What's the rarest or most unusual computer-related item do you own?
Santo Nucifora
santo.nucifora at gmail.com
Sat Jan 14 09:16:26 CST 2017
"Unusual" would be a recent acquisition of an Apple II Rev 3 motherboard
that has no solder mask or graphics. Not sure if it's a prototype or an
impeccable 1 to 1 clone and I'm not sure I will ever have confirmation.
This board was produced on the same material by the same manufacturer of
Apple II boards of the time but has a couple of replaced interface card
slots and is actually roughly cut on both ends. The card slot replacements
could have been because of a lot of testing with various cards (a theory).
Still remains a mystery but I am leaning towards prototype.
http://vintagecomputer.ca/apple-ii-rev-3-clone-or-prototype/
Santo
On Sat, Jan 14, 2017 at 10:01 AM, Jay Jaeger <cube1 at charter.net> wrote:
> I think my most uncommon item would be:
>
> A DEC RC11 and RS64 - Installed and working on a PDP-11/20.
>
> I have a few other interesting artifacts that are probably not common,
> including:
>
> A DEC VT05 - not working.
> A DEC RF08 - not installed
> A DEC RS08 - Disassembled and broken ;(
> A DEC PDP-12 - Mostly working last it was on
> A set of populated PDP-12 backplanes (I wasn't able to rescue the whole
> machine)
> A DEC PDP-8/L - Working last it was on
> A DG Eclipse S/140 with disk - not tested recently
> A DG Nova 4 with tape and disk - not tested recently
> A working Wire-wrapped Mark 8 I built
> A Mark-8 replica I built
> A TV Typewriter that I built way back when, restored
> A Netronics original IBM PC clone I built way back when
> An HP 2114
>
> On 1/10/2017 4:09 PM, Andy Cloud wrote:
> > Hi Everyone!
> >
> > I thought this would be an interesting question to ask around - What's
> the
> > rarest or most unusual computer-related item do you own?
> >
> > For me, personally, I have a Altair 8800!
> >
> > Looking forward to hearing your answers
> >
> >> _Andy
> >
>
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