Vintage computer collecting

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support AutomaticWasher.org:

I am going to try and work on some more of my vintage computers, I am going to try and get my Macintosh Quadra 950 running using A/UX 3.1 I will post pictures this weekend.
 
This thread inspired me to dig out my old Apple IIc Plus. I got it out of sentiment--Apple II series were among the first computers I ever used. This IIc Plus appears to work, although I haven't really done anything with it. One of these days....

The picture shows the computer, and an external 5 1/4" disk drive. A 5 1/4" data disk I used many, many years ago on an Apple IIe is pictured, too. The yellow thing is a protection sheet that was put into the internal floppy drive during transit. I remember hearing about those, but never saw one until this IIc Plus.

j2400++8-21-2009-16-33-37.jpg
 
A Youtube video I posted of my Apple IIgs running "Music Studio 2.0" by Activision. The IIgs has 1.25 MB ram, and the program was ran off of the 2 800k 3.5" floppy drives.

The video was captured out of the composite output on the IIgs, and the audio was from the Headphone out(which is why it is a little noisy)

 
Wow

That Xerox system is cool. I scored an IBM MagCard/A system from a local library, but without any MagCards, was at a loss for what it could/should do. A massive, inch-and-a-quarter thick bundled cable connected what looked like a normal Selectric III to the unit--did it do something similar to the Xerox system?
 
Pic

Grainy, but here it is from another site:

mag-card-a.JPG
 
Still have my first computer - a Leading Edge Model M. With dot matrix printer, and CGA color monitor, it set me back $3000 in 1984... but it was instrumental in leading me to a new career in the IT world... which lasted about 15 years.

Some time later I started building my own systems, starting with 386 motherboards and then up to the most recent, a Pentium 4 machine with Nvidia graphics card. Have a Pentium Dual Core motherboard, processor, and chassis waiting for me to build it up as well, but am in no big hurry.

I built a lot of Novell file servers, and still have all of the ones I created for my home lab, as well as a Linux system that was fun for a while until it decided it would no longer talk to my monitor ;-).
 
I have a couple of IIc clones, but no monitors for them with the built in 5 1/4" floppy drive.

Every once and a while you can find IBM Mag Cards on eBay. The typewriter units for the Mag Card were Selectric II's the III's came out in the early 80's.

A friend of mine from one the typewriter groups has a IBM MC/ST but the card unit doesn't work. I would really like to get my hands on a IBM MC Composer.
 
you gotta be an old coot to remember this

The company I worked for briefly in the early 1980's had a small computer store on Maiden Lane in San Francisco that I managed for awhile. They carried the entire Hewlett Packard line of calculators. This was pretty much HP's entry in PC market, the HP-85. It used these little data tapes and had a built-in thermal printer. Only the wealthy could afford one, the price was over $3,000. You see one pop up for sale now and then.

I moved to Cupertino (sort of a San Jose suburb) and remember several of my friends, fairly unskilled people with high school educations, working at HP in assembly making 3 times as much money as me and getting 10 times the benefits along with HP stock options...grrrrrrrrrr.

twintubdexter++8-23-2009-15-51-53.jpg
 
Nate - holly crap I haven't seen one of those in 20 years. Mom picked up one of those for free somewhere. I was always amazed by the sheer size and mass of the card reader. It's only use in the house was to type - we didn't have any cards to go with it.

Unfortunately the IBM was thrown out many many years ago. A shame too. It was a non correcting black Selectric II with a similar card reader.

Ben
 
Way back in 1984

13 years old and my brand spanking new Commodore 64 system.

And believe it or not, I STILL have the little TV that's right behind me. It was stored in the attic in the house so Katrina didn't get to it.

jasonl++8-24-2009-23-31-12.jpg
 
Got my Mac Quadra 950 online today. It has 40 MB ram, 500 MB hard drive, SuperMac 24 bit accelerated video card, Running Mac OS 8.0, 19" RasterOps Trinitron monitor.

mpatoray++8-29-2009-20-07-21.jpg
 
Back
Top