Hearty welcome Tez - finally - so sorry it took so long for whatever reasons. !!!
Please contribute to this site as you have done on vintage computer
Frank
GADFRAN on the vintage computer site and Kaypro buddy !!!
-----Original Message-----
From: Terry Stewart <terry at webweavers.co.nz>
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Tue, Oct 19, 2010 9:43 pm
Subject: Introduction - Terry Stewart (tezza)
Hi,
I joined a few days ago and feel I should introduce myself to others on this list. Some
here may know me as tezza on Eric Klein's Vintage Computer Forums, a handle I also use
on a few other vintage computer places around the Net.
My interest in microcomputing history started about 11 years ago, when I created a website
to archive some facts about my first micro.
http://www.classic-computers.org.nz/system-80/index.htm
However, in 2007 with the kids off my hands (and more room) I started collecting other
micros. This was trigged by finding a OS Challenger 1P someone gave me in the late 1980s
in the bottom of a wardrobe, turning it on and finding (astonishingly!) it went! Along
with my old System 80, I now had the nucleus of a classic computer collection! There was
no looking back after that!
http://www.classic-computers.org.nz/collection/index.htm
I am not a computer engineer, electronics technician or even associated with the computer
industry in any way. Before I started collecting I knew nothing about electronics except
you plugged something in at the wall, flicked a switch and (if you are lucky) it went. I
had never been under the hood of a computer even my System 80. However, once I started
collecting I found I HAD to learn something about the mystery of binary hardware in order
to keep these machines up and running! See
http://www.classic-computers.org.nz/blog/index.htm . I've found the vintage/classic
computer community to be very supportive and helpful with sharing knowledge in this
regard. I've still got huge gaps in knowledge regarding the hardware side but it's
improving all the time.
My main motivation for collecting these old machines is to preserve a slice of history
(particularly in the New Zealand context), and perhaps even display (and give talks about)
the units when I retire years down the track. I like to have every machine working, with
original manuals and decked out with software of the day. Let's face it, it's also
great to have all those machines you used to covert back then! Now that I know more about
it, I've (unexpectedly) come to enjoy the hardware side as well! Nothing is as
satisfying as seeing a dead computer suddenly surge back to life after a fix. To me, a
dead computer is just a collection of wires, silicon and plastic. They HAVE to be working,
and my wife would claim I go to obsessive lengths to make them so.
Anyway, that's all about me. I'm working full-time, have a number of other
interests and may not get a chance to contribute too often. However, I hope to share
classic computing thoughts/issues where I'm able.
Terry Stewart (Tez)
http://www.classic-computers.org.nz