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MailCall 0x0E: Mail from viewers like you!

MailCall 0x0E: Mail from viewers like you!

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“Tech Tangents”

To close out the year I’m opening up all the mail I’ve saved for the last 8 months sent by very generous viewers!

Here are some ways to help me make more videos!

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42 Comments

  1. the ethernet to token ring transeiver (with the BNC's) is a SUPER handy device, and when they were in use, that was a commercial grade one. they are crutical for bridging the token ring networks with standard networking. great gift.

  2. Nice, those Dell idrac vflash sd cards.. At my workplace I just decommissioned 70 Dell servers that had those cards.. and I thought: 8gb sd cards are kinda nice for retro use, and decided to take all of them, gave most of them away at a retro Commodore meeting and kept a few for myself 😉

  3. Think those capacitors are big? The ones used in the earliest television sets were the size of shoe-boxes. Lots of games are sold without physical media inside; they only have a code to activate a download.

  4. It's so weird to see stuff from my junk pile in someone else's junk pile. 😀

    The voltage switch on that Celeron cooler was for undervolting the fans. Back when I was running it, I installed dual fans to keep it cool since it was overclocked to 450MHz. The Celeron 300A was legendary for its ability to run rock solid at 450MHz even though it was a 300MHz CPU. The dual fans just got a bit loud, so I'd drop them down to 7V whenever I wasn't loading the CPU too much.

    I thought you'd enjoy those Y2K stickers. I installed hundreds of those on our company's computers in 1999. Those were the last of them that I had left over in my toolbag. They've been a drawer ever since.

  5. Hi Shelby,
    Happy New Year from Germany. The PCIe SCSI HBA is super cool especially as the LSI ones are quite compatible and well supported. I was listening to the manufacturer's/designer's name about a dozen times but didn't understand it. And the search engines don't find any reference to this project. So it would be very kind if you could add a link…

  6. Just a note, Shelby, I noticed that you cut out the street addresses of senders (for obvious reasons) but for several US ones left the ZIP+4 code visible. In some places in the US, a ZIP+4 will get you to a precise street address or post box. (In my dense Chicago suburb, my ZIP+4 will narrow you down to just three houses.) If you want to fully protect the locations of people who send you things you should at least cut out the +4 part.

    Great video, thanks!

  7. Those giant capacitors. 🤣
    As you flipped though that Commodore catalog, I said "Oooh, Marble Madness" right before you did. Hehehe…
    I'm guessing that Lotus 123 version was a basically just a physical license (software was installed from the local Netware server). Of course nowadays full on physical documentation isn't necessary but back in the day, a box was the only proof that you had purchased the software license (enterprise or small business licenses not yet a thing perhaps).

  8. Oh wow, the USB connector in the floppy eject hole, that's one hell of a good idea!
    Very interesting mounting solution for an older machine to have a front panel port, an old floppy drive with a flap for the slot and the USB port as eject button, it'd be quite nice IMHO

  9. 45:00 – I still use DDS4 tapes, simply because I still have a bunch of them. Streamer is extremely reliable and I only have to fix a loosen spring about once per year. You could still buy usb model. It can read DDS-1, 2, 3 and 4 tapes. I hope You'll have fun with those.

  10. Do not use the z88 power supply it may fail and be dangerous!
    Cambridge Computer were notorious for buying up the cheapest power supplies. They had recalls of their power supplies.

  11. 5:00 You got a railgun you need to power or something?

    I had a bunch of those little IDE to SATA boards that fit on the back of the device. Worked very well, often had individual LEDs because who doesn't like having individual device activity LEDs, and even though they needed their own power you could very neatly stick a Molex-to-Molex-&-FDD connector in the chain.

  12. Hi Shelby. I'd be really interested to know more about that PCIe SCSI card, and maybe if I can contact the manufactures to purchase one. Didn't quite catch the name. I currently run a PCIe to PCI card for my film scanner, but that involves getting the right lowprofile PCI card in order for it to fit in the case. It's a bit janky to say the least. Having a single PCIe card would be so much better. I've tried a bunch of different PCIe U320 cards, but I think the scanner is too old as none of them will see it. Thanks.

  13. I've seen oil filled capacitors bigger than a standard household microwave. Caps can get quite large, especially very high voltage ones. The capacitors i was referring to were 10KV, at only a few uF. Just filter caps, but they had to be large due to the voltages they operated at.

  14. That retail sticker on the maxi gamer shows how cheap these cards were at one point. The one donated to you is clearly the card that came in the box because of the text on the PCB but being green is rare for the maxi gamer 3d, they were normally yellow even though the picture on the box is of a green PCB.

  15. Those damn Y2K stickers bring back some memories. "Yes, we have to individually check each machine in this classroom of identically built computers for the audit"
    Insert check disk, watch computer reboot 3 times, get pass result, stick on green label. Now repeat 29 more times. Come back next day to find *@&$ kids peeled all the stickers off. Fun times.

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