the finger band units came as a terminet 300 and a 1200 denoting the baud
rate. nice as they had fully formed characters both upper and lower case.
if memory serves me correctly the 300 model A came out in late 60's early
70's
you will find them in many colors....
our hp 2000 f ( that became an access system ) had one with an hp paint
job and terminal number on it.
Honeywell also used them as console and terminal devices both for large
information systems and process control products.
the only units we have now are a couple Honeywell units terminet 1200 in the
white and black paint job.
alas the hp unit passed with the ages... probably to the same place the 2883
disk drive did for the 2000 system. If anyone has either of these units it
would be nice to at least have an example of them to display next to the hp
2000 here in the museum. to see what the 2000 system looks like and what
the drive looked like ( alas the terminet is not in the pic check towards
the bottom of
www.smecc.org)
I owe a great debt to this product line, as in my first year of business
they made the money that really helped launch the company.
Thanks Ed Sharpe archivist for SMECC
Please check our web site at
http://www.smecc.org
to see other engineering fields, communications and computation stuff we
buy, and by all means when in Arizona drop in and see us.
address:
coury house / smecc
5802 w palmaire ave
glendale az 85301
----- Original Message -----
From: "Vintage Computer Festival" <vcf(a)siconic.com>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
<cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2004 3:51 PM
Subject: Re: general electric terminal?
On Mon, 31 May 2004, Brian Mahoney wrote:
> In the local Goodwill this morning, there was a large General Electric
> printer/terminal(?) stand out front in the weekend dropoff area. It
stood
> about three feet high, had a keyboard, with a
printer behind it and a
data
> cassette holder in the upper right console area
which also had rocker
> switches on it. Sorry for the bad description but I was in a rush.
> The thing looked in perfect condition, similar to a teletype machine I
had
> seen once, although the keys didn't look like
teletype keys. The
cassette
> part intrigued me but I didn't have time to
examine it and I completely
> forget what the name of the unit was. It was GE for sure.
> Basically if anyone has interest in rescuing it, I will head back
tomorrow
to fetch it.
Otherwise does anyone know what it was, from my terrible
description?
It definitely sounds like something worth rescuing. Someone somewhere
should want it. I'd want it if it were closer.
--
Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer
Festival
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