First post, by king_grimloc
Hello all,
My first post!
I purchased 10 used EPROMS from Jameco Electronics last month in a grab bag. 5 of them were without labels, but the other 5 had the manufacturer labels still attached. I found one from a company called Number Nine Computer Corp. Number Nine was from Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, and created high-end video cards for the business industry. The EPROM in question has a sticker on it labeled "NNIOS Number Nine Computer Corp. All Rights Reserved 1986-90" with part of the label ripped off to show the part number of the EPROM. I have only seen one video of a person talking about a video card that used these EPROMS and I can't seem to find any other information other than the later video cards from the mid '90s. I also found many other, possibly important, EPROMS in the grab bag.
I have the EPROM image, along with several 386/486 BIOS chips and others that may or may not be copyrighted information from. I would be happy to share these images if it is legal to do so. I believe the NNIOS chip would be OK since it clearly states that the copyright shows 1986 to 1990. I just don't want to get myself or anyone else in trouble.
My question is; is this a chip that needs archived or can I safely remove the label and erase it?
The fact that I couldn't find much, if any information on the video cards that used this EPROM, or Number Nine Computer Corp. for that matter, I don't want this to become lost if someone can still use it.
Thank you for reading.
