PDP-8/S
COURYHOUSE at aol.com
COURYHOUSE at aol.com
Sat Jun 13 03:55:24 CDT 2015
That is a beauty!
You moved all that gear from UK to USA?
In a message dated 6/12/2015 2:26:10 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
tmfdmike at gmail.com writes:
I have one, restored, was running when stored but not powered up in
some considerable time.
Serial number unknown; IIRC correctly the tag with the serial number
was missing so may remain unknown.
Obtained from a collector called Erik in... Netherlands I think, circa
2004... who got it from John Bradatanu... IIRC I traded a TU56, a
pdp-8/L, and some other bits, for the 8/S and a working VT05.. see pic
on this page:
http://www.corestore.org/coremove.htm
Pics on that page are interesting, as it's the only time around 90% of
the DEC portion of the Corestore collection has all been lined up and
visible in the same place at the same time!
Oh 8/m has been discussed in front panel talk... here's a nice pic of
mine: http://www.corestore.org/pdp8m-1.jpg
Mike
On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 7:56 AM, Fred Cisin <cisin at xenosoft.com> wrote:
>>> I know of 17 PDP-8/S systems, including four at the RICM.
>>
>> Not everyone wants their collections to be public information but:
>
>
> If somebody were to try to make a "complete" list, it would make sense to
> provide variable levels of anonymity, such as name but not contact info,
> state but no name, email but no other contact, etc. If designed well,
that
> could be managed by a full information form in which it is easy, and
> acknowledged to be acceptable, to fill in only items that are intended
to be
> public.
>
> Prob'ly some people would be more willing to discuss what they have IFF
they
> aren't opening themselves to theft risk, and/or a deluge of "I'd like to
> buy".
>
> NOTE: I do not currently have ANY PDP stuff, so I am only speculating
about
> what others would like.
>
>
> --
> Grumpy Ol' Fred cisin at xenosoft.com
--
http://www.corestore.org
'No greater love hath a man than he lay down his life for his brother.
Not for millions, not for glory, not for fame.
For one person, in the dark, where no one will ever know or see.'
More information about the cctech
mailing list