This is a message that I sent out during the classiccmp blackout in
early july. I didn't realize at the time that the message wasn't
delivered. Here it is again:
I received an email today from a gentleman in Portsmouth. He said it
was OK to share the message with the list.
(begin quote)
Hiya im due to pick up a wang 2200 from one of my relatives houses as my
grandad has recently passed away and was wondering if you know anyone in
the uk either portsmouth or liverpool that might be interested in it.
It is a Wang 2200 A which comes with a cassette drive built into the
screen/keyboard, a separate CPU, a separate power supply and a separate
I/O unit.
I have found some manuals. They are a Wang Basic Language Ref Manual, A
Wang System 2200 STATS/Engineering General program library & a
Matematics general program library. There are also 3 cassette albums
each containing about 12 cassettes with various programs and one game.
Whether these work or not is unknown.
As far as i know it was working before it was put in the loft 12 months ago.
Regards
malcolm
(end quote)
I know he would like some money for it, but I'm not sure what his
expectations are. I don't think he knows either. :-) It would be
hard to set a price on it as these systems appear on ebay rarely, and
also he doesn't know whether it is functional.
If you are interested, email me and I'll forward his contact information
to you (frustum at
pacbell.net). I don't want to post his email address
for fear of email address bots might pick it up. I don't care if they
get mine though. I'll also send along a couple small photos of the system.
The 2200 came out in the early 70s and was Wang's first successful
general purpose computer. The BASIC interpreter was written in
microcode, and systems had from 4KB to 32KB of RAM. You can visit my
site,
www.wang2200.org, to get more information about this family of
computers.
Malcolm said that this is a Wang 2200A, which would make it very early,
but many of these machines had board upgrades, turning them into later
model machines.