OT somewhat. China, our aircraft, delays.

From: Sellam Ismail <foo_at_siconic.com>
Date: Mon Apr 9 18:29:04 2001

On Mon, 9 Apr 2001, Ross Archer wrote:

> > > So this discussion isn't totally off-topic, does anyone have
> > > any suggestions on how to fix my dead KIM-1 keyboard?
> >
> > Find a cheap Chinese-made replacement keyboard.
>
> Hehe, brilliant reply.
>
> I was hoping to do something more home-made
> and customized to have the same layout.
> The odds of getting that in a premade keyboard
> are about the same as that crash actually
> being deliberate from either side, which is
> to say, low. But conspiracy theories are fun. :-)

Ok, so all kidding aside, your best bet is to probably find a batch of
surplus KIM-1 keyboards (this is not as far-fetched as you may
think...certainly less far-fetched than the idea of Jeffrey staying on
topic ;)

The next equally impossible suggestion is to find another KIM-1 that is
mostly junk and use it for parts.

I'll bet that the KIM-1 keypad was the same type that was used in one of
Commodore's pocket calculators. But even THOSE are pretty rare.

I guess you're SOL. Is it possible to unsolder the keypad and disassemble
it to clean the contacts?

Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
Received on Mon Apr 09 2001 - 18:29:04 BST

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