Liam Proven wrote:
    M95, eh? That's quite a modern one, isn't it -
a 486 or even a Pentium? 
 It's an AMD K6-2, believe it or not.  I have another
mod 95 as a print
 server.  I chose it because it has two parallel ports on the
 motherboard.  I could probably switch to something that uses less juice,
 but it's been so freakin' rock-solid that I don't feel I should screw
 with it.  It's running four printers.  Two parallel, one serial and one
 SCSI. 
 
 Wow!
 A SCSI *printer*?! What on Earth is that? 
 
It's a continuous-tone dye-sub photo printer.  And the serial one is
actually a pen-plotter, but I count it as a printer.
    I am considering trying to put my old Model 80-A21 -
once the LAN
 server on my home net -  on the Web as a webserver. I like the idea of
 a webserver that is significantly older than the Web itself. :-) 
 I'd consider
an 8580-Axx newish.  It has *gasp* CACHE! 
 
 :?) Indeed. Runs Windows NT 3.51 SP5 really well for its age, too.
 But AFAIK, it's contemporaneous with the other Model 80s, as part of
 the original range. 
 
It actually came out about a year and a half later.  Mid-1989?
  IIRC:
 30 - slimline desktop 8086 (ISA, MCGA)
 50 - desktop 286
 60 - tower 286
 70 - desktop 386
 80 - desktop 386 
        ^^^^^^^^^^^
I assume this was supposed to read "tower 386".
   I have a video
editing workstation built out of an 8550.  A whole 10MHz!!! 
 [Boggle]
  I've collected microchannel hardware for a
number of years. 
 I don't have the space, but it was the state of the art when I started
 my first job & I still have great affection for it. The only things
 I've seen which rival it for build quality are the PowerMac G5s and
 later. 
 
You should at least pick up one of the last-generation microchannel
RS/6000s.  Some of them can still be considered reasonably quick today.
Peace...  Sridhar