I still have all those Corvus drives and drive shells sitting in the garage.
Marty
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 1:17 PM, Curt @ Atari Museum
<curt at atarimuseum.com> wrote:
Corvus got into the clone PC business with Onyx-IMI
(IMI of course has
already been making their drives) and later they bought OEMTEK so on these
systems, there was nothing too far of a stretch that they weren't released.
? Also there was some pretty big fanfare when Corvus announced its 386 based
servers as they were one of the first companies to use the new Intel chip at
the time.
So I will continue to dig and pursue my efforts to find more out. ? In the
meantime work has started on this:
http://www.corvusmuseum.com and I should start having a good bulk of the
materials up around May 1st.
If anyone has anything they'd like to contribute - photo's, manuals,
equipment, software please email me and let me know, thanks.
Curt
Al Hartman wrote:
I can say that Corvus PCs did indeed exist. I used one, and sold lots of
them while working for Lawrence S. Epstein Associates in the 1980's.
There were other things Corvus that never got produced, this wasn't one of
them.
Al
On Thu, 8 Apr 2010, Steven Hirsch wrote:
On Thu, 8 Apr 2010, Curt @ Atari Museum wrote:
Let me know if anyone has one of these or has seen one, I'm told these
may have been done by Tandon as they bought Corvus around 1987-1988 or so.
Heh. ?You'll have to beat me to it...
Seriously, though, are you sure this was ever actually manufactured? ?I
have a bunch of glossy sales stuff from the early 90s that shows a number of
Corvus items made of pure smoke and mirrors.
Steve