I have one of those. You may NOT disassmble it.
NO DISASSEMBLE! NO DISASSEMBLE!!
I wouldn't tear down a working Apple II anyway.
No go on any early Mac, though; there's just not enough room inside.
Or gut it and go with the fishbowl. But I don't know how to safely discharge a CRT.
Here is a decent article on the flyback discharge via the anode on a CRT (using the screwdriver method):
http://www.h-i-r.net/2009/12/flyback-transformers-and-crt-discharge.html
We are going through some of my father's belongings. Found a random number generator.
The instructions were difficult to read as they it was a very small font printed on a 2"x1" piece of paper which had slightly faded. On one side was English, the other side was Japanese.
If I had to guess how old it is I would think it is from the 1950s at the latest the early 60s.
$3.29, including shipping from Japan.
They look like DnD dice.
What's interesting is that these are not D10's, but instead they are D20's labeled 0-9 and then 0-9 again.
And you seem to have placed a D2 next to it :)
Tue Sep 20 2016 21:34:30 EDT from IGnatius T Foobar @ UncensoredWhat's interesting is that these are not D10's, but instead they are D20's labeled 0-9 and then 0-9 again.
And you seem to have placed a D2 next to it :)
Doubles the size of the entropy pool....
All over the retro community, a device called "SD2IEC" is showing up.
It appears to be a device only available in board form (not a finished appliance) that contains a filesystem driver for a MicroSD card, and interfaces with the Commodore 64's IEC ("serial bus") protocol. The result, of course, is the effect of having an obscenely large solid state disk attached to the Commodore 64.
This is fascinating. I wish I could send one 30 years back in time to myself.