I go back and forth with it. Once I got some money i bought some old dream machines back. it was great for a while. but At one point i had like 15 retro computers that i almost never used, eventually i went Marie Kondo and gave a bunch away and it feels good to have actual closet space. kept a few that were special. now... about this pile of 30 old hard disks i have... oh and my collection of usb type-b and usb-mini cables...
I did something in between - I kept the physically small systems (Landisk, VAXstation VLC, Mac LC III+, Mac Quadra 610, Cobalt Raq, EdgeRouter, various Pis, et cetera) and some of the more useful larger ones (Amiga 4000, VAXstation 4000/60 and 4000/90, AlphaServer DS25), and I put them to use building NetBSD pkgsrc packages so they're useful.
Considering the fact that I paid less than $100 for the VAXstation 4000/60, for instance, and they go for > $1000 on eBay these days, I'm glad I kept all my VAX hardware. While 286 systems don't cost quite as much, the prices are only going to go up.
Sounds like you live in a computer museum ;) How did you end up owning these?
I kept a handful of older computers, my ZX-81 still sitting somewhere, ZX-Spectrum, Apple Newton. My HP-48GX is used by my daughter. I have a dual CPU 486 machine... I doubt any of these is worth any $'s ...
NCR had a couple of SMP 486 boxen (NCR 3450, 3550 & 3600) that were supported by SCO Unix, SVR4 and (early) NT. I think they had support for OS/2. ALR, Unisys and Compaq made somewhat similar 486s with roughly similar OS support (although I vaguely recall the Unisys stuff was OEMed elseware). The support problem was 486 predated standardized SMP hardware (APIC), so it was all custom hardware.
I've always had an appreciation for odd hardware, and I've just tried to keep what I like of what I have.
Big fan of the Sinclairs - small, simple, yet filled with all sorts of neat tricks that made them inexpensive and simple. That cleverness makes for a great set of lessons to modern computer programmers and architects.
tbh not sure. I'd have to dig it out of the crawlspace and have a look. But yeah, seems like those indeed are rare. Had no idea and I guess some chance I'm misremembering and it's a Pentium or something.
From the file linked in https://www.vogons.org/viewtopic.php?p=534845#p534845, it looks like 'mov fs, ax' may have been 5 cycles compared to 3 for 'mov dx, ax', with no penalty in the other direction? So probably net faster than using memory instead.
But +15 cycles if you're in protected mode. In this case I think you'd also cause a fault by storing values into a segment register which weren't valid indexes into the LDT/GDT.
My first computer was a 386. There was a reference program I used all the time and I can’t remember it for the life of me. It was menu driven and had a ton of information on hardware, including CPU’s, UARTS, registers and their uses, interrupts etc. Sounds vague I know, but does anyone have any idea what that program was called?
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 56.1 ms ] threadConsidering the fact that I paid less than $100 for the VAXstation 4000/60, for instance, and they go for > $1000 on eBay these days, I'm glad I kept all my VAX hardware. While 286 systems don't cost quite as much, the prices are only going to go up.
I kept a handful of older computers, my ZX-81 still sitting somewhere, ZX-Spectrum, Apple Newton. My HP-48GX is used by my daughter. I have a dual CPU 486 machine... I doubt any of these is worth any $'s ...
as always with a legacy $anything the price is for those who really want it.
I have Psion 3 (with a damaged screen cablr, but with a whopping 1MB SSD), it costs nothing, but people selling the working ones for more than $100
Big fan of the Sinclairs - small, simple, yet filled with all sorts of neat tricks that made them inexpensive and simple. That cleverness makes for a great set of lessons to modern computer programmers and architects.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40700257
But +15 cycles if you're in protected mode. In this case I think you'd also cause a fault by storing values into a segment register which weren't valid indexes into the LDT/GDT.
https://www.dr-hardware.com/pghgretro.htm