Search found 14 matches
- 09 Aug 2017, 18:22
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
TLDR: eBay treats sellers like dirt, which lead to sellers overcharging, and buyers thinking sellers are jerks. I stand behind my dissertation from years ago: https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=51443.msg1132476#msg1132476 Other than eBay's changes (to charges) over the years, and business seller ...
- 08 Aug 2017, 21:09
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
On the ebay note, eBay takes 10% straight away, including the cost of postage jacking postage prices up, PayPal charge at least 3%, possibly more if the payment is from a different currency, plus a business seller has to pay at a minimum £25 a month for a basic shop on eBay, giving only buy it now l...
- 27 Jul 2017, 09:55
- Forum: Keyboards
- Topic: Keyswitch identification?
- Replies: 8
- Views: 2291
I've found a couple of Soviet computers which have used MX clones, and even a Soviet "made" keyboard, stamped as made in the USSR using Cherry MY switches, which was clearly a Cherry G80. Never got to the bottom of if they got a license to make them or just had a batch made with "made in the USSR" s...
- 26 Jul 2017, 22:54
- Forum: Keyboards
- Topic: Keyswitch identification?
- Replies: 8
- Views: 2291
- 26 Jul 2017, 22:22
- Forum: Keyboards
- Topic: Keyswitch identification?
- Replies: 8
- Views: 2291
It's a keyboard from a smart terminal "ТС-7063" in Russian, or "TS-7063" in English. The full name of the keyboard in Russian is "ТС-7063.02.А003.01" or "TS-7063.02.A003.01" in English. It feels like a very nice linear switch (although personally I prefer clicky keyboards). Even information in Russi...
- 26 Jul 2017, 21:57
- Forum: Keyboards
- Topic: Keyswitch identification?
- Replies: 8
- Views: 2291
Keyswitch identification?
keyswitch.jpg keycap.jpg Does anybody recognise these keyswitches? I've found them in use on various different computers from the USSR, and it'd be nice to know if they were ever used on Western keyboards, or if they're purely a Soviet design. For full disclosure, I sell vintage computer gear, alth...
- 15 Nov 2016, 01:47
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
- 14 Nov 2016, 18:15
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
- 14 Nov 2016, 18:11
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
https://www.olx.ua/obyavlenie/vinrarney ... c249143b32
No photo which actually shows it's an IBM, does anybody recognise this?
No photo which actually shows it's an IBM, does anybody recognise this?
- 29 Oct 2016, 20:10
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
- 29 Oct 2016, 19:23
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
- 29 Oct 2016, 18:29
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
- 05 Oct 2016, 08:45
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
:D Awesome, thanks for sharing your knowledge with us Wanderer, indefinitely worth more than any consensus or speculation which are often substituted for facts by very few around here. My pleasure, Soviet keyboards are something I see a lot of, just a shame that this isn't one of the nicer ones. :l...
- 04 Oct 2016, 04:19
- Forum: Other external
- Topic: Great/Interesting Finds
- Replies: 26272
- Views: 9336974
Not IBM. No way. Maybe IBM compatible. Yeah I'd think so too. Still interesting though. It gets posted every other month or so, including once by me. The consensus was rubber dome. This is the keyboard from an Elektronika MS0511 (UKNC), a Soviet PDP-11 based microcomputer. Not IBM compatible. It's ...