Tor wrote:
@cbmeeks
I think we're basically on the same page. I'm looking for computers I used when I was young, and those I wanted but could not afford (say, a BBC B).
Same here.
Tor wrote:
I used Apple II computers at work, and clones. There was a great clone with 128K and a Z80 (6502+Z80, could run both Apple DOS, USCD-P, or CP/M-Plus (aka CP/M-3), the Basis-108. Just slipped away under my nose when they were disposed of from my old workplace. And I did some programming on a friend's Dragon 32 (TRS-80 Color Computer clone), so if I could find a CoCo3 I might buy it. The 6809 is a great CPU.
I own a CoCo3 that is nearly mint in a nearly mint box. Manuals and everything. Very interesting computer.
The Dragon 32 is on my radar! It's not the best computer out there but there is just something about it that makes me want one. Maybe because it's a "dragon".
Tor wrote:
But time has passed, and with that, decades of working in a much richer computing environment, e.g. Unix workstations. It's not actually easy to go back to basics and fiddle around with those very limited monitors and 2K and BASIC (which I don't actually want to touch, ever again, to be honest - I never actually used BASIC when I worked with Apple II computers. Only Pascal and assembly. I enjoyed 6502 programming). So I tend to gravitate to, for example, Z80 systems with enough RAM to run CP/M. CP/M-3 if possible. And most of all I want to get my hands on the minicomputers I worked with from around 1982 - they have an operating system I can still feel comfortable in, after all these years. And if I get a CoCo3 at some point, I would add memory and run Flex or one of the other operating systems available, not BASIC (I did enough of that on the Dragon-32, that's where I truly saw the limitations of the language).
That's where our use-cases differ. I enjoy the "punishment" of tapping away on my 1K ZX81. lol. My biggest use is games and playing the games I never could afford back in the day. I also enjoy 6502 programming and would like to branch out into Z80 programming because ColecoVision is a favorite of mine. So is the TI but that is another processor. Not enough time to learn them all I suppose.
Tor wrote:
My collection is a bit limited. I have an old Nascom-1 (I bought it back when it was new, as a kit), and an old British almost-clone PC, I think it was called Advance (it's in storage right now). An Apple II semi-clone (somewhere between a II+ and IIe). A 68k home-built setup, a bit limited on RAM. A couple of 8" Shugart drives. An IBM PS/2 model 35. An Olivetti M700 (MIPS R4000 CPU), a bunch of SGI O2 computers, one O2+, a couple of Indys, and, at work, one or two Octanes and a Fuel which I can take as soon as I find room for them. Oh, and a terribly heavy CCT drive, in perfect condition, sitting in my garage at the moment. It was never actually used operationally, it was only there in case some old tapes came by (that system had moved to exabytes by then). So it's as-new. I connected it to an Octane to read all my old 9-track CCT tapes from the old minicomputers, a few years back.
That's an interesting collection. I had a Irix (spelling?) years ago. Gigantic tower that was given to me. When I moved in with my fiancee, it became missing. I was tossing some stuff and I think it was stolen or tossed by mistake. I lost several computers then. I personally think my neighbor had sticky fingers. :-/
Tor wrote:
(I was just thinking today if I should build a computer shed in the garden, to be ready for the hypothetical case of find one of those minis.. I could put a rack in there.)
Ugh...storage is a huge problem when you have around 70 computers. I honestly don't know how many I have. I need to inventory them.