Big Ed wrote:
You might enjoy this very short video from London's Science Museum
Thanks, Ed -- definitely some interesting content there. Over and above that, I can't help being impressed with the upbeat
animation techniques used in the videos -- particularly
the one about LEO. It's remarkable how much they've managed to enliven the source material (which consists mostly of
still images).
As for parts sources, like Garth I remember the neighborhood Mom & Pop surplus/electronics stores, and also Allied and Lafayette. The latter were even more problematic for me than for Garth, due to border & customs issues, but that didn't stop me from poring over their catalogs and dreaming up problems for the solutions they contained! Those catalogs served both for inspiration and as an educational resource.
Another major source of parts for me was discarded TV sets, which in my teen years were black-and-white models powered by vacuum tubes. The easy pickings included tubes and transformers, but I also amassed a collection of resistors & capacitors which, according to the style of the day, had been hand-wired point-to-point on phenolic terminal strips. (No printed-circuit boards in these sets!) Of course only an over-zealous teenager would've bothered salvaging carbon composition resistors & paper-dielectric capacitors -- and
selenium rectifiers! The stuff was junk, and had little value even when new.
OTOH I have no ambivalence about my decades-old collection of vacuum tubes. Definitely worth keeping! Some of those tubes are used in vintage audio gear -- for example, my brother's Hammond organ... and BDD's Ampeg bass amplifier (a few years ago I sent 'im a pair of well-seasoned 6SL7 twin triodes)!
cheers
Jeff
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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