At 08:07 PM 11/6/04 +0100, you wrote:
>It seems to be the same as an Olivetti M24 I just read on the net.
IIRC the M24 is the same as the AT&T 6300. The AT&Ts were made by Olivetti and used 8086 CPU and 16 bit bus and non standard keyboards and monitors. The monitors had slightly higher resolution than the PCs and the electrical interfaces were very different.
Joe
>(Perhaps I should put all my finds together in one mail next time....)
>
>Stefan
>
>At 20:00 6-11-2004, you wrote:
>>It's a nice little Xerox badged Olivetti. 8088, I think. About the same
>>as an AT&T 6300.
>>
>>On Sat, 6 Nov 2004 birs23_at_zeelandnet.nl wrote:
>>
>> > This person has one :
>> http://www.minotaurz.com/compmuse/museum/directory.html
>> >
>> > Quote from the site "Xerox 6060 (1984), very sturdy DOS machine in an
>> > attempt to play catchup after the marketing failure of the 8010 Star "
>> >
>> > Stefan
>> >
>> > At 18:37 6-11-2004, you wrote:
>> > >Any one know anything about a Xerox 6060. I've got a free one to pickup
>> > >tomorrow and I'm wondering what it is and is it worth the effort. It's
>> > >set up with a 10/10 Bernoulli box too. There doesn't seem to be much on
>> > >Google about it as Xerox also uses 6060 as the model number of a large
>> > >digital printing press.
>> > >
>> > >James
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >--
>> > >www.blackcube.org The Texas State Home for Wayward and Orphaned Computers
>> > >
>> >
>> >
>>
>>--
>>M. K. Peirce
>>
>>Rhode Island Computer Museum, Inc.
>>Shady Lea, Rhode Island
>>
>>"Casta est quam nemo rogavit."
>>
>> - Ovid
>
>-------------------------------------------------------
>http://www.oldcomputercollection.com
>
>
Received on Sat Nov 06 2004 - 21:17:09 GMT