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Vintage Computer Festival in San Jose 94

K2 noted the Vintage Computer Festival taking place in California ... apparently MIT does this too (not that this matters to us midwesterners). At least there's a lot of interesting looking reading material on the site that those of us who aren't there can read (the true Apple story, archives on vintage computers, petitions to sign wrt releasing specs of vintage hardware into the public domain etc).
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Vintage Computer Festival in San Jose

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  • now that I'm back in California for my new job, I can go to things like this...
  • by kniedzw ( 65484 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:11PM (#810029)

    Those who are interested in the MIT event should probably check out the flyer [mit.edu].

    It's a relatively well-attended event, although the hardware (and software) available ranges from antique (vacuum tubes and all) to the relatively new (PII-range tech). Decent prices, however, and you can generally get whatever you're looking for.

  • by Xzzy ( 111297 ) <sether@@@tru7h...org> on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:11PM (#810030) Homepage
    What qualifies for this distinction?

    I mean, I can reasonably deduct that anything from the 70's and earlier is going to be a good qualifier, but what other lines of machines can we expect to see?

    Their website doesn't seem to go into much detail on it; would this include the first Macs that hit shelves? How about my old Amiga 500? An itty bitty Sun IPX?

    What is classified as a "vintage" computer? :) For cars this is easy; anything over 30 years or so. But in the computing industry, where machines advance fast enough that something two-three years old is out of date, where is the line drawn?
  • by jred ( 111898 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:12PM (#810031) Homepage
    Is a place to get rid of all the "vintage" computer stuff I have now. I'm starting to run out of storage space!!!

    jred
    www.cautioninc.com [cautioninc.com]

    jred
    www.cautioninc.com [cautioninc.com]
    caution, inc.
  • by miracle69 ( 34841 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:12PM (#810032)
    Nothing like the Slashdot effect on a vintage computer.

    I guess everything is vintage under the /. load. I got the first graphic loaded before the site slowed under the pressure. Either that, or the web server is a TRS-80...
  • by br4dh4x0r ( 137273 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:13PM (#810033)
    Vintage Computer Festival?

    Is that anything like a Renaissance Faire?

    "Hail and well met! Prepare to eat fiery death from my Vic-20, knave!"

    love,
    br4dh4x0r
  • by Anonymous Coward
    poke 3600,0
    you lose.
  • by Tairan ( 167707 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:17PM (#810035) Homepage
    Check out my mirror over at http://www.johncglass.com/mirror/ oldcomputing.htm [johncglass.com]

  • This sounds like a good time. Nerdvana! I wonder if they'll have a listing of 101 uses for that old box?

    Certainly the MacAquarium will be on the list...

    Maybe I'll be able to gather ideas about what to do with my P3 and case...ya know....seeing as the P4 isn't compatible and all....

  • If they have my first computer, the Texas Instruments 99/4A (TI-99/4A), I'm there. Started programming BASIC on that thing at the age of 6. It had a surprisingly robust assembly language as well.
  • old machines on show,
    like anyone gives a shit.
    Slashdot wastes bandwidth.
    Further information on this topic may be found here [slashdot.org].
  • Very good question.

    Maybe someone should define the term vintage when it is in relevance to computer tech.

    My 2 cents would say that any
    five year old system would be vintage.

    any suggestions or has someone already defined
    the term "vintage"?

  • I'm sorry, this is a great idea, but dont host the site on a vintage computer :) Its a little slow.
  • by Sawbones ( 176430 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:24PM (#810041)
    If you can do without the couple of pennies you'd earn by selling it, several charities would most likely be happy to pick up your used computer equipment. I know from experience that Good Will will gladly take whole systems dating back to the IBM PS and PS/2.

    If what you've got is just loose components there are still options. There is a charity, "Computer Bank Charity" if I remember correctly, here in Seattle that takes older computers and computer parts, rebuilds and refurbishes them and supplies them to lower income families - an effort to breach the "digital divide". I'm certain there would be something along those lines in your area.

    A previous slashdot article about computer charity in general : http://slashdot.org/askslashd ot/00/07/01/226259.shtml [slashdot.org].
  • Why?

    The mission of the Vintage Computer Festival is to promote the preservation of "obsolete" computers

    I mean, sure I still enjoy a good 'ole Gameboy "LAN party" every now and again;) But how long can Tetris entertain a guy? Even a beer-swiggin' Gameboy afficionado?

    And trying to do any decent 3D modeling at work on an 8086 might be a little trying...

    --

  • it's called Ebay.com [ebay.com]. :-)
  • A car is vintage if it's more than 30 years old. Car makers put out one new model every year. Computer makers put out a new computer about every six months. IMHO a vintage computer should be 15 years old. UNIX was written in C Try writting Windows in VB
  • Cool! What CPU did it use, for the uninformed?

    -----
  • I would guess that you'de need to be 5-10 years old to be considered "vintage" in the computer world. This corresponds to the car world where 30 years is "vintage", and about 1/3 of that, or 10 years is safely "out of date". So now when 2-3 years is "out of date" for computers, you get 5-10 is for "vintage" computers.

    At least that's a guess. ;-)
  • by new500 ( 128819 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:30PM (#810047) Journal

    Slashdotted methinks (stuck loading front page).

    Cheap trick gets round slashdot effectso you can actually read something and be able to post with intelligence ;) is :

    use Google's Advanced Search [google.com] and search vintage.org for a word like "computer" or "old" like this :-) [google.com] and load up the cached pages of the site [google.com]

    should work for any slashdotted site, just pick a word not too generic to be eliminated by Google's engine bu tlikely to appear on every page, and enjoy the cached files!

    Don't you just love Google?

    Karma whoring for my /. soul please look away if this is obvious to you

  • oops, forgot I had a .sig, was my own first post.
    Doh!

  • What are the criteria for a computer to be consiter vintage?

    At the current rate that computers get obsolete, the machine I bought last year, would qualify too.

  • ...there was Oog. Oog knew nothing of these 'puterators' or 'input machines'. He knew fire. He knew hurt. He knew woman. And one day, he stumbled on something he named the 'wheel'. It was round and made getting around easier. He couldn't wait to show his friend Ug.

    Ug picked up on this, making his own wheel and distributing it with the notion that it was _his_ idea. Oog was not happy, but nevertheless wanted to share with the world his discovery. After Ug sold his patent and namesake, the 'UgRoll' (as it was then called) sold like hotcakes, amazing the world and caveman society alike. And all the while, Oog gave away his free wheel. Ug soon had him destroyed, by a pack of mean, nasty dogs and a bodyguard named Stomp.

    Generations later, there was Bill. Bill was a skinny, geeky kid, and he had an idea. He had a proposterous idea. And he was going to find other people to make it work. So he did. And they flourished. Soon, he was the richest man in the world! There were parties. Women. Cars. Etc. But, somehow, it didn't make him happy. He couldn't be satisfied with being number one. He had to have EVERYTHING. So he began bullying, and terrorizing. And threatening. And soon, he was known throughout out the world for his actions, and a bad rep was attained in a few short years.

    But alas! There is hope! Years earlier, a young man by the initials L.T. and something to do with a penguin made an amazing discovery: if you give it away, it will be better. Who needs this 'money' and 'stock'. Who needs 'coporations' and 'takeovers'. Give it away! He screamed. Give it back!

    A bitter battle ensued, with the now heartless and evil Bill battling L.T. to the end. L.T. wanted nothing, and Bill wanted it all. They fought for years, in all battlegrounds imaginable. It was bloody, and violent. One 'Del' lead to another 'rm -rf'. One '.xls' lead to '.whatever-you-want-your-extention-to-be'. Lives were lost. Programmers were saddened. Many funerals were attended.

    And in the end, it goes back to Oog and Ug and who wanted to make the best wheel. One wanted his wheel to be the bestseller, and the other just wanted it to give it away. Sometimes you want to do the right thing, and other times you get your balls cut off while screaming "Freedom!!!" Does it make sense? Will it ever? Only the future knows that secret, and it never tells...

  • Yea, I thought of that. But most of my stuff would cost more to ship than it's worth. Quick, how much would you pay for 1 working & 1 non-working KayPro4's? Next consider that they weigh ~40lbs apiece...

    jred
    www.cautioninc.com [cautioninc.com]

    jred
    www.cautioninc.com [cautioninc.com]
    caution, inc.
  • by sidesh0w ( 32371 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:34PM (#810052) Homepage

    The Festival site links to a petition on an important topic (well, important to vintage computer users anyway): legalizing `abandonware'.

    These old computers would be even more useless without software, and a few thousand signatures might help convince some of these companies to release their old, all-but-forgotten software into the public domain.

    So, go sign the petition [mivox.com], before it gets slashdotted too.

  • "If you're not confused by quantum mechanics, you really don't understand it." - Niels Bohr

    "No one understand quantum mechanics." - Richard Feynman

    love,
    br4dh4x0r
  • Or, you could check out the mirror over at johncglass.com/mirror/oldcomputin g.htm [johncglass.com]

  • I got this .sig from an artice on www.unix-vs-nt.org I recomend that you read it.
  • Oh yeah, I've got a couple of these laying around in my attic somewhere. Great machines.

    Especially with the Speech Synthesizer module that plugged in the side for games like "Parsec". I was blown away by the fact that a computer could say "Entering Asteroid Belt" that realistically. (For the time, that is)

    And the adapter for saving files on cassette tapes... The manual even said something like "You know the tape is being loaded when the tape recorder is making sounds like a love-sick gorilla."

    You don't see that kind of documentation with today's drives, do you?
  • It's an interesting question. Is Linux vintage because UNIX is 30 years old? Look at the gear that GRiD made in 1992 -- pen-based handhelds with built-in wireless, like PDA's are just now beginning to sprout. Is there a distinction between "vintage" and "classic", design patterns that never really go away?

    --
  • by dark_panda ( 177006 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:42PM (#810058)
    Like that ancient PIII-933 I got a month ago? Yes, those were the days. I remember when I was the first person on my block to get a near-gHz PC... I was the envy of everyone in my country. For a mere $4000, I was on the cusp of gigahertz processing... opening up 87 instances of Microsoft Word was never easier.

    Ah, but those simple days of pre-gHz processing are all but gone out here in the real world. Being the leading edge guy I am and obviously needing to keep up with the times and after hours of putting it off, I finally made the upgrade to the 1133 mHz P3.

    Oh, sweet nostalgia! The 1133 performs as well as my pre-pre-gHz 850! Why, it seems like only months ago when the most I could get out of my desktop was a paltry 180 fps in Q3A. Happy days are here again!

    How did our ancient pre-gHz brethren survive with such quaint technology?!

    J
  • "We're under attack! Prepare the Sinclair 1000's... WITH 16k RAM packs! Mwahahahahahaaa!"

    "Uh... sir, I bumped it by accident."

    "Whaat? The RAM module was bumped? All those hours of coding lost! We have been defeated."
  • #1 chill.

    #2 I know this was probably a joke, but I wasn't talking about expensive software that cheapskates like myself refuse to buy. Personally, I support copyrights inasmuch as even if "information wants to be free", I still have no right to "liberate" software that someone else refuses to share. I think the issue with abandonware is software not available _at any price_ because no one sells it anymore.
  • by I_Have_A_Long_Name ( 228247 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:47PM (#810061) Homepage
    I consider my 15 year old VAX a vintage computer
    I also consider it a perfect platform to run a proxy to spread the penis bird gospel.


    <O
    ( \
    X
    8===D
  • yeah, the mirror definately kicks butt for simplicity :-)

    so if there's a legit mirror, and the main site is real suffering, why don't the editors put your link on the front page story?

    hope you're not paying for that lovely bandwidth I just enjoyed to get to the mirror . . .

    but, tho' i say it myself, the Google idea I posted *will work for any indexed site* even if there's no mirror

    or if the mirror gets slashdotted, he he ;-)

  • I don't know if my first personal computer, an Atari 800, counts as vintage, but I sure loved it. It's gotta be like a hundred years old in computer years, right? That's a classic for sure!

    Anyway, I put a little note with my personal info inside it before I left home for college. I have no idea where it is now.

    I wonder if I'm the only kid that thought their computer might become a collector's item someday and wanted to be sure they, as the original owner, would be credited on the plaque in the museum.

    If you open your very expensive, classic, museum-quality Atari 800 and there's a note in there from Sherman, please send it home! I miss it. You'll have to actually open the case to find the note - not just the cartridge/RAM "hood".

  • a TPS-9900 at 3MHz.
  • On the Classic Computer mailling list, we have arbitrarily defined Classic Computer as any computer over 10 years old. It's not a great definition, and is has been bent occasionally. (And, personally, I wouldn't consider my 10+ year old 386 a classic, really...)

  • I kinda doubt the goodwill would take a VAX 11/750 or anything that large and non x86.
  • The only problem is when the google page's slashdotted.

    "We apologize for the slowness of the news. The servers resonsible have now been /.ed" -CmdTaco

    "we apologize for the slowness of the cached pages, those resonsible for /.ing have now been /.ed" -CmdTaco

    *Insert flashing lights and wacky accordian music*

  • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:55PM (#810068)
    Also hooking up with VCF is CA Extreme [caextreme.org], showing vintage/classic arcade machines restored to their former glory.

    Old computers. Old video games. These are a few of my favorite things...

  • by CaptainCarrot ( 84625 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @01:56PM (#810069)
    Maybe I can finally unload that 286 that's been sitting in the corner of my dining room for the past 8 years! 12 MHz of raw computing power, and 1 whole MB of RAM! How could anyone turn it down?

    San Jose, here I come!

  • Cool! What CPU did it use, for the uninformed?

    The TI-99/4A ran on a 16 bit TMS-9900 CPU running at a speedy 3MHz.
    For more info, check out the TI-99/4A Home Computer Page [99er.net]

    --
    Jonathan Hunt
  • If you look at the link, you will see that it is easy to get Google's cached site version from the URL. Just do like:

    http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:URL

    Or just type:

    cache:URL

    into Google's "search" box.

    This all assumes that Google has visited the site already so it's in the cache.

  • -- compared to a modern ATX MB, let alone one of those tiny'st onechip webservers!
    They have lots of room inside for adding a couple of FeeCee motherboards - for Amiga's, Ataris, MAME, or other emulators.
    Most had giant powersupplys and PCBs by todays standards.
    Those wood-ish chassis gave good sound, control, and airflow, and are easy to work with.

    Lots of great memories will be for sale! SO REMEMBER: ~"Those that do not study history are doomed to repeat it---" ;^)
    If you want to score a machine, bring lots of $$:
    Cash TALKS - Credit balks!
  • Go and read this google cached link [google.com]

    No it's not a link to something sick - it's a competition page on the vintage.org site.

    Surely Slashdot wins *de facto* HANDS DOWN?

    "No really, check it out . . .

    [sig]I wasn't concentrating, really I didn't mean to Karma whore . . . "

  • Thanks for wasting that little bit more ;)
  • Most charities don't want your old PS/2's, they want decent, mostly-working computers that can be put to use by lower income families. Sure, the Good Will will take one or two of your 386-PC's at a time, but just try dumping a basement full on them and see how they react.

    I've spent the last 6 months trying to give away a business basement full of 808*, Sun 6/60's (You know, the 10 year old workstations), old printers, Mac Classic's (No HD). Free, I'll help to haul 'em.

    I called several dozen charities in the San Francisco Bay Area, nobody wants this shit. The monitors are worthless and toxic (16-color greyscale, lead. $5 disposal fee), the hard drives are too small (and probably dead), and the processers are too slow for any decent applications.

    If it can't run Win95 or MacOS 7.5.x , then forget it. I've had dreams of organizing a Linux installfest for these aging systems, but to you still need a decent computer to run a GUI.


  • i hope they have my first computer.. an atari 800xl, that thing was a mean machine with BasicOS and a wopping (i think) 256k of ram.. woo hoo
  • I just moved from Boston to Baltimore, and the swap fest at MIT is one of the things I'll greatly miss. Note that it isn't really aimed at being a computer show, although it's slowly been approaching that. The cool stuff for sale are old (and new) electronic components. All kinds of crap, kind of like what the OLD style computer shows used to be about, when they were primarily DIY.
  • I'm a proud owner of:

    • TRS-80 Model I
    • An original Apple II (no, not the II+ or //e)
    • Two Commodore 64s
    • An Atari 800, 800xl and 1200xl
    In the past I've owned several PDP-11s (had to chuck 'em because of a move ARRRGH!), (11/03, 11/23+, an 11/34, and an original Hexbus 11 with a wirewrap backplane and 8KW of core. I'm not listing all the Suns, SGIs, HP9000s, and VAXen/Alphas... they're to "modern", all being at least 32 bit.

    I love old computers. :-) WRT the MIT flea... it's been slim pickings lately; mostly just old PC's. At least there's plenty of cool HAM radio and various test gear still for sale.
  • Most charities don't want your old PS/2's, they want decent, mostly-working computers that can be put to use by lower income families. Sure, the Good Will will take one or two of your 386-PC's at a time, but just try dumping a basement full on them and see how they react.

    Well I can only vouch for the good will here in seattle, but...

    An unforunate lucky bid at a university surplus auction landed myself and 2 roomates with 7 flats stacked 4 feet high each with old computer equipment. the good will sent over a truck and picked them right up.

    Though the likelihood of them wanting anything other than x86 and apple/mac hardware is pretty low, you'd be surprised what people can do with dirt old hardware. I'm sure quite a number of people would find DOS and Word 1.0 sufficient for their needs - or Linux and Pine, or whatever their installation of choice.
  • TI-99/4A--What a piece of crap. My parents bought that for me one Christmas because they didn't know any better. You couldn't do jack with it unless you shelled out for the "expansion module" which was like, $1000. Their business model was "sell them the machine, so they have to buy the expensive peripherals".

    It took months to convince them to get me a C-64, which I adored and used from 10th grade through the middle of college.

  • Or even better, an SGI Power Series IRIS 4D/30 VGX. The size of a 2 drawer filing cabinet and weighs about 240 lbs. And may or may not boot, depending on the flaky PROM.

    I believe it is only about 9 years old, not quite vintage by the definitions I've seen here.

  • I thought the speech was actually surprisingly good. If you ever get a chance to play the "Alpiner" game, you will hear some of the best synthesized voice on a computer - ever.
  • Dunno about the rest of you, but this link breaks for me...perhaps the TI/99 they're running the site on is overloaded? ;-) -psyconaut
  • Right on.. Often, I still find myself saying to myself "You forgot to duck."
  • If it was stock it was 64 (16 of it being banked under the ROM)... but you could hack 256K (hell, some even put a meg into 'em) into no problem. I had 256K internal and then the 256K MIO expansion box. Wicked quick RamDisk that didn't go tits up when you cycled the power. Those were the days.
  • hmmm.... there's actually a specific computer Goodwill here in Pittsburgh PA and they take all kinds of stuff...

    in fact they recently got a donation of something like 50 Sun IPCs and IPXs... I've even see old HP Apollos in there...

    Of course I have no idea if Goodwill has these stores anywhere else in the country....

    .technomancer

  • shouldn't this be... funny? not insightful?

    at least, i HOPE it's supposed to be funny....

    -------

  • Maybe this is the curse of living in the Bay Area... it's like some bizarre cyberpunk scenario. All this stuff was donated to my organization once (about 5 years ago) from Sun and other places. We used some of it, gave some of it away, and still have a bunch of it left over.
  • What makes you think that midwesterners care about California more than MIT? Being from Kansas, I would much rather go to MA than CA.
  • From this competition page [google.com] on the vintage computer site:

    Add a link to the VCF from your website and each time you refer a visitor to the VCF from the link on your website from now until VCF 4.0, you'll receive a point. The website making the most referrals (and therefore earning the most points) will win $50 cash and will be featured on the home page of the Vintage Computer Festival website!

    Slashdot Wins!

    Surely? Unless you've registered and goth the $50 for yourself ;-)

  • Look buddy, any more revisionist history outa you and I'll (to quote) "break your head with many open source cds" (in all caps).
  • Some old printers (The ones that you can still get ink for) are great for printing logs. I have an old HP (from 1982)that works great for text.

  • by thogard ( 43403 ) on Friday September 01, 2000 @04:13PM (#810093) Homepage
    I suspect there are several things that would help classify a computer as vintage.

    I'm guessing the most importaint factor is that it has been abaondoned by its maker. Things like a Sun 3 are vintage while a sparcstation 1 isn't (yet). A PDP-11 and most vaxen are but the Microvax isn't yet [slashdot.org] at least till the end of the month.

    I also expect that a minium of 5 years (or should it be 10) is needed. My web server [abnormal.com] is running on a Sparcstation 1 that is now over 11 years old and its not vintage yet so maybe 10 years should be the cut-off.

    I do know the the first computer to do music [mu.oz.au] that they are installing accross the street from my house [vic.gov.au] counts as vintage since its now 50 years old [abc.net.au].
  • My bedside Televideo-910 dumb-terminal probably qualifies as vintage computer equipment. It must be at least 20 years old, sits next to my bed so i can chat away on IRC when I wake up in the middle of the night...
  • The new Guiness Record of World Records hardcover hit the store shelves here in Ireland this week (Guiness Records being started by the Irish beer company of same name, meaning it always get prominent display here).
    Flipping through it, on the computer page, was a nice big colour picture of a Commodore 64, which a decade and a half later, still was the most popular computer of all time.

    ---
    "And the beast shall be made legion. Its numbers shall be increased a thousand thousand fold."
  • Sorry, I've already got one, exept mine's in the basement :-)
  • I have an old Tandy 1000 that still runs Deskmate...Would that qualify for a vintage computer? Either that or I have to find a network card for it so I can hook it up to my in house network....that way i can play HangMan on any of the computers from anywhere in the house...Talk about technology!


  • the person who runs vintage.org is hosting the site of his cable modem connection--first generation/vintage home-broadband. no wonder it takes five minutes to access a 1K HTML document on their site. ping times of upwards of ten seconds in some cases.
    if you are reading this sysadmin of vintage.org... well, sorry.
  • When I was but a wee li'l chillun, my parents bought an Atari 400. Used, but in the original box and everything!

    The games.... who can forget those. We had a few cartridges (defender, pac-man) which were FAR superior to the 2600. But the best games were loaded off of cassette tapes (5 or 10 minutes to load a game!)
    My favorite was Dog Daze, which was a 2-player game where you had to control your little dog and either pee on a blue fire hydrant, or throw your bone at it to turn it your color.

    A couple years later, that gave way to a shiny new Apple //c. That really was a fine machine.
    I still have all the old Apple Basic programs I wrote (and some games including the original Wolfenstein) running on my apple2 emulator. Good things never die.
  • Anything running in a nuclar power plant. Meets the 30 year rule too. Rock Solid Mother Fucker! That's why it's still there.
  • What do you want to do with it? DOS 3.2 and Word Perfect on a 8088 driven monochrome monitor spell checked and printed my papers from 1988 to 1994. It set me back $1000 at the time. Compiled FORTAN to debug it, then ran it off a vax on campus. That covers arts and sciences. Hell, with a 1200 baud modem, a logitech mouse and some old software AOL sent me gratis, I had email and www. I sadly retired that mobo two years ago when I droped a Cyrix media GX into the box. And I got Borland C rel 1 or so just one year later! Just missed it.

    Sounds like Decent=MS.Slave, I mean latest release compatible, Winblow2k or something. It's sad that some people are like that, they will never get anywhere. If they don't have the best around, they won't even try.

    Easy entry to Linux world starts at 386 with 8MB ram and 150MB hard drive. This includes most PS2's, though they are hard to support. A fellow grad student sold me the monitor I'm typing this on for $20, iff I removed his dead PS/2 with it. He had Debian running on it, 486 with 32MB ram and two nice little scsi. The video ram was burn and it failed to boot. The case is really nice and modular, and I wold feel bad stripping it, but I will if I ever buy a scsi controler! It might work well work well with my 8MB RAM, 33 MHz 486 that runs Debian and DOS 6.2 off a 210MB hard drive. More space is nice. I use it and my old amber monitor for mail at school.

    I'm dreaming of my old Peee Ceee tonight!

  • Better yet, when does a computer graduate from "Obsolete" to "Vintage"? Seems like hardware takes a step down before taking a step up.

    People are guessing that to be designated as "Vintage", hardware should be 5-10 years old. I must disagree. The Pentium started shipping 6 years ago, and I don't consider a Pentium Processor as "Vintage" by ANY stretch of the imagination.

    I think in the computer world, "Vintage" can't be an absolute, except in the idea of being older. Starting at about 10-15 years old seems about right, but it depends on the circumstance. The Commodore 64 and the i286 were introduced the same year - Which do you think is more a "Vintage" piece of hardware?

    Personally, I'd side with the C64, but that's due to personal nostalgia. But hey! Vintage equipment is SUPPOSED to invoke nostalgic feelings, so the definition is in the eye of the beholder.

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

  • Vintage computers are cool, but CA Extreme is going to be a much cooler event. Think of it. hundreds of arcade games and pinball machines, all on freeplay. I'm bringing a few of my collection. I'm trying to decide if I should bring the Ms. Pac Man, the Astroids Deluxe, the Space Duel, the Xenophobe, the Sinistar, or the Tempest.

    Any suggestions? -- Tricot

  • My oldest computer is an IBM portable 8088 from the 1980's, no hard drive, two 3.5 disk drives. It's original keyboard is gone, but all other original parts are there, and working. Is that a 'vintage' computer?
  • Sorry not going . If I want to see vintage computer I'll go look at the E-machines in the Sunnyvale Frys .Besides Fry's has a Klystron and a vintage Apple and Best of all FREE PARKING
  • Solaarius asked:

    Why?

    Here's my answer [intergate.ca]. Some of the other articles on my page are also germane.

    -Gareth

  • Glad to see so many are still keeping alive the old platforms. Truly a labor of love.

    My household encompassed a Sinclair, an Osbourne, some funky thing that was a suitcase computer for the lottery system, a couple of Vic-20s, a dozen or so of the Commodore 64s and even an Amiga 500.

    *g* I left all of those and took the AMD K6 when I moved out.

    ---
    Somebody should have labeled the future 'Some assembly required.'
  • Maybe /. should start wrapping links with the akamai trick [slashdot.org] so they are automatically cached.

  • I hope someone invited the windows 9x team along.
  • serial connection... with one line in inittab

    S5:2345:respawn:/sbin/getty ttyS1 DT9600 dumb

    that probably isn't the right terminal emulation , in fact , i believe 'tvi910' would be the proper termcap entry to use. But it works , halfassed, but good enough for irc :)

    it took a lot of playing around with , with no success.. then one day, my system rebooted itself after the power went out, then everything worked fine.... knock on wood. Maybe I was playing with setserial too much :)
  • I still think the mystery of Steve Jobs dropping out for a year in India still has to be written. Didn't Christ disappear for 7 years there? :-) !ed
  • My Apple II (also original) was stolen from me when a burglar 'visited' my place. It was right next to a 386-minitower and he left that {relieved sigh} so I did not lose all my work on it.
    Now I still have a *lot* of 5,25" diskettes with a lot of fun games on them. Do you have any idea how I could read them to my PII-300 running the A2 Emulator?

    ---
  • The MIT Flea looks more like a swap meet. There's nothing wrong with that, mind you, but I do want to point out that the Vintage Computer Festival [vintage.org], while it includes a flea market, is much more than that. There will be exhibits, speakers, and even a Nerd Trivia Challenge. The Vintage Computer Festival [vintage.org] is more scholarly (well, kinda) than just a flea market. Attendees should expect to learn, as well as buy or sell.

  • What qualifies for this distinction?

    An excellent question, and one that gets almost continual discussion amongst computer history buffs. Ten years seens to be a popular rule of thumb, but I'll give you my take on it. As I see it, there are three types of vintage computers:

    1. Those computers which are no longer manufactured, and are no longer in common use. These include computers such as:
      • Atari, Commodore, and Apple 8-bit home computers
      • Altairs, IMSAI's, CompuPro's, and a lot of other S-100 machines
      • A lot of the more well-known classic computers.
    2. Computers which are significantly different from their modern decendants, even though technically, the same line is still sold today. This would include:
      • Early Macintosh computers
      • Early Vaxen
      • Some of the more notable early PC's (IBM PC, Victor 9000, a PC's Limited Clone, etc.)
    3. Computers which represent a significant advance in technology/design or which departed radically from the norm. Examples are:
      • That corner PC somebody came out with a few years back
      • The Monorail -- one of the first consumer-oriented, all-in-one, flat-screen style computers
      • An awful lot of portable computers (which is why I collect them. A lot of weird stuff has been done to pack full functionality into a too-small box.)

    But why not come to the Vintage Computer Festival [vintage.org] and decide for yourself?

  • UNIX was written in C Try writting Windows in VB

    Windows 2000 was written in Visual C++. Try writing UNIX in PERL.

    Makes as much sense.

  • Let this poor sad fool
    With no sense of history
    Choke on his own bile.

    (And your last line is a syllable too long.)

  • No, just shitty.

  • And trying to do any decent 3D modeling at work on an 8086 might be a little trying...

    Hey, Wizardry ran on a 6502, man! These modern 3D apps are all code bloat.

  • Long live the MacAquarium! http://www.microserve.net/hac /interesting/macquarium/ [microserve.net] I am sure those instructions could be modified for any computer.
  • My oldest computer is an IBM portable 8088 from the 1980's, no hard drive, two 3.5 disk drives. It's original keyboard is gone, but all other original parts are there, and working. Is that a 'vintage' computer?

    Absolutely. But you ought to "upgrade" it -- my IBM "portable" has a 486 mobo, 32 megs RAM, 1.2 gig IDE drive and a NIC. I have it running Slack 2.0.36 but no X because of the built-in 9" yellow screen 80x25 monitor. That doesn't matter because we all know that CLI rules anyway! :->
    --
    You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
  • I got an old acorn at a swap meet for $7 .au. I can't seem to get the mouse working I think I need a special k'board for it.

"Experience has proved that some people indeed know everything." -- Russell Baker

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