Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
I was a member many years ago here but my original account seems to be
deactivated. In any case, the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA (next to Google HQ) wants an N770, see http://www.computerhistory.org/artifactdonation/ I didn't get involved until the N800 so can't help them out. A virtual high-five to anyone who is willing to do this for them. |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
I would suggest Ebay...for them if they desire an n770..
or other such venue... There are precious few n770 owners about here...anymore... I have one... and I could count on 1 hand the number of n770 owners I have run into in the last 5 years here... any remaining n770 owners who do have one... Most likely it is their only one.. it is unlikely they will part with it... perhaps someone here has a broken one... that they could part with... equally a stretch is the hope that there are lots of people who have simply a used one in a desk drawer... but that is a stretch... Of that number... I think I have run into even less than 1 hands worth of people over the last 6+ years... If they had inquired long ago... they would have had a better chance I think... Wish them luck... As far as your account being deactivated... there is no such thing as that here... |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
I second eBay. Most things on their wish list can be found there.
The list seems exceedingly US-centric, with an odd Japanese item here and there. Nothing from Eastern Europe, for example. Perhaps that is the idea, given the museum's location. But then they should be honest and name it the museum of Silicon Valley computing history. |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
I feel like the next door neighbr to Google is probably funded but it can be hard for some poor nerdy kid to get their hands on a brokne laptop where they have to fix the power supply or replace the HDD to make it work with a fresh lubuntu install.
That said I hope the museum finds a clean bricked N770 on an auction or in someones desk drawer to display. |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
Quote:
Quote:
Robotron 1715, 1984, VEB Kombinat Robotron Robotron computers Robotron was the leading computer manufacturer in the former GDR, which at that time at least politically was considered part of Eastern Europe. My father had a KC 85/3 [1] in the late 80's, which was my first contact with a computer. It got kind of burried in the basement after the fall of the Berlin wall and my father's purchase of his first PC. But in the late 90's, when I was in high school and made a presentation about computer history, we unburried it and I brought it to school, where it was quite a great attraction that day. I kept it through my studium, but when I graduated and moved out of my dorm room, my mother unfortunately threw it in the junk. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KC_85 |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
Quote:
|
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
Quote:
|
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
Quote:
Also, has anyone ever visited it? I'm actually going to California next week but it is a bit out of my way. EDIT: Just occurred to me they may have a variety of representative examples from eastern Europe. This list is a request for additional pieces... |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
My pressing question about the museum is...
Does it have a log flume water ride? I'll go if it does... |
Re: Computer History Museum in Silicon Valley seeking N770
Quote:
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 09:36. |
vBulletin® Version 3.8.8