Vintage Computers

POS support is hectic.
I turned down a job with digipoint in George in the 90s because of the POS element. Clients 300km on either side. No thanks.
At one stage my area was a everything on the left of a line from East London to Upington, then the whole of Namibia as well. Did a little over 1.5 million KM's in 8 years. Sometimes miss being on the road, but mostly not.
 
POS support is hectic.
I turned down a job with digipoint in George in the 90s because of the POS element. Clients 300km on either side. No thanks.
I worked for what was technically a POS software development company for 12 years. On standby permanently considering around R10-20mil went through our systems daily.
Printers are still a swear word to me, thermal printers were the bane of my existence.
 
always wonder what computers and IT will look like in 10-20 years from now,
look how far they have come in the short time they been around,

maybe in the future win 10 will be considered an antique.
 
And flipping expensive bricks sometimes... those Zebra printers were the only ones I got much joy from. *spits*
Those and Oki dot-matrix for multi-part wider format stationery.
So glad I haven't had to open one of those in over 16 years.
Man some of those printers... especially Zebra label printers.
I spent a ton of time using the EPL/ZPL language to write instructions for formatting.
The flipside was that once they were working they generally carried on working.
 
Staying off topic (sorry), but I think the printers were the worst calls to attend too. If they weren't full of cockroaches, dirt and coins, they were switched off. Really annoying to drive 8 hours to switch on a printer. We used Epson LX-300 for end of day, Citizen dot matrix slip printers then Star thermal slip printers. The things that came out of some of those PC's are best forgotten.
 
Staying off topic (sorry), but I think the printers were the worst calls to attend too. If they weren't full of cockroaches, dirt and coins, they were switched off. Really annoying to drive 8 hours to switch on a printer. We used Epson LX-300 for end of day, Citizen dot matrix slip printers then Star thermal slip printers. The things that came out of some of those PC's are best forgotten.
LOL
Agree
Always cockroaches or paperclips in the dot matrix printers
We used Oki Microline or something, furking hell those things printed fast, bloody fast !!!!
 
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As for till printers I still have one in my spare room somewhere from the mid 90's

Also have a keyboard to program the old TEC cash registers as the tills only had an alpha keyboard so it was a mission to use the ASCII c ode to type out your groceries etc into the till. Lemme go find it and take a photo, also from 1995
 
The LX-300 was the go to printer, not bad and affordable. But I did repair a few of those in the 90s
Whereas the more expensive Oki Microline series was double the price they just never broke down. I had to once change out the head on one of the printers due to a horizontal pin jammed up, was a 9 pin guy if I remember correctly. There were OKI printers with more needles but they were beyond expensive and I hardly ever saw one
 
I'm going to need help on the next step with the Osborne Executive.
So far everything checks out and I'm going to connect up this weekend but I will need some software including a boot floppy.

I'm not sure what file system it uses, never mind how to create a new boot floppy eish.

Anyone know if a more "modern" double sided double density 1.2Mb floppy would work? This is a single sided single density drive with something like 160k capacity IIRC.
I'll do some homework...
@jannievanzyl

CP/M-80 operating system. Before my time. Maybe you can download from the internet?

SSDD floppies from that era were 100KB according to Wikipedia.
 
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