I can't believe you have Nova 1200's. I used a 1220 in the late 70's in
high school and it was old then.
Ours actually had a hard drive which was about 36" on a side, covered
with woodgrain vinyl, with a capacity of a MEGABYTE!!
I might still have the source to my Nova multiuser Star Trek around
someplace. It was so popular it got banned from the system since it
slowed everything down too much.
Kai
> ----------
> From: carl.friend_at_stoneweb.com[SMTP:carl.friend_at_stoneweb.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 1997 6:02 AM
> To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
> Subject: Wanted Systems
>
> I've seen a certain amount of conversation as to the
> appropriateness
> of "For Sale" messages on the list. So long as it doesn't get out of
> hand, some of the posts can be quite useful (like the one on IMSAI
> switches, for instance). How about "Wanted Systems" posts?
>
> I'm looking to flesh out my collection of 16-bit Data General
> hardware, and am looking for leads to systems, or systems themselves.
> Anything in the Nova/Eclipse line is fair game, with the exception
> of the 32-bit MV series (although I hope somebody is preserving
> them!).
> Any documentation is, of course, more than welcome.
>
> Thanks!
>
> --
>
>
> ______________________________________________________________________
> | |
> |
> | Carl Richard Friend (UNIX Sysadmin) | West Boylston
> |
> | Minicomputer Collector / Enthusiast | Massachusetts, USA
> |
> | mailto:carl.friend_at_stoneweb.com |
> |
> | http://www.ultranet.com/~engelbrt/carl/museum/ | ICBM: N42:21 W71:46
> |
> |________________________________________________|____________________
> _|
>
Received on Tue Apr 08 1997 - 12:12:36 BST