Ozzuneoj wrote on 2025-02-13, 07:56:
Thermalwrong wrote on 2025-02-13, 03:04:What a curious keyboard, normally I'd rate it down because of those power and sleep buttons displacing the keys that regularly g […]
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sfryers wrote on 2025-02-12, 21:12:A cheap, yellowed early 2000's keyboard: […]
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A cheap, yellowed early 2000's keyboard:
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Wouldn't normally be worth a second glance, except for...
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...the buckling spring mechanism! Hardly an IBM Model-M, but an interesting curiosity nonetheless. Model number is IZITK-105M, apparently manufactured by the Can Technology Co. Ltd., Taiwan.
It has an unusually small spacebar and a Fn key next to the right shift, which can be used to set the repeat rate. Pressing Fn+Print Screen causes it to output the string "eleen enterprise co., ltd. v1.02" to the connected PC.
What a curious keyboard, normally I'd rate it down because of those power and sleep buttons displacing the keys that regularly go in those spots, but it's buckling spring? With a windows key?
Today I got this little 8" LCD TV from a made-up-brand-from-maplins - I was going to take it apart to get the LCD since it's a 640x480 TFT but it works so well as a mini VGA monitor and composite TV that it's going to get used. It's got a really convenient built-in stand, stereo speakers and it looks nice 😀
Nearly pixel perfect VGA is something I find you generally can't get with analogue VGA screens, like the screen would normally do some awkward scaling, but this one doesn't do too badly at VGA resolution:
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It's got some weirdness where getting the vertical position right is though, which is especially bad with 720x400 resolution. It's usable but cuts off quite a lot at the top:
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Oh, that little thing is cool! I can't believe it actually has a VGA input!
Yeah, maplins did some cool stuff back in the day, I need to test out the latency on it for games but it might not be too bad. With the little kickstand it's a very handy little display, like the mini monitors I love making: Re: A Permanent Solution to the Dell 'Fake ATX' Power Supply Problem?
Today I got another Toshiba T4400c laptop, among others but this one works. It came with a broken CPU & hard drive, then I swapped in a good CPU along with a recapped power board to stop it destroying more things. Today the LTM09C011 control board got recapped too, look at how bad the leaked electrolyte was - this screen actually worked for a bit prior to the recapping:
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after:
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All put back together - this one is special though because it has the BIOS to support drives other than the original Toshiba 120MB drive (which was also destroyed by leaking caps). It just auto detects a 256MB CompactFlash card and that's so nice. This T4400C looked so good after a wash too, the paint on these is wonderful for how it doesn't age like other plastics:
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It had a 4MB memory expansion card and those are ridiculously rare - tragically it would throw a memory error at 6.5MB (4MB internal & 2.5MB of the card). The connector of the memory card I thought was standard JEIDA but no, looks like this Toshiba T4400 / T6400 card has a custom pinout and will only work with cards designed for it. Regular JEIDA cards just do nothing even when they're 5v ones.
So of course this had to be disassembled too - I thought that maybe a power surge that killed the CPU also damaged this RAM card - because the power boards on T4400's are all faulty until recapped, causing havoc when powered up. But the chips on the card looked okay, so I resoldered all the pins on the memory chips of this super rare memory card and wah, now the card works at the full 8MB! At last I have achieved 8MB of memory on a T4400C!
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(I have actually had a really bad, terrible time with T4400C & T4400SXC laptops lately. I got careless trying to run a working T4400C before recapping the power board which destroyed the CPU, the hard drive & stopped the mainboard from booting. The other two T4400C / T4400SXC laptops I've got for parts also all seem to have suffered catastrophic damage from the power board fault, with dead mainboards / cpus. The upside is those had good screens, hard drives, recappable power boards. I'm so glad this latest one only had a bad CPU and hard drive...)