How far back are you talking?
I think drawing a time box (start, end) around what you collect
would give you returns.
...
Steve Jenkin
I actually don't consider myself much of a collector of anything besides information.
Even the physical books and such I've accumulated lately, save for select pieces, I
eventually want to get into some other library. I'm not on the hunt for some piece
of hardware I want to order and keep around here, rather, seeing if there's avenues I
should keep my eye on while searching around for documents and other history that, say, I
could then get the CHM or another involved with. For instance, one "goal" if
you will is to somehow run down a (working or not) 3B20S and put the right folks in
contact to see about preserving the thing. Even better if I can travel and help with some
of the restore, but honestly at the end of the day I'm just after lost history.
That said, hardware significant to the pre-divestiture UNIX-and-adjacent history takes
priority with me, stuff like Interdata 32-bit, various 3B machines, etc. so to put years
on it would be 69-84. I'm actually kicking myself because there was a MacTutor (WE
Mac-8 SBC) on eBay this past couple of years and it had been bought by the time I made up
my mind on it. My hope was to document it as much as I could and then see if LCM or CHM
were interested in it for their archives.
I do have a AT&T UNIX PC I intend to get rolling eventually but that's about as
far as my on-hand hardware ambitions go, and certainly isn't relevant to early
history. I would maybe go for a higher end SGI for myself if I found one at an agreeable
price, but even that would be mostly to experiment with IRIS GL and their specific
graphics hardware. I'm trying not to let too many hardware distractions get between
me and my SBC experiments though, too much coding for the past will keep me from coding
for the present. After all, one of my chief personal motivations in studying the past is
to better understand how we got here and where we're headed.
- Matt G.