About a week ago I visited my friend to see some of his trash that he is going to throw out. I stumbled upon old beige box with display and 5.25" floppy drive. Of course I took it, the only reasons why I would not take it is coma or death. But since I don't have a way to transport stuff except my own hands and feet, so I put it to bag and went home. From his home it is about 2 kilometers of walk and this puppy weighs about 10 kilos... Yuck.
Here is photo I took in the middle of walk when it started to rain. Just in time... :\

Short before my home there is a electronics scrap collecting point and that day there was big "Recycle electronics, save Earth" kind of days, so I had to dig through stuff there. But this time I was disappointed a lot. Pretty generic stuff was there, one AT rubber dome keyboard with F7 key missing, two generic serial port mice, complete parallel port scanner sealed in plastic wrap (didn't take that, I don't have space for that kind of stuff - to be true, I have two of them and I have to throw them away, I have no use for them), and the saddest computer I have ever seen. More about that later
Jeez, finally home!

I only had few moments to go through stuff I scored, so I am not sure what I have. From what I managed to remember that beige puppy is the dustiest computer I ever stumbled upon. It was home bookkeeping computer, it was upgrade from Commodore PC20-III 8088 PC, which I coincidentally have aswell. This thing was bought new and working since early 90s to mid 2000's with no changes at all. It has 486 40MHz by Texas Instruments (didn't know they did CPUs). The mainboard is a little bit wonky though. Next to the CPU there is math coprocessor slot, but the label on it says 387 PIN 87DLC, I don't know what is up with that.


What is the saddest computer you say? Just look at this...



Every cable was cut. And I mean that every single one was cut in two. Apparently, it was lying somewhere outside, leaves, bugs and mold got inside. Funnily enough, the harddrive was there, so I pulled everything out and let it dry for few days. Yesterday I scraped all the mold from the harddrive and tried to power it up and guess what? It works flawlessly, all the data is there. This is personal data safety done completely wrong. 😁