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.
 
Now I only have one... and dread losing it, cuz they don't make them anymore.
Unicomp is the official successor for producing IBM keyboards using the patent of the buckling spring technology.
After my both original Model Ms died the same way (It wasn't coffee but beer, and not my cat but me) I also got me Unicomp's keyboards. Apart from the color very much like the original: noisy, but robust, and exemplary - reference- tactile feeling.
When I get it right, they also repair your IBM KB.
 
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