[TUHS] Do you have any historical UNIX computers?

Henry Bent henry.r.bent at gmail.com
Tue Jun 10 04:52:54 AEST 2025


On Mon, 9 Jun 2025 at 14:28, Vicente Collares <vicente at collares.ca> wrote:

> Hello Henry,
>
> On Mon, 9 Jun 2025 13:45:37 -0400
> Henry Bent <henry.r.bent at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > How retro, and how little space?  Is a pizza box form factor Sun
> > workstation like, say, a SPARCstation 1 or 2 too new, or too big?
> The pizza box factor would be ideal since it would fit on top of a desk.
> Therefore the SPARCstation 1 or 2 seems reasonably sized to me. The
> *biggest* I could accommodate would be something the size of a modern
> full tower.
>
> I do not have a strong preference for the era of the system. I'm more
> interested in its historical signaficance


Something like a SPARCstation 2 or 5 might be ideal since you would be able
to run a variety of operating systems both historic and modern - SunOS 4,
Solaris, NetBSD, probably Linux if you really wanted to, NeXTstep, and I'm
probably forgetting a few more.  The historical significance of a system
like that is that they were everywhere - Sun sold a ton of them and they
were used in all sorts of applications, which also makes it a good entry
level machine since they're fairly easy to come by and not terribly
expensive.  Parts are usually easy to find and inexpensive if you need
them.  You would also have options like using a modern SCSI emulator
instead of a hard disk or connecting to an LCD monitor, but you could also
do the full original workstation setup without too much trouble.

-Henry
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