Post some hardware porn

The most expensive memory card I have ever bought was a JustRAM AT 8MB memory board from Monolithic Systems. Sadly I can't find a photo of it on the web. The board was a full-length 16-bit ISA-bus PC card, with a baseboard and a mezzanine card. It used a large number of very high density SIP (single-in-line) package DRAMs (I think they were 256K DRAMs) to construct an 8MB store; there was 4MB on the baseboard and another 4MB on a 'mezzanine' daughter board that plugged onto the compent side of the baseboard . At the time that (I think, maybe around 1986-7?) that was a vast amount of RAM in a PC. I used it for some high-speed satellite data acquisition software I wrote for the PC-AT in protected mode assembler. It was a high quality board, made in the US, and I found it highly reliable.

It was similar to this, also from monolithc systems, but the ones we used employed a large number of SIP memory chips, which makes me think they were 256K DRAMs.
Note this type of SIP package is nothing to do with the modern "system-in-package" which is also called SIP.

From memory, that 8MB memory board cost I think 1500 pounds at the time, I remember it cost as much as the IBM PC-AT system unit. I may have remembered the price wrong though, it may have been more.

Adjusted for inflation, 1500 pounds in 1986 is 4500 pounds ($6000 US) today, according to:-
 
So, #1 is my oldest active computer (Dell Inspiron 3668) which has no network connection and is running a several-years-old Slackware.

Spotted an interesting book! 😁

half-01-DSCF5392.JPG

Haven't read that one! I just ordered one from ebay for a fiver.

 
My primary workstation still uses an IBM AT full size keyboard.
I had two, until my cat knocked my coffee into it.
Now I only have one... and dread losing it, cuz they don't make them anymore.
Maybe I can get lucky and find another one at a garage sale.
 
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