Educational subsidies

From: Eileen Backofen <backofene_at_hotmail.com>
Date: Sun Oct 18 12:51:03 1998

The problems your mention is exactly what we had - over & over again.
Perhaps our failure rate was due to the fact that all our Eduquests came
through the grocery receipts program, we never actually bought one. And
through that program, getting repairs was a hassle and they always
needed repair.



>there's nothing wrong with eduquests at all. in fact, the model 55 is
quite
>nice. the only problem is lack of many slots inside and only one bay
for a
>hard drive as well as if the monitor or power supply fail, that's
expensive. i
>like how the inner tray slides out with your system board and
everything on
>it. very handy.
>
>
>
>In a message dated 10/18/98 9:43:39 AM US Eastern Standard Time,
>maxeskin_at_hotmail.com writes:
>
>> Thanks. Actually, my school just got rid of a lab full of eduquests
>> to another school, and we still have one of them in the basement.
>> These seem like OK machines, though never tried to use them. They're
>> like PS/2 Model 25s only bigger. They have microphone and headphone
>> jacks on the front, along with a floppy drive. They're all 486s with
>> 16 MB RAM, IIRC. What was wrong with these?
>


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Received on Sun Oct 18 1998 - 12:51:03 BST

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