In trying to make some Polymorphic docs available to a larger (but
probably still small) group of people, one thing I have is a LOT of
Polymorphic documentation/manuals. This all came from Polymorphic
Systems after they shut down here in Santa Barbara. and is arranged by
part # in folders in about three or four file cabinet drawers. While I
haven't counted them, a WAG is probably around 100 or so manuals, each
with a printed out manual and some (most?) have a floppy disk with the
manual on them. Years ago, I had some uneducated person say these
couldn't be original manuals since none of them have any pictures or
graphics (that someone hadn't heard of cut and paste back when these
manuals were put together.) I don't recall any graphics in the manuals,
but it has been a LONG time since Ive looked at them so I could be wrong
about that.
If anyone needs a copy of a Polymorphic manual, let me know that part
number and I'll see if I have it. I have a 600 dpi scanner and it is
fairly easy to make copies. The 5 1/4" disks are probably around 50
years old, and I have no idea if they are still readable.
Among all this stuff is about 20 assembly floor manuals I have looked
at, but not done anything with. This is more stuff I would like to get
scanned to avoid it being lost to posterity. Included in them are mods
to the computer boards.
Part of the motivation to do this was a post by Sellam (founder of VCF)
a while ago talking about people passing away with potentially a lot of
irreplaceable or uncommon stuff in their possession (I'm currently 80.)
Normally I would bring some of this stuff to VCFMW, but I couldn't get a
room at the convention hotel since they were apparently sold out, and
thus I won't be attending this year.
Hello everyone.
I am documenting early OS/2 releases (before 1992).
I am interested in all possible information about the released versions, photos of media, screenshots.
There is very little on the internet. For example, there is very little information about OEM versions of MS OS/2 1.x, as well as little information about OS/2 1.X localizations.
if you are the owner of the package/disks of versions 1.x, please let me know.
Best.regards.
–Georg
The Virtual OS museum has MS and IBM OS/2 versions listed pretty
comprehensively (which you can of course run locally):
https://virtualosmuseum.org/installation-list/
It includes some Citrix versions that OEM the main providers, too.
I have a couple of IBM OS/2 boxes (1.1 and maybe 1.2, I think) that I
can snap pictures of media from if you're interested; but there are
probably places like the Internet Archive that already have such
things:
https://archive.org/details/ibm-os2-1.00-extended-edition-3.5-1.44mb
- David
On Mon, 08 Jun 2026 03:05:56 <georgijgalcev1570(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello everyone.
>
> I am documenting early OS/2 releases (before 1992).
> I am interested in all possible information about the released versions, photos of media, screenshots.
> There is very little on the internet. For example, there is very little information about OEM versions of MS OS/2 1.x, as well as little information about OS/2 1.X localizations.
>
> if you are the owner of the package/disks of versions 1.x, please let me know.
>
> Best.regards.
> –Georg
Lee Felsenstein livestream Sun. June 14 at 1PM (Eastern):
https://youtube.com/live/Js6R3OIxiKY
Before the laptop, before Apple took off, there was Lee Felsenstein. As the
legendary moderator of the Homebrew Computer Club and designer of the
Osborne 1 (the first commercial mass-produced portable computer), he didn't
just build the tools—he changed the rules. Don't miss our exclusive
livestream with a true PC pioneer this Sunday June 14 at 1PM (Eastern)!
Take care!
Jeff Brace
VCF East Showrunner
Georgy,
One of the software disks that came with my 8:16, which I purchased in
March of 1984, has a printed label saying (with the "d" after 2.1.1 hand
written in blue ink):
<quote>
ATTACHE
MSDOS
REVISION: 2.1.1d SN 1850 48 TPI Date: 02/29/84
</quote>
Volume 5, Number 1 (Spring 1985) of "Where It's Att. Official Newsletter
of the First Attache/2001 User Group" lists the "Newest" FAUG Library
disk as "Attache MS-Dos 2.11e(x) System Disk FAUG211e(x). The latest
'unreleased' Otrona 8:16 master disk for MS-Dos. About to come out when
bankruptcy hit Otrona."
That same issue says that RAMDISK.SYS works only with 2.11e(x) and not
with earlier versions. Issue 5, Number 2 says that "211e(x)" "Includes
extensive new hard disk software."
Regards,
Bob
P.S. to Fred: My apologies for not knowing offhand if the MS-DOS version
is "two eleven e (x)" or "two one one e (x)". When I get my 8:16
running, I can check. Bob
>Message: 12
>Date: Tue, 9 Jun 2026 12:09:28 +0700
>From: Georgy Galtsev <georgijgalcev1570(a)gmail.com>
>Subject: [cctalk] Re: Need Otrona Attache 8:16 MS-DOS Disk
>
>in fact, the version from the Don Maslin archive labels itself as 2.11,
>without additional letters. Where does the information about 2.11d and
>2.11e come from?
<snip>
Does anyone have a working copy of a bootable Otrona Attache MS-DOS
2.11d or 2.11e disk that they can copy and snail-mail to me? All of my
disks are giving a "Bad or missing Command Interpreter" error. I no
longer have another computer that reads/writes 5 1/4" IBM 360KB disks,
so I need a physical copy.
Please email me at feldman.r(a)comcast.net so we can arrange shipping (I
am in Chicago) and payment.
Thanks,
Bob Feldman
Gimix Documentation Needed!
I need the following Gimix documentation:
Intelligent 4 Port Serial Interface (24-0076A)
256K Memory Board (24-0082)
6809 CPU III Rev C (24-0066C). I have the manual for 24-0066B.
Thanks,
Please email me at directly if you have it (bitwiz(a)12bitsbest.com)