The main problem with these machines is that they are still so heavily used that noone
wants to give up the media (cd-roms, etc). You can try comp.sys.next.marketplace. There
are also some websites...
http://www.orb.com and
http://www.deepspacetech.com.
Mostly what you probably need is a >300 mb standard SCSI harddrive, a cd-rom player
that works with that machine [there are many but not all work] and the cd-rom media
(NeXTStep 3.3 is probably the best).
If you were near me I'd tell you just to come by and I'd do a builddisk for you.
Perhaps someone else will offer. $25 was a good deal- last time I checked they were still
going for a couple hundred. Poor kid!
Once you get it working there's tons of software around for it, some of it the best
quality available... try
http://peanuts.leo.org and
http://www.peak.org/next.
The machines, although great performers for their time are getting slow by today's
standards. Because of that, and the fact that Mac OS X Server (aka Rhapsody) is somewhat
available, the prices should be dropping lower.
Thomas
Begin forwarded message:
From: Anthony Eros <Anthony.Eros(a)digital.com>
Date: Sun, 26 Jul 1998 19:21:17 -0400
To: "Discussion re-collecting of classic computers"
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Subject: NeXtStation TurboColor
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 beta -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN
X-To: "'classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu'"
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
I picked up a NeXtStation TurboColor box today at a hamfest. A kid had
just bought 3 monitors, 4 boxes and a small stack of manuals and sold
me the extra system box for $25. No memory or hard disk and (of course)
no monitor, cable, keyboard, mouse or software.
Does anyone have experience with these systems? Any tips on getting
the pieces needed to get it running?
-- Tony