-8 and a few others.
It doesn't work.
Allison
At 09:04 11/18/97 +0000, you wrote:
>I've never understood this love of screwdriver-less cases. If I'm going to
>be fixing a computer I'm going to have a soldering station, scope, logic
>analyser, cutters, etc with me. So having a screwdriver set is no big deal
>either.
Wellll....I wouldn't mind a fastener that gave me the choice, like some
kind of knurled goodie with a screwdriver slot. That would cover the case
where I'm at someone's house for dinner, and they say "Oh, BTW, my
computer's not working," and I didn't bring a screwdriver and they don't
own a #2 Phillips.
__________________________________________
Kip Crosby engine(a)chac.org
http://www.chac.org/index.html
Computer History Association of California
At 01:39 PM 11/16/97 -0500, you wrote:
>OK, I am probably going to get yelled at...
>
>> Okay.... recently, there's been lots of "off-topic" stuff going on here
>> about computers... but I think that it's not "off-topic."
>
>In my opinion it is. There are lots of good, smart people on this list
>that can help everyone with modern(ish) equipment, but there are also lots
>of them on other lists and USENET.
I agree. I even think that there are better sources of info on the
day-to-day operation of things like an Atari ST or Falcon (which I have)
than here. If you want to know how to copy disks under CP/M, you'll be
better off in comp.os.cpm. Which is not to say that such a question would
necessarily be unwelcome, just not as well answered. Better might be
"Where/who should I ask about formatting CP/M disks?"
Mind you, I've answered PC questions posed to a Land Rover list (and
suffered through discussions of florists in Oregon and which guitars are the
best (I like Fenders, if I could afford one) on the same list.)
>> if you remember, in the "welcome" message, it
>> said that it was hard to state the definiton of a classic... but 10
>> years or older would do.
Well, 10 years is kinda arbitrary (and probably rather recent at this
point.) Still, gotta do it somehow. My personal guideline is
non-mainstream stuff (non-pc and non-mac) unless it's something really weird
(like the Outbound laptop or the IBM PC Radio.) Still, that keeps it to
>10yrs for almost everything except the occasional oddity.
I wouldn't, fer instance, bother mentioning the Sharp PC-7100's or Compaq
lunchbox here, even though they're probably 10yrs+ (Sharps for sure.)
(Except, of course, as part of a larger discussion on the history of
portable computers.)
In any case, as with any such list, the decision and definition really
belongs only to the list owner (Bill Whitson in this case) no matter how
much he might solicit or be affected by input from list members. (And, of
course, we all have the option of setting up our own DOS-PC-Collectors or
whatever list if we want.)
Personally, I'm not all that into DEC stuff (though a PDP 11/70 was my first
and I thought it was great) so I wouldn't mind seeing less VAXstationery
this or DECwindowshades that messages, but I wouldn't think of suggesting
that others not post them. I just delete them (sometimes even without
reading them -- Sorry!)
--------------------------------------------------------------------- O-
Uncle Roger "There is pleasure pure in being mad
sinasohn(a)ricochet.net that none but madmen know."
Roger Louis Sinasohn & Associates
San Francisco, California http://www.crl.com/~sinasohn/
Found on comp.sys.tandy
Greetings:
I have acquired a pile of boxes from an estate sale. Numerous old
computer pieces-parts that I thought might be of some value, but I
don't know where to 'advertise' them -- and now they must go.
Included are
computers - TI & Radio Shack, some in perfect condition -- one is
in a heavy steel case, RS keybd, could be home brew from misc
parts but I can't tell, could it possibly be a stock TRS 80?
software - cartridges & 5 1/4 floppies
printers - are ribbons & print heads still available?
ref books - old, specialized, probably junk
monitors - USI, PI2, mono, unfamiliar connectors
{also 2 non-computer antiques: 1) an old Associated Press
linotype machine, with ribbons, very heavy. 2) 3M copier.}
chips - small, many, stored in plastic tubes
LNW Research products - look like large keybds but may be
more than that -- one box is different as follows
You should see this manual, it is beautiful. Yes, Virginia, there is
such a thing as an Antique Computer. Wish it had a date in it; ref is
made to a CA sales tax of 6%. "System Expansion for the TRS-80 [pc
board & user manual] w/ serial RS232C / 20mA I/O
floppy controller
32K bytes memory" (awesome)
etc....
Found a date. Guess! Answer to follow at signature.
So please, somebody, send me a clue, what can I do.
Anyone know an address where I can list these? Are old puters
so plentiful as to not have any value as collector's items?
Thanks much.
---mikey
DON'T PEEK THE1ANSWER9IS8DON'T1PEEK
Found on comp.sys.ti
I have a couple TI99/4As, an expansion box with a disk drive and other
stuff (very heavy), another disk drive, and some carts that a coworker
was going to throw away. I live in Gilroy, CA and work in San Jose,
CA. Anyone interested?
Bostone1
Bostone1(a)aol.com