The golden age for me was my first corporate job. My boss really wasn't
technically minded and made bad decisions. Modems that didn't error
correct ended up in a box in a storage room. AT-based cash register
systems lasted a few months before the 386-based systems came out. Lots
of one-off systems like an Olivetti PC and a Compaq Portable II they
tried out and ditched.
At a place I worked, we had a client who purchase what IIRC was a Compaq
(or maybe Digital?) machine that looked a lot like a MAC in the sense that
it was a monitor and PC all in one case. This would have been in the
Summer of 1994. We had to add a card to it and it was a *bear* to work
on. It might have been neat to have around as a conversation piece but I wouldn't have wanted trying to use one myself.
When I was asked to clean out the storage room and toss everything in
the "dumpster", it felt like Christmas day to me. :)
Unfortunately, most places I have worked had a process for surplus
equipment that prohibited them from leaving the premises via the actual dumpster, or via the type of "dumpster" that you refer to. Even things
like old chairs... really pissed me off when we moved and they told us we
had to leave some really nice old chairs behind for another group to come through to pick things for their own offices. They wanted more modern
stuff so those chairs (and a lot of other decent office stuff) went in one
of those rent-a-dumpsters.
In these parts, diving in one of those is a good way to get bed bugs so
that is where those chair stayed. They should have went to surplus but
didn't. :(
Mike
---
þ BgNet 1.0á12 ÷ moe's tavern * 1-502-875-8938 * moetiki.ddns.net:27