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Speaking of Henry Spencer
Hi Everybody? Is the STICK dead yet?
Just a quick update, the Fujitsu hard disk in the 'Henry Spencer' died, a head crash worse than I have ever before witnessed in my entire life, probably a result of lack of use, and so I put the SCSI disk drive back into the beloved Henry Spencer, and then I went out on eBay and bought a used AMD K6-2+ CPU for $0.25 (yes 25 cents, plus $4.00 shipping, lol) and reset the voltage to 2.0 volts, and the multiplier to 4.5 (450 MHz) and the Henry Spencer experienced an epiphany, a transformation, a real upgrade in performance. Plus it runs a lot cooler now, this is the chip with the on chip fast cache RAM and fabbed at 0.18 microns, they sell like hotcakes on eBay, flap jacks. The German guy who was selling K6-3+s for $30.00 bucks brand new just sold out, and another guy has a tray of 10 brand new K6-2+s already bid up to $50.00. Smaller is better, Henry. That SCSI hard disk is still cranking out a lot of heat, though. |
#2
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
On Jul 23, 11:36*am, kT wrote:
Hi Everybody? Is the STICK dead yet? Just a quick update, the Fujitsu hard disk in the 'Henry Spencer' died, a head crash worse than I have ever before witnessed in my entire life, probably a result of lack of use, and so I put the SCSI disk drive back into the beloved Henry Spencer, and then I went out on eBay and bought a used AMD K6-2+ CPU for $0.25 (yes 25 cents, plus $4.00 shipping, lol) and reset the voltage to 2.0 volts, and the multiplier to 4.5 (450 MHz) and the Henry Spencer experienced an epiphany, a transformation, a real upgrade in performance. Plus it runs a lot cooler now, this is the chip with the on chip fast cache RAM and fabbed at 0.18 microns, they sell like hotcakes on eBay, flap jacks. The German guy who was selling K6-3+s for $30.00 bucks brand new just sold out, and another guy has a tray of 10 brand new K6-2+s already bid up to $50.00. Smaller is better, Henry. That SCSI hard disk is still cranking out a lot of heat, though. Look here kT, we both like Henry and we both know that Henry's system is less than he deserves. I know you're willing to donate a system, but so am I. I live in a college town (University of Maryland, College Park). That said, I recently acquired a 2.6 GHz E-Systems computer complete with Windows XP, that I am willing to donate to a useful cause. E-Systems is not a top of the line system, however, it is better than what you are trying to send to Henry and better than what he has now. I'll donate what I have, but I want to make sure it gets into good hands... Eric |
#3
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
Eric Chomko wrote:
On Jul 23, 11:36 am, kT wrote: Hi Everybody? Is the STICK dead yet? Just a quick update, the Fujitsu hard disk in the 'Henry Spencer' died, a head crash worse than I have ever before witnessed in my entire life, probably a result of lack of use, and so I put the SCSI disk drive back into the beloved Henry Spencer, and then I went out on eBay and bought a used AMD K6-2+ CPU for $0.25 (yes 25 cents, plus $4.00 shipping, lol) and reset the voltage to 2.0 volts, and the multiplier to 4.5 (450 MHz) and the Henry Spencer experienced an epiphany, a transformation, a real upgrade in performance. Plus it runs a lot cooler now, this is the chip with the on chip fast cache RAM and fabbed at 0.18 microns, they sell like hotcakes on eBay, flap jacks. The German guy who was selling K6-3+s for $30.00 bucks brand new just sold out, and another guy has a tray of 10 brand new K6-2+s already bid up to $50.00. Smaller is better, Henry. That SCSI hard disk is still cranking out a lot of heat, though. Look here kT, we both like Henry and we both know that Henry's system is less than he deserves. I know you're willing to donate a system, but so am I. I live in a college town (University of Maryland, College Park). That said, I recently acquired a 2.6 GHz E-Systems computer complete with Windows XP, that I am willing to donate to a useful cause. E-Systems is not a top of the line system, however, it is better than what you are trying to send to Henry and better than what he has now. I'll donate what I have, but I want to make sure it gets into good hands... I'm pretty sure Henry, like the rest of us, got past his K-6 bottleneck. I only run the 'Henry Spencer' because I am a 'computer enthusiast'. I needed to prove to myself that I've still got the 'right stuff'. Besides, it's a K6-2+, those chips are still selling for $20.00. I suggest you check out the trade in old and obsolete CPUs. People all over the world are doing this, it's fun as hell! That being said, I still draw the line at K6-3+s and PIIIs. In other words, I only run the PIIs until I can find a PIII to put in them, although I still have a few legacy A440LXs which I run for fun. The driving factor here is power and heat, not functionality or speed. Here is the link, only seven of them left now, get them while you can : http://cgi.ebay.com/K6-III-450-ACZ-K...2em118Q2el1247 Only 14 SSMEs left! The aftermarket for those things is gonna be HUGE! |
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
On Jul 30, 7:57*am, kT wrote:
Eric Chomko wrote: On Jul 23, 11:36 am, kT wrote: Hi Everybody? Is the STICK dead yet? Just a quick update, the Fujitsu hard disk in the 'Henry Spencer' died, a head crash worse than I have ever before witnessed in my entire life, probably a result of lack of use, and so I put the SCSI disk drive back into the beloved Henry Spencer, and then I went out on eBay and bought a used AMD K6-2+ CPU for $0.25 (yes 25 cents, plus $4.00 shipping, lol) and reset the voltage to 2.0 volts, and the multiplier to 4.5 (450 MHz) and the Henry Spencer experienced an epiphany, a transformation, a real upgrade in performance. Plus it runs a lot cooler now, this is the chip with the on chip fast cache RAM and fabbed at 0.18 microns, they sell like hotcakes on eBay, flap jacks. The German guy who was selling K6-3+s for $30.00 bucks brand new just sold out, and another guy has a tray of 10 brand new K6-2+s already bid up to $50.00. Smaller is better, Henry.. That SCSI hard disk is still cranking out a lot of heat, though. Look here kT, we both like Henry and we both know that Henry's system is less than he deserves. I know you're willing to donate a system, but so am I. I live in a college town (University of Maryland, College Park). That said, I recently acquired a 2.6 GHz E-Systems computer complete with Windows XP, that I am willing to donate to a useful cause. E-Systems is not a top of the line system, however, it is better than what you are trying to send to Henry and better than what he has now. I'll donate what I have, but I want to make sure it gets into good hands... I'm pretty sure Henry, like the rest of us, got past his K-6 bottleneck. I only run the 'Henry Spencer' because I am a 'computer enthusiast'. I needed to prove to myself that I've still got the 'right stuff'. Besides, it's a K6-2+, those chips are still selling for $20.00. I suggest you check out the trade in old and obsolete CPUs. People all over the world are doing this, it's fun as hell! That being said, I still draw the line at K6-3+s and PIIIs. The whole "Classic Computer" (see my collection he http://home.comcast.net/~pne.chomko/comp_list.htm) thing has gone into a case where the older systems cutoff point from a timeline perspective is not moving forward. What this means is that unless you have something from before mid 1980s and earlier, you have nothing from a collectable computer perspective. Everything in the past 20+ years is NOT collectable with few exceptions such as the NeXT computer. Basically there exists three categories of home computer/PCs that exist. The early stuff that is collectable, a bunch of stuff that is too old to use and is not collectable and newer stuff that people use. The earliest category grows very slowly. The middle category grows very rapidly. And the last category is basically the computer market as we know it today of which most people use daily. When something is no longer usable it goes into the ever growing middle category. In other words, I only run the PIIs until I can find a PIII to put in them, although I still have a few legacy A440LXs which I run for fun. All of which, though fun, will never have any resale value to anyone. More people would rather have the Pentium 1 chip that had the floating point error, as a novelty, rather than a PII or a PIII system. The driving factor here is power and heat, not functionality or speed. Too slow and nobody will use it. Here is the link, only seven of them left now, get them while you can : http://cgi.ebay.com/K6-III-450-ACZ-K...G_W0QQitemZ260... I collect chips as others do and have a few K6s. I like them. Only 14 SSMEs left! The aftermarket for those things is gonna be HUGE! Ah....no... Think middle category of ever growing stuff. Supply and demand. The supply will outpace demand for a long long time. Eric |
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
I have an 8085, ISTR they are still available new.
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
Neil Gerace wrote:
I have an 8085, ISTR they are still available new. Has anyone seen one of these yet? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VIA_C7 Supposedly they're rare already. Built in value that way. Supposedly, from what I hear, these and the multitude of spinoffs from this sort of chip design methodology are going to be fairly successful. We'll have to see. All of this stuff came out of K6-2/3+ heritage. What I'm wondering is what kind of graphics cpus they will use. |
#7
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
"Eric Chomko" wrote in message ... On Jul 23, 11:36 am, kT wrote: Look here kT, we both like Henry and we both know that Henry's system is less than he deserves. I know you're willing to donate a system, but so am I. I live in a college town (University of Maryland, College Park). Before moving to Miami, DC was my long time stomping grounds. Used to live just around the corner from UM, in Riverdale near Rt 1 and 410. And in nearby Greenbelt, one of the nicer areas in the DC suburbs imo. |
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
jonathan wrote: "Eric Chomko" wrote in message ... On Jul 23, 11:36 am, kT wrote: Look here kT, we both like Henry and we both know that Henry's system is less than he deserves. I know you're willing to donate a system, but so am I. I live in a college town (University of Maryland, College Park). Before moving to Miami, DC was my long time stomping grounds. Used to live just around the corner from UM, in Riverdale near Rt 1 and 410. And in nearby Greenbelt, one of the nicer areas in the DC suburbs imo. Henry likes his old system; that's why he stuck with it. He could have easily replaced it on his budget, but is pretty much a reactionary when it comes right down to it. The hair and beard straight out of the late 60's - early 70's should have clued you into that immediately. COMRADE! He fails Lenin's test - he does not "dare to be as revolutionary as reality itself". I think it's time that he be sent to a "Space Re-Education Camp", don't you? ;-) Pat |
#9
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
In sci.space.history jonathan wrote:
"Eric Chomko" wrote in message ... On Jul 23, 11:36 am, kT wrote: Look here kT, we both like Henry and we both know that Henry's system is less than he deserves. I know you're willing to donate a system, but so am I. I live in a college town (University of Maryland, College Park). Before moving to Miami, DC was my long time stomping grounds. Used to live just around the corner from UM, in Riverdale near Rt 1 and 410. And in nearby Greenbelt, one of the nicer areas in the DC suburbs imo. As someone born and raised in the District of Columbia I feel compelled to dispute that any of those areas are "DC" rick jones -- web2.0 n, the dot.com reunion tour... these opinions are mine, all mine; HP might not want them anyway... feel free to post, OR email to rick.jones2 in hp.com but NOT BOTH... |
#10
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Speaking of Henry Spencer
On Jul 31, 9:18*pm, Neil Gerace wrote:
I have an 8085, ISTR they are still available new. The whole series is nice: 4004, 8008, 8080, 8085, 8086 and 8088. Eventually the 80286 or simply 286 came out and changed everything until the Pentium and then it changed again. Wasn't the 8085 a microcontroller chip sort of like the Motorola 6811? I do not recall any microcomputers that have either an 8085 or an 6811 in them. But both were used as microcontrollers for embedded applications, IIRC. Eric |
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