Reply 521 of 4734, by sf78
wrote:Went there this monday and picked up a Commodore 128 with keyboard and monitor.
Sweet! These used to sell for 100€ 5-6 years ago without monitor. Haven't seen one of them since.
Reply 522 of 4734, by Panties
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Reply 523 of 4734, by vmunix
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- Member
could be 28.8 , that board on top is weird, at first I thought this could be an ancient ISDN card but I do't think so.
Trailing edge computing.
Reply 524 of 4734, by kaputnik
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- Oldbie
Went to recycle some electronics stuff at work (doing it myself instead of delegating it since I got bitten by the retro bug 😁) and scored this gem:
A Black Box SW622A-R2 4-port KVM switch. Its exterior was quite dirty, but otherwise it is as good as new. Found it with only two KVM cables (that needs a clean up too), but since they use no proprietary or hard to source connectors, it'll be piece of cake to solder together equivalents 😀
Here's the best part, the connection possibilities. In addition to PS/2 stuff, it'll accept serial mice and AT keyboards. No adapters needed. Haven't found out whether I can use both those and PS/2 peripherals in parallel yet, guess time will tell. Absolutely awesome for retro purposes in any case.
Only tested it with a VGA monitor and PS/2 peripherals so far, that works like a charm at least 😀
Reply 525 of 4734, by vmunix
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Nice, I have a kvm switch but causes a lot of interference with the audio for some reason, it's so bad I was considering using a mechanical type of switch.
Trailing edge computing.
Reply 526 of 4734, by CelGen
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wrote:Went to recycle some electronics stuff at work (doing it myself instead of delegating it since I got bitten by the retro bug :D) […]
Went to recycle some electronics stuff at work (doing it myself instead of delegating it since I got bitten by the retro bug 😁) and scored this gem:
A Black Box SW622A-R2 4-port KVM switch. Its exterior was quite dirty, but otherwise it is as good as new. Found it with only two KVM cables (that needs a clean up too), but since they use no proprietary or hard to source connectors, it'll be piece of cake to solder together equivalents 😀
Only tested it with a VGA monitor and PS/2 peripherals so far, that works like a charm at least 😀
I have the 16 port version. It supports almost anything you give it. PC, mac, Sun, SGI, IBM....it takes it all like a dirty girl and the pinout for the DB25 is available online.
I found this:
IMHO:
This is a board I'll never use. I'll build a wall enclosure for it and some mocking statement from Intel where they said that soon RAMBUS would be standard and the P4 would be stock at 5ghz.
"It's science. I ain't gotta explain sh*t"
Reply 527 of 4734, by gdjacobs
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- l33t++
i850 chipset / S423?
All hail the Great Capacitor Brand Finder
Reply 528 of 4734, by Cyrix200+
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- Oldbie
I would build a system with it, love these dead ends in computer history!
wrote:I found this:
IMHO:
This is a board I'll never use. I'll build a wall enclosure for it and some mocking statement from Intel where they said that soon RAMBUS would be standard and the P4 would be stock at 5ghz.
1982 to 2001
Reply 529 of 4734, by candle_86
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- l33t
Custom built PC with ECS KT600 motherboard with nice case and a CD-RW and floppy drive
Geforce2 MX400 64mb
customer was throwing them out and I offered to recycle them for free
Reply 530 of 4734, by gdjacobs
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- l33t++
How's the ECS board for stability?
All hail the Great Capacitor Brand Finder
Reply 531 of 4734, by candle_86
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- l33t
wrote:How's the ECS board for stability?
no idea havn't messed with it yet
Reply 532 of 4734, by CelGen
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wrote:i850 chipset / S423?
Asus P4T. Correct.
I would build a system with it, love these dead ends in computer history!
P4's aren't historical, nor are they retrocomputing. They're junk.
"It's science. I ain't gotta explain sh*t"
Reply 533 of 4734, by candle_86
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- l33t
wrote:Asus P4T. Correct. […]
wrote:i850 chipset / S423?
Asus P4T. Correct.
I would build a system with it, love these dead ends in computer history!
P4's aren't historical, nor are they retrocomputing. They're junk.
P4's are historical, as a warning
Reply 534 of 4734, by einr
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Saved another system from death!
This is a Compaq Presario 5130. It has:
Intel Pentium II 350
64 MB RAM
6 GB Quantum Bigfoot TX
2X DVD-ROM
3,5" HD floppy
On-board ATI Rage LT Pro 4 MB video
On-board ESS AudioDrive ES1869
56k ISA modem
...and it looks like the previous owner upgraded it with a:
Hercules 3D Prophet 4000XT PCI (ST Kyro chip)
Haven't tried booting it yet but it looks good! Never used the Kyro chips, are they any good?
Reply 535 of 4734, by Tetrium
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- l33t++
wrote:Never used the Kyro chips, are they any good?
Keep it 😁
Reply 536 of 4734, by CelGen
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- Member
wrote:wrote:Asus P4T. Correct. […]
wrote:i850 chipset / S423?
Asus P4T. Correct.
I would build a system with it, love these dead ends in computer history!
P4's aren't historical, nor are they retrocomputing. They're junk.
P4's are historical, as a warning
Which is why this specimen is being hung on the wall in an acrylic case.
"It's science. I ain't gotta explain sh*t"
Reply 537 of 4734, by kanecvr
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- Oldbie
wrote:Which is why this specimen is being hung on the wall in an acrylic case.
I actually went to great lengths to acquire a working 423 mb+cpu. They are decent enough and rambus is interesting. It seems to work better on socket 370 then it does on 423/478 tough...
Reply 538 of 4734, by kaputnik
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- Oldbie
wrote:Nice, I have a kvm switch but causes a lot of interference with the audio for some reason, it's so bad I was considering using a mechanical type of switch.
Have you tried using a shorter cable to connect the audio receiver? Had the same problem with my Aten CS62S, lots of interference, but it all went away with a shorter cable. Not sure if it was the shortening itself or simply the the fact that the new cable was routed another way amongst the other cables under my desk that did the trick, but well, might be worth a try at least.
wrote:I have the 16 port version. It supports almost anything you give it. PC, mac, Sun, SGI, IBM....it takes it all like a dirty girl and the pinout for the DB25 is available online.
Ah, thanks, googled and found the pinout too. Saves me some work with the multimeter 😀
I'm really starting to like this thing. Studied the manual some to learn what it can do, and was quite impressed with the honesty, they mention limitations and even outright weaknesses. Not the usual our-product-is-the-best-thing-since-sliced-bread-pitch.
Love your way of expressing its compatibility 😁
Reply 539 of 4734, by vmunix
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wrote:wrote:Nice, I have a kvm switch but causes a lot of interference with the audio for some reason, it's so bad I was considering using a mechanical type of switch.
Have you tried using a shorter cable to connect the audio receiver? Had the same problem with my Aten CS62S, lots of interference, but it all went away with a shorter cable. Not sure if it was the shortening itself or simply the the fact that the new cable was routed another way amongst the other cables under my desk that did the trick, but well, might be worth a try at least.
The problem is this, the KVM switch is also for the audio cables, which is cool actually, imagine the PC sharing also the amplifier and the pair of speakers, but I think the shielding of the audio cable is not good enough and the interference from the vga or mouse or whatever signal is being picked up buy my amp, it can also be heard using headphones, it first is not big deal but after 10 or 15 minutes with the hiss you endup plugging the headphones directly into the soundcard, which in my case will always be a random Turtle B. known for being very very low noise.
Trailing edge computing.