View allAll Photos Tagged oldcomputer
Rowan's description: "Ah, it's an early-on turbo model, 90s, a 286 I think. IBM compatible"
Later (he's taken it to bits): it's a 386SX actually
This was, surprisingly, seems to be a II Plus rather than a Europlus. Previous I'd only seen the Europlus over here, so naturally I grabbed it.
CANON X-07 / Hand Held Computer avec carte mémoire XM-101 (8K Bytes) à l'intérieur du micro (Fonctionnel , merci HEBDOGICIEL !)
Cartouche / Programme YRM-301 / Enregistreur MIDI YAMAHA ( transforme votre ordinateur musical YAMAHA en enregistreur MIDI 4-pistes, en temps réel ).
Dimension 2350 Intel Pentium 4 Processor @ 2.20GHz with
512K L2 Cache 128MB DDR-SDRAM 17 inch Monitor
Using IBM 2741 Terminals - apparently the latest technology everyone wanted.
This is a digital rendition of a 35mm transparency scanned with an Epson Perfection 4490 Photo scanner. Some colour restoration has been applied.
aspen, colorado
may 1980
nick with the computer he built to run the aspen dancing fountain
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
Cartouche / Éditeur RX YAMAHA YRM-302 ( permet une programmation , à partir de l'Ordinateur musical YAMAHA, des programmateurs de rythme YAMAHA RX11 ou 15 ).
This heap of old american seconds was visible outside the library of the Community college in Grenada. There was some reluctance to part with all this junk.
Windows 98, refurbed Compaq Presario 5686 (Pentium III) with a $5 thrift store monitor. It knew what day it was, but the clock was off by 40 minutes or so.
My next project is to fire up my very first computer...I think it's around here somewhere.
It still works! Now to try and remember how you load files off Microdrive... there's also a mod my eldest brother did for me to get composite video out. That's the cable snaking off at the top. Note the Psion software starter pack - whatever happened to them?!
Arguably the most important part of the ZX Spectrum was the BASIC programming manual which taught a generation of schoolkids something of the fundamentals of coding.
NOW WHERE THE FRICK IS MY RASPBERRY PI!?
Zoomer :) It is still working :)
"The Casio Z-7000, XL7000, Tandy Z-PDA and AST Gridpad 2390 are all the same machine, the Zoomer. The XL-7000 does not include AOL, or other US specific documents.
The machine was engineered by Casio, Palm Computing, Datalight and Geoworks. Casio designed the hardware and ROM BIOS. Datalight provided it's ROM-DOS v3.31. Palm Computing provided most of the applications that run on the Zoomer as well as the handwriting recognition (PalmPrint). Geoworks provided Geoworks v2.0 and also provides development software for the Zoomer in it's SDK."