home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky misc.forsale.computers:28137 misc.wanted:7401
- Path: sparky!uunet!dtix!darwin.sura.net!udel!rochester!galileo.cc.rochester.edu!ee.rochester.edu!moscom!klr
- From: klr@moscom.UUCP (Kevin Robinson)
- Newsgroups: misc.forsale.computers,misc.wanted
- Subject: Motherboards
- Keywords: 386 sx dx wanted
- Message-ID: <3844@moscom.UUCP>
- Date: 29 Jul 92 20:13:01 GMT
- Organization: Moscom Corp., Pittsford, NY
- Lines: 32
-
-
- I am still looking to purchase a couple of Motherboards.
-
- They should Meet the following requirements.
-
- 1) 386, 386sx, dx or Higher.
- 2) Fit baby AT case.
- 3) contain CPU and BIOS.
-
- To the persons how responded to my first add, I thought that I had
- reached an agreement with a seller for 386sx/25 boards so I dumped
- the rest of the mail.(Sorry, That was stupid).
-
- klr@moscom.com
- Kevin Robinson
-
-
- A Severe Strain on the Credulity
-
- As a method of sending a missile to the higher, and even to the highest
- parts of the earth's atmospheric envelope, Professor Goddard's rocket
- is a practicable and therefore promising device. It is when one
- considers the multiple-charge rocket as a traveler to the moon that one
- begins to doubt ... for after the rocket quits our air and really
- starts on its journey, its flight would be neither accelerated nor
- maintained by the explosion of the charges it then might have left.
- Professor Goddard, with his "chair" in Clark College and countenancing
- of the Smithsonian Institution, does not know the relation of action to
- re-action, and of the need to have something better than a vacuum
- against which to react ... Of course he only seems to lack the
- knowledge ladled out daily in high schools.
- -- New York Times Editorial, 1920
-