I found an 8.25" floppy

lol, i love the “[PBS]”

Yep…A lot of the commands interchange.

Actually, I had a buyer for the pacer already, but not the xenix box. I miss the pacer. I drove that thing all over Utah. I even towed a 66 microbus from SLC to Payson. You think you get wierd looks driving a pacer, try driving a pacer with a microbus on a car dolly behind it. It looked for all the world like the bus was trying to mount the pacer. Think of the offspring.

I met a guy one time who had one in his third story appartment. He got his job, they offered to move his household goods for him from wherever he was from. They had to pay movers to haul this 800 pound monstrocity up 3 flights of stairs. Whats worse, a friend of mine bought it from him, and I had to help move it down the stairs. It and the manuals took two pickups to haul away.

I just wanted to mention that there is a novel called The Crow Road by Iain Banks which contains this very same problem as a plot device.

example. You can find these on ebay.

And I’ve got you beat with a fine leather belt.

I have the book on how to convert your IBM Selectric™ typewriter into a computer printer. All of 50¢ in the thrift shop. I also have the commercially produced ASCII to Selectric code conversion box bought in another thrift shop for all of $5.[sup]00[/sup] (I had to argue them down from $15.[sup]00[/sup] by indicating that the printers they had for sale cost less than they wanted for the converter). I even use to have a Selectric™ typewriter as well, but @sshole so-called “friends” burned it out the one time loaned it to them. It has since been thrown out.

We’ll ignore the 14" diameter “mud” (ferrous oxide) disc drive platters I have in my eletronics collection. These were originally used for television instant replay. Feel free to peruse my MPSIMS postfor a glimpse into true solid state madness.

You have no idea. Ever seen an 16 inch “sloppy disk”…? It was a naked 16 inch piece of magnetic media, with no sleeve to protect it, they were notoriously fragile. It was used in PLATO IV terminals (circa 1972) and was driven not by an electric motor, but by a compressed air turbine. The disks could store digital data or audio recordings. Boy I wish I could find an old 16in sloppy disk, nobody ever believes me when I describe it. I’d love to see the looks on people’s faces when I pull out my 16 incher…