Ihave two 8088 emulator laptop.... the NEC Multispeed (9.1 / 4.0 Mhz). Still work, to my knowledge.
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Ihave two 8088 emulator laptop.... the NEC Multispeed (9.1 / 4.0 Mhz). Still work, to my knowledge.
Our church has an old Olivetti 8088 that used to run a bank of six old slide projectors with the use of a home-grown custom program. It has been relegated to obsolesence with the purchase of a new LCD projector.
At least with PowerPoint you don't have to worry about upside-down slides midway through a service. No BSOD's yet, tho....
The nice thing's about them is the fact you dont have a cmos, or other volatile memory.
So as long as the contacts dont corrode you should be able to leave it sit for years and when you flip the switch it will be just the same as you left it.
Anyone thats interested I can get PLC's based on 8088's with a flavor of unix os, for around 5k :) 64k eeprom no IO though thats extra :)
At one job they were using an old 8086 with dbaseIII+!! unfortunately I got rid of it instead of keeping it.
Nah, the oldest thing I got on hand right now is a P75 hooked up to the entertainment system as a music server.
Yea, i use it as a high tech door stop
It's a game wherein you try to cover as much ground on the board without the monsters catching you! It's highly addictive (which is why I still can't stop playing it....).Quote:
Originally posted by Nicholas 'Raijen' Furniss:
Never heard of that game {Xonix} before. Is it good?
There's a version for PDA out there, I think. Do a search for Xonix and you'll find it - I think it should be available on abandonware sites.
If you live in Brisbane or Gold Coast Australia I got a 8086 with 640KB ram and 611KB HD and XGA video card and 1.44MB diskette drive!
Another blast from the past.... :D :D
Thanks Dataman for the time wasting idea! :D :p
Why are you digging this old topic up? :confused:
since this topic was posted i,ve upgraded from the 8088 , to an amstrad 8086 ,,,(512k memory) it runs at 1.4 times the speed of the IBM ,,,,and the wife says that if i behave between now and my birthday , i can have a compac 286,
looking foward to this !!!!!
freddy
I know where an entire room filled with 8088's is. I actually started with an Atari, it had 16k of memory and no drive. Before then we wrote programs on cards with a keypunch machine and put them in a card reader......don't get me started.
Did a service job on one not long ago (power switch broke). Still works to this day, and does the job (WordPerfect 5.1 and a LJet 2).
Y'know a lot of people would consider that a collectable?
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="Trebuchet MS, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="Trebuchet MS, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Originally posted by clauded:
<strong>i wish i could find a museum to keep them,my wife says it takes too much space but they are all in good working order,lol
clauded</strong></font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Trebuchet MS, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><a href="http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/" target="_blank">http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/</a>
<a href="http://www.old-computers.com/news/default.asp" target="_blank">http://www.old-computers.com/news/default.asp</a>
Some of my sites are still running systems that use the 8088, or the newer model of the same system, which has an 80286 in it. The 8088 has a max of 512k RAM, and the 286 has a max of 1024k. A restaurant's entire DB fits in there. Keep in mind, these are strictly single purpose machines, though.
Can still buy NEW machines running the 80286!
Unfortunately, the forum system won't allow me to post the link, but its <a href="http://www.micros.com" target="_blank">www.micros.com</a> then products>table service resaurants>2700