• Good Place to Find Retro Computers

    From mobbyg@21:1/101 to All on Mon Aug 23 05:54:47 2021
    Hello all,

    So I wanted to share some insights I had after a recent trip to the local hamfest (ham radio flea market for non hams). While there I ran into a gentleman I had bought a Zoom modem off of at a hamfest a few years prior. He had, at the time I got the modem, which I only paid $1 for, a Vic 20. Well, I wasn't interested in the Vic20 at the time. I was more focused on getting a breadbin 64 which I couldn't seem to find online for anything less than $80-100+ dollars. So I figured, sooner or later I'll get a deal. And I did. I did some voice over work for a friend and as payment, he sent me an extra C64 and Vic20. Wonderful! It would have cost me like around $200 something
    dollars for both, but I got them for reading a page and a half which would go for about $60.

    Then I run back into John, who I got the modem off of. He had the Vic20 he
    had been trying to sell for some time. No clue why anyone hadn't snatched it
    up yet, but I asked what he wanted. For a box of cartridges, the user manual, and some ham radio hardware included. $45. But I only had $30 on me. So he
    took $20 and said I can give him the $20 sometime after the hamfest. I said deal. So after the fest, I went to the ATM at my bank, drove to his house,
    and dropped off the $20. $40 for a Vic20 and box of accessories! Powersupply included! Plus he gifted me a Viking Rad-Amp for my radio studio, but that is another story...

    But long story short, keep an eye on local Amateur Radio swap meets. There
    are always good deals with older tech that may come in handy, and the occasional retro computer. Plus of course deals on a little more modern ones, and accessories. Like 20" flat displays for $20. Hams are pack rats, and we always seem to collect stuff we intend to use and never get around to, and
    then the wife makes us sell it off, or we need to make room for more stuff. LOL. But it's definitely worth the look around one. Especially the one at MIT in Cambridge that runs every month.

    'nuff said..
    73.
    Rich, KB2MOB

    |04---- |15Rich Lawrence, KB2MOB
    |14//// |15SysOp of Radio Freqs & Geeks BBS
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  • From N1uro@21:4/107 to all on Sun Aug 22 18:18:00 2021
    mobbyg wrote to All <=-

    [snip]

    But long story short, keep an eye on local Amateur Radio swap meets.
    There are always good deals with older tech that may come in handy, and the occasional retro computer. Plus of course deals on a little more modern ones, and accessories. Like 20" flat displays for $20. Hams are pack rats, and we always seem to collect stuff we intend to use and
    never get around to, and then the wife makes us sell it off, or we need
    to make room for more stuff. LOL. But it's definitely worth the look around one. Especially the one at MIT in Cambridge that runs every
    month.

    For only $15USD, one can also go for their Technician license and buy a nice used HT (walkie talkie) at the same time - pending you pass your test. Amateur packet radio is a great thing to use retro technology on and you can even do TCP/IP with it without the need of a network card.

    Cheers
    N1URO
    AmprNet coordinator for 1/5th of the USA.

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  • From tenser@21:1/101 to mobbyg on Mon Aug 23 12:47:44 2021
    On 23 Aug 2021 at 05:54a, mobbyg pondered and said...

    around one. Especially the one at MIT in Cambridge that runs every
    month.

    Sadly, since Steve became an SK, I think the future of the MIT
    flea is in doubt. I don't think it ran at all last year due to
    the pandemic, and I haven't gotten email about anything this year.
    The space where it used to be held has been developed, and it's
    unclear where it will be in future.

    I just checked the web site; they've tentatively scheduled
    something for October, but I wouldn't hold my breath.

    It is kind of neat. A guy a few years ago tried to sell me some
    used Sun gear: "My basement has enough used SPARC kit." "Oh, then
    you could use some more...." "Not if I want to keep living with
    the mother of my kids...."

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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to tenser on Mon Aug 23 09:33:00 2021
    tenser wrote to mobbyg <=-

    It is kind of neat. A guy a few years ago tried to sell me some
    used Sun gear: "My basement has enough used SPARC kit." "Oh, then
    you could use some more...." "Not if I want to keep living with
    the mother of my kids...."

    I've been setting up a compact home lab, and have wanted to find a small, cheap retro Linux box to play with. A shoebox Sparcstation like an LX or IPX would be great, if anyone has a line on a place to buy one of those (or
    *any* other older *nix systems) I'd love to find out about it.


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  • From tenser@21:1/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Tue Aug 24 08:06:19 2021
    On 23 Aug 2021 at 09:33a, poindexter FORTRAN pondered and said...

    I've been setting up a compact home lab, and have wanted to find a
    small, cheap retro Linux box to play with. A shoebox Sparcstation like
    an LX or IPX would be great, if anyone has a line on a place to buy one
    of those (or *any* other older *nix systems) I'd love to find out about it.

    I hate to be "that guy", especially since this is a retro group,
    but if you're going to run Linux anyway, why go for a retro piece
    of gear? I honestly think you'd be better off with a low-power
    ARM or Atom device with an SSD.

    Trust me, I lived on those old SPARC machines and it wasn't all it
    was cracked up to be. :-)

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  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to tenser on Tue Aug 24 08:13:00 2021
    tenser wrote to poindexter FORTRAN <=-

    On 23 Aug 2021 at 09:33a, poindexter FORTRAN pondered and said...

    I hate to be "that guy", especially since this is a retro group,
    but if you're going to run Linux anyway, why go for a retro piece
    of gear? I honestly think you'd be better off with a low-power
    ARM or Atom device with an SSD.

    I meant to say *nix.

    Trust me, I lived on those old SPARC machines and it wasn't all it
    was cracked up to be. :-)

    I worked on a Sparc II back in 1997-1999 - maxxed out on RAM, with a Weitek Power-Up chip, it was a great little box. With a 19" monitor and a type 5 keyboard, I ended up using it as a daily driver, backup DNS server and a
    file server.


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