At 07:09 PM 3/11/1999 -0500, you wrote:
Hi,
I just bought a strange looking machine at a Salvation Army store. It's
from AES Data Inc., Montreal, Canada. Model # is 7100, which is on the
plate on the front. I haven't brought it home yet because it's too damn
heavy to carry.
The monitor is attached to the machine via a swivel neck. Two
full-height 5.25" disk drives are attached to the right hand side. The
drives are part of the unit, but they're made to look separate, especially
by their height which is much taller than the rest of the machine. (The
drives are stacked one on top of the other.)
The port on the back which is labeled "Printer", is a female connector
which has pins arranged in a grid pattern. The connector looks very, very
similar to the game controller connector on a Magnavox Odyssey.
There's another port on the back which is a male edge connector. I didn't
count the number of pins on it.
The keyboard uses a wide phone-jack style connector, and it has a
grounding wire which screws to the back of the machine.
Does anyone know if this is just a strange looking early MS-DOS machine,
or a CP/M beast, or if it's something entirely different?
I can't wait to get it home and open it up to see what's inside.
Providing I can figure out how to open it. :)
--
Doug Spence
ds_spenc(a)alcor.concordia.ca
http://alcor.concordia.ca/~ds_spenc/
Sounds as if you have found an ICON, aka "The Bionic Beaver", the
computer
designed by the Ontario government to take over the educational computer
market. Unfortunately it came out at the same time as the IBM PC.
If you find another one please let me know, as I have been looking in
Windsor without success. (The schools have all sent them to the dump.)
Regards
Charlie Fox
Charles E. Fox
Chas E. Fox Video Productions
793 Argyle Rd. Windsor N8Y 3J8 Ont. Canada
email foxvideo(a)wincom.net Homepage
http://www.wincom.net/foxvideo