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74LS 
7400s, 74LS00s, 74S00s, and some 74AS00s (if i remember the advanced schottky's correctly.) Also various EEPROMs, Z80s, drams.74LS![]()
artillery mechanical calculator:Some slide rules.
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Top to bottom: Faber-Castell 57/88 'Rietz', Jakar No. 77 'Darmstadt', Faber-Castell 111/98 'Electro'.
I used to have the full TI TTL databook set in hardcopy. I've got all that stuff in pdf's nowadays. And any modern CAD software has them all in the library anyway. A lot of books I used to have in hardcopy I now have in pdfs. It takes up a lot less space! And now that 4K monitors are so cheap, reading them on the screen isn't so bad.7400s, 74LS00s, 74S00s, and some 74AS00s (if i remember the advanced schottky's correctly.) Also various EEPROMs, Z80s, drams.
The TI rep for me, her brother, was one of the initial founders or investors in Sun back in the day. She filled my bookcase with TI data books and sample parts until management decided "we don't need no stinkin' color monitors!" Which meant we didn't need TIs stinkin' graphics chips which meant she was no longer my friend.I used to have the full TI TTL databook set in hardcopy.
Yeah. Those were the days: You simply could ask for free samples on a semiconductor's webpage, and they shipped 3..5 parts to you for free: OpAmps, MOSFETs, small Microcontrollers,...(almost) anything. Built some device that way that went into series production. Since now (almost) every company is taken over by TI, it's over. When you are not a company with a name yourself TI does not even talk to you.When I was at the university, I found...
They used to have shops all over UK, and the other really good place was Maplin electronics, which sadly went under a few years ago.RadioShack.
Scrapped a 17 years old motherboard today , kept the CPU for the CPU museum.
AMD Phenom II X4 from 2009.
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I thought I had a problem, but you've got it real bad!View attachment 24704
My stack of thinkpads and docking stations. Yeah, I know, I've "got a problem".Various different models, mostly classic series thinkpads. I can't be bothered to sell them for a few quid on ebay, they're not worth anything anyway, and you never know when they're going to come in useful. No company makes this kind of high quality hardware any more, including the modern lenovo thinkpads, so I'm hanging on to them; at least they don't take up very much space. And they all run freebsd!
I had the Phenom X3. The urban legend was that they were triple-core because they failed QA for quad-core. And Windows had to patch their OS so it could run on this processor.I still have a Phenom II X6 in production. The board has a PCI slot for my RME 9652 sound card.
If they won't boot... try the usual trick to defeat latch-up. Take battery out, hold power button down for about 2 minutes, then put battery back in. Or if battery is discharged, just power it from mains adapter only. Then press power button to see if it will boot.I'm actually surprise at how many of mine have stopped working.
I've tried various things. but haven't thrown any out yet just in case I find a magic formula.If they won't boot... try the usual trick to defeat latch-up. Take battery out, hold power button down for about 2 minutes, then put battery back in. Or if battery is discharged, just power it from mains adapter only. Then press power button to see if it will boot.
Oha! Many will really envy you for this little piece of genuine hardware!My first laptop. Unfortunately it isn't working currently, and probably hasn't been for over 35 years. But I keep telling myself I will get it fixed.
Well it got me exposed to DOS 2.0 which was embedded. I had my first experience with BBS's at a superfast connection speed of 1200 BAUD (or could it have been 300).Oha! Many will really envy you for this little piece of genuine hardware!
But if I may you give you an advice: Keep it (in a dry and dustless space), and just keep it as it is.
Point is: When you actually get it fixed, and make it run again someday, you will spend two or three hours with it, and then realize: there is nothing useful you can do with it anymore. It's just memories. Don't spoil them.
At least I had this experience with my old Amiga.
Doesn't matter. Before there had been 150 Baud acoustic couplers (I think 300 was max what those things could do; anything above >=1200 already were modems [words from the trenches, almost nobody knows anymoreat a superfast connection speed of 1200 BAUD (or could it have been 300).
...or a museum. Good idea. So you know it's in good hands.I'll donate it to some computer club
Yeah. I wish I started my computering back then with one of those.but it helped along the way with learning about PCs.
Theres probably not much wrong, toshiba kit of that period usually had very good build quality, I remember my T3200 was built like a tank. You just need a friendly local electronics repair man to have a look at it. It might be something as simple as a blown fuse. I wouldn't chuck it out.My first laptop. Unfortunately it isn't working currently, and probably hasn't been for over 35 years. But I keep telling myself I will get it fixed.