Technically this was yesterday, but I went thrifting and also checked out the Freegeek garage sale. I picked up a bunch of bits and baubles:
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The fan is a big scary Delta with three blades, an inch and a half of thickness, and close to an amp of power draw. I bought it because it's loud and awesome, but now I'm scared to even try it.
The cable beside it looks like a 30-pin iDevice dock to 3.5mm connector. Might be handy if I run across a cheap iPhone dock since nothing uses that connector anymore.
Both the mice are from Value Village, which was surprising because usually they don't have anything that old. The serial mouse is made by Mitsumi and mostly unremarkable, but I wanted a backup if I couldn't figure out the PS/2 header on my Pentium box. The Microsoft mouse is actually an optical one, and though it's probably early-2000s it looks similar to the one I had in the 90s while offering some modern conveniences. It is, however, filthy.
I had a combo laser pointer like the one on the lower left before, but I broke it. I've been looking for a replacement ever since. Unfortunately the batteries are junk and I don't have any spares so I'll need to get some.
The model kit was cheap and looks really neat. I'm not good with those and I'm not sure if I'll ever build it.
Finally, we have Black and White, which you probably can't read because of the glare. This is the deluxe edition, but they also had the base game and expansion separately. I was kind of surprised to see two copies, because I wanted this game for a video a while back and couldn't find it anywhere, and I mean anywhere.
And I also got, well, this:
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They weren't actually selling what I was looking for (an AT case for my Pentium build), but I asked if they had one and they had this whole computer. It was in pretty rough shape, and I wasn't expecting much, but it seemed to be intact physically and all I really needed was the case. And if the optical drive worked, that would be a nice bonus provided it was IDE (which I wasn't sure of at first).
To my surprise, the machine booted. I did remove all the nonessential bits including the badly bent modem first. There was no hard drive, but DOS from a floppy or floppy emulator worked fine. And it's quite a fascinating machine, clearly an early 1990s 486 machine that was upgraded at least once. The motherboard has an OPTi chipset and no VLB or PCI, the processor is a DX4 Overdrive, clearly not original, and the CD-ROM dates from 1995.
I feel kind of bad tearing it apart, but there are two pretty serious issues with the machine. The first is the unreliable power switch. It needs to be nudged just the right way to fully turn on, and makes ominous sparking sounds if it's not. Yikes! The second is the leaking clock battery, which only seems to have caused cosmetic damage but definitely needs to be changed before it gets worse.
Perhaps this machine will live again, but for now I'm just going to use some of its parts in my Pentium rig. If the CD-ROM works, I'll be using that since it's far more period-appropriate than my other one (a DVD-RW from 2009), I might use the soundcard, and the case of course is what I bought it for.