In article <002c01c6fd3d$aba53080$5b01a8c0 at uatempname>,
    <arcarlini at iee.org>  writes:
  I'm nowhere near (not even the right continent
:-)) but I see this:
 CASE #:        8032266186S016
        ITEM:   TERMINAL, DATA PROCESSING       MFG:    DIGITAL
 EQUIPMENT CORP         Model #:        VT50AA
 DESCRIPTION:   POC KEN LEE 6X4766/G21053
 SERIAL#:       20516NX         MFG YEAR:       1986    CONDITION:
 REPAIRABLE
 Now "MFG YEAR" of 1986 sounds way too late. Surely the VT100s would have
 driven the VT5x stuff off customer radar by then? Was DEC really still
 making VT5x terminals this late in the day? (I wouldn't be at all
 surprised to know that they were supported a long time beyond that
 date - for a fee! - but I'm having a hard time believing that they
 were made and sold in 1986 ....) 
I doubt that as well, but I've found that these surplus property
auction places *rarely* have accurate information about the items.
Some poor schmuck is paid minimum wage to enter all the data about all
this junked property into a database.  What do they care if its
accurate?  It could be 1976 instead of 1986 and what would they care?
By 1979 I remember that the VT5x was becoming rare and the VT100 was
becoming the dominant model.  
VT100.net says the VT52 was introduced
in 1975 and the VT100 introduced in 1978.
--
"The Direct3D Graphics Pipeline" -- DirectX 9 draft available for download
      <http://www.xmission.com/~legalize/book/download/index.html>