I'm in the process of moving a bunch of my computer collection into
storage as part of an effort to de-clutter my far-too-cluttered house.
In so doing I've decided to thin the collection a bit.
This stuff is in the Seattle area, and I really really really prefer
local pickup, especially for the heavy items. Items are free unless
otherwise noted. More details available upon request.
Thanks!
Josh
Computers:
SGI Indy R5000 - $20 - No hard drive or RAM, but was working the last
time I powered it up (which was several years ago.) I can probably
scrounge up some 72-pin SIMMs for it if needed.
SGI Indigo2 - $100 - R10K, Max Impact with 4MB TRAMs, 4gb drive and
(iirc) 768MB RAM. Very nice system but I don't use it much anymore (and
I have a better equipped Octane for those days I do want to play with a
nice SGI :)).
Sun Ultra 10 - $20 - 512MB RAM, 60GB drive, "Penguin" PC coprocessor.
Acorn A5000 - Complete, but faceplate got damaged in shipping so it's
kind of ugly. Has 240V power supply, I had tested this at one point
with a 120V supply and it seemed to be working. NVRAM battery has been
removed (after causing mild corrosion on the PCB, but nothing
irreversable). No keyboard/mouse.
2x IBM PC Convertibles - Complete, working. Printer & RS232 expansion
modules, and a pair of carrying cases. Now you can outclass those
Macbook-using snobs at Starbucks. (Or perhaps not.)
3x Macintosh Portables. $30 for the lot. None in working condition,
none with hard drives. Other than that, they're complete. Impress your
friends with a laptop that weighs more than a small car.
IBM RS/6000 (Type 7043-140) - 233Mhz 604e, unknown amount of RAM (I can
power it up and find out if you're interested.) Includes gigantic POWER
GXT800P video card. Was working last time I powered it up.
2x "ePod" tablet computers (w/box) - (see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPod) Windows CE 3.0-based tablet device,
color 640x480 screen, PCMCIA. A tablet years ahead of its time, or a
useless doorstop? You be the judge.
Non-Computers:
Shibaden FP-107-1B TV Camera - The Seattle Science Center was tossing
this out a few years back, and I couldn't let it get scrapped. It's a
heavy old video camera from the late 60s. Complete with lenses but I've
nothing to hook it up to so who knows if it works. Has some nifty tubes
in it, though!