I used to work for a company in Maryland
that sold CADO computers-- alot of our
older customers had systems that were in
this "Computers as furniture" mode.
WE also sold Redactron systems-- basically
the WANG 1200 idea minus the furniture:
deskside steel cabinet with a couple of
cassete or magcard drives, and a selectric
mechanism attached by a *THICK* umbilical.
The Redactron used a sea MSI chips on a
single logic board.
-----Original Message-----
From: curt at
atarimuseum.com
Sent: Sat, 24 Apr 2010 16:07:09 -0400
To:
Subject: Re: Wang 1200 Trip
I loved the old days when computers were furniture.
My first computer to ever see in person was a Compugraphic 7770 that my
grandfather had in his micro-fiche and printing company in NJ.
Curt
Robert Borsuk wrote:
> Hi Dave,
> Jim Battle is on this one. Check out:
>
>
http://www.wang1200.org/
>
>
> Thanks
> Rob
>
>
> On Apr 24, 2010, at 3:10 PM, Dave McGuire wrote:
>
>
>> On Apr 23, 2010, at 4:35 PM, Robert Borsuk wrote:
>>
>>> For those interested, I just picked up a Wang 1200 Word processor.
>>> I have the trip story and some pictures at:
>>>
>>>
http://borsuk.us/2010/04/23/wang-1200-word-processing-trip/
>>>
>> What a fascinating system...a dedicated word processor with
>> hardcopy-only output and cassette storage! Do you know anything about
>> its architecture, or how the cassettes are formatted? I'd love to
>> explore one of these.
>>
>> -Dave
>>
>> --
>> Dave McGuire
>> Port Charlotte, FL
>>
>>
>
>
>
____________________________________________________________
GET FREE 5GB EMAIL - Check out spam free email with many cool features!
Visit