Thanks to craigslist someone posted this old laptop in the free section. Its a toshiba 205cds. A neat little pentium machine with 16mb of ram. it came complete with manuals, printer, external floppy, driver disks, everything.
The printer is a bubblejet, thesticker says its color, but there is only a black cartridge installed. Naturally its dried up and useless, but it does seem to want to work. If I happen across a cartridge, I might give it a full test.
boots quickly into win 95b. total fresh install too. nothing but the drivers have been installed. That and the cd drive came with a cereal box scrabble game.
After checking the bag, it also had a pcmcia modem (not pictured) and an iomega clik drive. The sd <-> pcmcia card was mine, I was expecting to transfer files off the hdd. The clik drive has dos 6.22 on it for whatever reason. 40mb of awesome!
Don't know what I'm going to do with it. The screen is HORRIBLE. And the pointer works but is horribly sensitive one moment and totally unresponsive the next. The price was right anyway!
It is a mistake to think you can solve any major problems just with potatoes.
@Beegle; I have one of those which matches an ISA Aztech card with which I got it years back. It sucks and the radio card is unreliable. Hopefully you have better luck with yours, I don't listen to the radio anyway because pop music is crap.
@Luckybob; If the drivers are still on the drive you might want to save them as Toshiba have been deleting support for their old laptops. I keep meaning to copy the ones for my 410CDT off of the drive.
I was still able to get Satellite 200CDT (same system but with a TFT screen) drivers from Toshiba a year or two ago, but it's never a bad thing to back up something like that. They're nice laptops, but it's definitely a lot better with the TFT screen than it is with a dual-scan screen! Wish mine had all of the trimmings though, I was never able to find the correct floppy drive before I sold the thing.
Thanks to craigslist someone posted this old laptop in the free section. Its a toshiba 205cds. A neat little pentium machine with 16mb of ram. it came complete with manuals, printer, external floppy, driver disks, everything.[/url]
The printer is a bubblejet, thesticker says its color, but there is only a black cartridge installed. Naturally its dried up and useless, but it does seem to want to work. If I happen across a cartridge, I might give it a full test.
Really want an old Pentium laptop, bad screens notwithstanding. So jelly! I also remember reading about those little printers in PC World and wanting one purely because they were so compact.
Thanks to craigslist someone posted this old laptop in the free section. Its a toshiba 205cds. A neat little pentium machine with 16mb of ram. it came complete with manuals, printer, external floppy, driver disks, everything.[/url]
The printer is a bubblejet, thesticker says its color, but there is only a black cartridge installed. Naturally its dried up and useless, but it does seem to want to work. If I happen across a cartridge, I might give it a full test.
Really want an old Pentium laptop, bad screens notwithstanding. So jelly! I also remember reading about those little printers in PC World and wanting one purely because they were so compact.
Get one with a TFT and you'll be fine, to be honest. I've got a few myself (one with a DSTN - Thinkpad 380E - and a couple of Latitude CP M233STs with TFTs) that I really should finish fixing.
I got pretty lucky today and picked up a pretty nice Tandy 1000SX to add to my stack of Tandy's....
I thought that I was lucky for just finding a fully working Tandy 1000 locally that even included the original keyboard and manuals...
But the luck would not stop there...
...the person I purchased it from even included an original Tandy VM-4 monochrome monitor in the original box and also a Roland EGA color monitor...
Two original Logitech 3 button mice and a bunch of software on 5.25" floppies...
...and low and behold, one look at the back of the case, I noticed that all the slots were almost filled with what I hoped to be more retro goodness...one look at the back and I noticed some serial ports and a network card and a modem (all with 8bit interfaces) which is pretty cool and already much more than I usually find to come with an old Tandy 1000, but what really intrigued me the most was an expansion card with a lonely 9pin connector taking up one of the slots. At first I thought that it was probably an EGA or 9pin VGA video card of some sort that the original owner somehow got to work with simultaneously with the on-board original Tandy video, but when I opened up the case to take a look, I was pleasantly surprised to see that the card was actually a Music Quest 8 bit MIDI interface card! 😀
I will need to make an interface cable, but I remembered that luckily Keropi and I believe Soviet Conscript have posted on how to make a homemade 9pin to 2XMIDI port (in and out) interface cable for this Music Quest card (Thank you for this Keropi and soviet conscript and whoever else was involved in coming up with the pinout information!!).
I have been on a bit of a hiatus from buying retro PC stuff lately and it's crazy that the week I get back into it after a couple months, I find these amazing treasures 😀 .
Oh and I almost forgot...I just won this Tandy 1000RL HD from ebay this week and it is being shipped out to me as we speak...
...can't wait to add it to my stack as well...I have been looking for a good deal for a 1000RL model for over 4 years now.
To "complete" my Tandy 1000 collection then I still need a 1000 model (I have the 1000 HD version), a 1000 TL/3, 1000 SL, 1000 SL/2, 1000 RSX, 1000 RLX, and a 1000 RL (non HD version)
Have you ever tried to connect those "close standards" PC --things like Tandy and Amiga-- to modern monitors? Or probably 4k TV? Do they work well with "non-native" monitors?
Have you ever tried to connect those "close standards" PC --things like Tandy and Amiga-- to modern monitors? Or probably 4k TV? Do they work well with "non-native" monitors?
Have you ever tried to connect those "close standards" PC --things like Tandy and Amiga-- to modern monitors? Or probably 4k TV? Do they work well with "non-native" monitors?
I see. How about Tandy? Is it true Tandy monitors are non-standard? I remember trying to run Wibarm in Tandy mode in DOSBOX, and the graphics become so jumbled that it's barely recognizable.
Have you ever tried to connect those "close standards" PC --things like Tandy and Amiga-- to modern monitors? Or probably 4k TV? Do they work well with "non-native" monitors?
I see. How about Tandy? Is it true Tandy monitors are non-standard? I remember trying to run Wibarm in Tandy mode in DOSBOX, and the graphics become so jumbled that it's barely recognizable.
They didn't use special monitors from what I can see, but they did have a totally different graphics set.
Tandy 1000's typically use RGBI output instead of analog RGB. I have been somewhat successful getting tandy graphics to display on my 1080p 60hz tv with various extron products....it's been a while since I tried but it involved using various scan converters and rgb to hdmi converter boxes. I can't exactly remember what I did but I can tell you it's possible but not without some decent quality conversion setup. I have also been successful in displaying tandy and amiga 500 rgb video to an old sony crt via rgb to component conversion again with extron products. It wasn't perfect for video quality when in the menu system or in dos but when you start up a game the graphics look really nice on a crt. I have many more experiments to try to get good results but it will take me some time. I have a stack of extron gear that I have been getting from a local recycler for a good price that usually do the trick if used in the right combination with the right cables. The great thing about most of the extron stuff is that there is virtually zero lag as well.
Reply 10337 of 52976, by Kreshna Aryaguna Nurzaman
Tandy 1000's typically use RGBI output instead of analog RGB. I have been somewhat successful getting tandy graphics to display on my 1080p 60hz tv with various extron products....
I see. 😳
What is RGBI, by the way?
retrofanatic wrote:
it's been a while since I tried but it involved using various scan converters and rgb to hdmi converter boxes. I can't exactly remember what I did but I can tell you it's possible but not without some decent quality conversion setup. I have also been successful in displaying tandy and amiga 500 rgb video to an old sony crt via rgb to component conversion again with extron products. It wasn't perfect for video quality when in the menu system or in dos but when you start up a game the graphics look really nice on a crt. I have many more experiments to try to get good results but it will take me some time. I have a stack of extron gear that I have been getting from a local recycler for a good price that usually do the trick if used in the right combination with the right cables. The great thing about most of the extron stuff is that there is virtually zero lag as well.
If I somehow managed to finish my personal game theater, I'd really be interested to connect various retro hardware --like Atari Console-- to modern computer screen and A/V receiver, so I'd be interested to hear more details. 😀