Re: [M100] (re)introduction

2021-11-27 Thread Jake Bickhard
I love hearing stories like this. I've been trying to browse quickly through 
some of the backlog over the last while to see what I've missed, sounds like 
quite a lot has happened. I actually was reminded about this whole place after 
seeing a video of someone using acoustic couplers and some sort of VOIP 
solution to connect an old 8 bit micro to the Level 29 BBS and started getting 
visions of making a TRRS cable for the 300 baud modem port of the Model 100 and 
using that to wirelessly dial into Level 29 (though I'm unsure what modern 
telephony codecs would do to a 300 baud connection; my experience with T38 fax 
being finnicky at best leads to guess it isn't a great experience).

Got a couple keycaps off and had a peek. No difference between the two 
keyboards; I think it's just dirty. Seems to have a heavier actuation and 
slower spring-back. I might try washing the switches out with some isopropyl.

From: M100  on behalf of Brian Brindle 

Sent: Saturday, November 27, 2021 4:48 AM
To: m...@bitchin100.com 
Subject: Re: [M100] (re)introduction

Jake!

Wow, very cool to hear from you and catch up. We had theorized about you and I 
think someone hit up FB at one point noting that you had discovered 
motorcycles, cars and women. For the record I always enjoyed seeing you on the 
list. Mostly because I could identify with your situation. Back around the time 
the M100 was actively used (1987) I was 12 years old and discovered BBSes. 
There weren't many young people on them in those days and I annoyed the crap of 
out a lot of people but also made some good friends. (Tiny bit weirded out that 
guys my age hung out with 12-13yr old kid now.. But hey, different times.)  
Also, I never owned a M100 back then, couldn't afford it. I bought my first one 
off eBay when I was about the age you are now just because it was something I 
always wanted and never got. Now I carry it with me almost every day.

Speaking of, check out the list and what you missed over the last 7 years! It's 
incredible. I often wish that Rick Hanson was still around because we have 
finally realized all of the things he wanted out of his M100, where he could 
sit in his truck and punch out work orders, wirelessly transmit them to his 
home PC or the cloud. With the proliferation of hobby microcontrollers and some 
pretty awesome collaborative development environments, easy PCB manufacturing 
and sharing things have really taken off.

In regards to your keyboard woes, I don't know of any physical difference in 
the switches used for the keys from 1983 to 1984. The boards did have different 
revisions, but I think they mechanical keys stayed the same. I do know they are 
subject to breaking down over time from either lack of use or from having 
things stacked on them and being compressed for a while. May want to look at 
the switches themselves for why it's mushy. Not much to the KB and the switches 
tend to be pretty robust so I'd def take a look at the traces on the one with 
the bad keys.

Keep plugging on the job front, you aren't wrong that cars and computers are 
the same but the real value comes from having a troubleshooting mind. That's a 
rare talent and if you've got one it's easy to find jobs where people pay you 
for what you know instead of what you do.

Brian





On Fri, Nov 26, 2021 at 11:01 PM Jake Bickhard 
mailto:jakebickh...@outlook.com>> wrote:
Hi all.

I think it's been about 7 years since I fell off the face of the earth here and 
after recently digging my M100 out of my basement and giving it some R in an 
attempt to shoehorn it into some aspect of my modern workflow I felt a twinge 
of nostalgia and was amazed at how active this community still is.

But some thanks are in order. To Ken and Steve especially, but also to the 
whole group here who put up with my 15 year old socially inept homeschooled 
self making a general ass of myself 10 years ago. Your collective kindness and 
patience (so much patience) is in no small part responsible for my current life 
and career here in Wichita.

I believe I fell off of the vintage computer hobby after my junior year of 
highschool (the first year I'd gone to a public school after being raised 
homeschooled) and my mental health took a nosedive. Graduated by the skin of my 
teeth and floundered through a year of state university before dropping out to 
drift aimlessly for a while working as a car mechanic. Cars became my main 
hobby at that point, and I quickly realized the entire industry was a septic 
tank of horrible people top-to-bottom and quickly got out to get back to what I 
was good at: computer things. Ended up at a small datacenter run by one dude 
with the task of keeping the lights turned on while the company could sell off 
its assets (as many as possible) and cease operations. It was a crash course in 
Linux server admin, IP telephony, wireless multipoint networking, and managing 
multiple buildings entire IT infrastructur

Re: [M100] (re)introduction

2021-11-27 Thread Mike Nugent
Hiya, Jake. Welcome back.

My keycap removal tool for years was a bent paperclip. First straighten it out, 
then bend it in half, and finally, bend each end inward to form a little hook. 
Needlenose pliers help when bending the hooks. To use it, lower the tool over 
the keycap, letting the hooks go under diagonally opposite corners. Then gently 
pull straight up, using your free hand to steady the cap and keep it level.

— Nuge —

[Not sure if I accidentally posted this twice. LOL]


> On Nov 26, 2021, at 23:01, Jake Bickhard  wrote:
> 
> Hi all.
> 
> I think it's been about 7 years since I fell off the face of the earth here 
> and after recently digging my M100 out of my basement and giving it some R 
> in an attempt to shoehorn it into some aspect of my modern workflow I felt a 
> twinge of nostalgia and was amazed at how active this community still is.
> 
> But some thanks are in order. To Ken and Steve especially, but also to the 
> whole group here who put up with my 15 year old socially inept homeschooled 
> self making a general ass of myself 10 years ago. Your collective kindness 
> and patience (so much patience) is in no small part responsible for my 
> current life and career here in Wichita. 
> 
> I believe I fell off of the vintage computer hobby after my junior year of 
> highschool (the first year I'd gone to a public school after being raised 
> homeschooled) and my mental health took a nosedive. Graduated by the skin of 
> my teeth and floundered through a year of state university before dropping 
> out to drift aimlessly for a while working as a car mechanic. Cars became my 
> main hobby at that point, and I quickly realized the entire industry was a 
> septic tank of horrible people top-to-bottom and quickly got out to get back 
> to what I was good at: computer things. Ended up at a small datacenter run by 
> one dude with the task of keeping the lights turned on while the company 
> could sell off its assets (as many as possible) and cease operations. It was 
> a crash course in Linux server admin, IP telephony, wireless multipoint 
> networking, and managing multiple buildings entire IT infrastructure here in 
> downtown Wichita. Eventually it closed and I've worked at a few MSPs here in 
> Wichita honing my people-skills and developing my knowledge of 
> Microsoft-based infrastructure, cloud tech, etc. It's been fun.
> 
> In the interim I moved out, got married, lived barely paycheck-to-paycheck in 
> a trap house in the rough part of town, got a small fixer-upper in the... 
> less rough part of town? No kids; a few pets. Simple stuff. Kept the 
> automotive thing as a hobby and realized that a good mechanic and a good IT 
> guy have very similar skillsets, just different occupational hazards. A 
> couple years ago I started a vlog-style YouTube channel at the urging of some 
> friends given my hilariously poor luck with cars and the potential 
> entertainment value. That has since been monetized to an extent that allowed 
> my hobby (with an extreme amount of work; two 10-20 minute videos per week 
> for the last year and a half) to more or less pay for itself and afforded me 
> opportunities I could never do otherwise (there are some 4-6 other automotive 
> youtubers here in Wichita with substantial followings; I'm the smallest).
> 
> To keep this somewhat on topic: I tried searching the archive but couldn't 
> find keywords with the right amount of specificity; did the keyboard switch 
> on the M100 change at any point? The keyboard on my 1983 model is 
> significantly different than my 1984 model. The 1983s keyboard sadly has 
> multiple bad keys (I'm assuming the broken trace issue I've seen mentioned in 
> a few threads during my research) so I swapped over the keyboard from my '84 
> model and it feels... mushy. I did notice they have different numbers on the 
> PCB and the newer model PCB is a completely different color than the older 
> model PCB is. My thought is perhaps someone put some damping o-rings or 
> rubber bands around the keys but I haven't been able to find my keycap 
> removal tool to verify.
> 
> Thanks,
> Jake



Re: [M100] (re)introduction

2021-11-27 Thread Brian Brindle
Jake!

Wow, very cool to hear from you and catch up. We had theorized about you
and I think someone hit up FB at one point noting that you had discovered
motorcycles, cars and women. For the record I always enjoyed seeing you on
the list. Mostly because I could identify with your situation. Back around
the time the M100 was actively used (1987) I was 12 years old and
discovered BBSes. There weren't many young people on them in those days and
I annoyed the crap of out a lot of people but also made some good friends.
(Tiny bit weirded out that guys my age hung out with 12-13yr old kid now..
But hey, different times.)  Also, I never owned a M100 back then, couldn't
afford it. I bought my first one off eBay when I was about the age you are
now just because it was something I always wanted and never got. Now I
carry it with me almost every day.

Speaking of, check out the list and what you missed over the last 7 years!
It's incredible. I often wish that Rick Hanson was still around because we
have finally realized all of the things he wanted out of his M100, where he
could sit in his truck and punch out work orders, wirelessly transmit them
to his home PC or the cloud. With the proliferation of hobby
microcontrollers and some pretty awesome collaborative development
environments, easy PCB manufacturing and sharing things have really taken
off.

In regards to your keyboard woes, I don't know of any physical difference
in the switches used for the keys from 1983 to 1984. The boards did have
different revisions, but I think they mechanical keys stayed the same. I do
know they are subject to breaking down over time from either lack of use or
from having things stacked on them and being compressed for a while. May
want to look at the switches themselves for why it's mushy. Not much to the
KB and the switches tend to be pretty robust so I'd def take a look at the
traces on the one with the bad keys.

Keep plugging on the job front, you aren't wrong that cars and computers
are the same but the real value comes from having a troubleshooting mind.
That's a rare talent and if you've got one it's easy to find jobs where
people pay you for what you know instead of what you do.

Brian





On Fri, Nov 26, 2021 at 11:01 PM Jake Bickhard 
wrote:

> Hi all.
>
> I think it's been about 7 years since I fell off the face of the earth
> here and after recently digging my M100 out of my basement and giving it
> some R in an attempt to shoehorn it into some aspect of my modern
> workflow I felt a twinge of nostalgia and was amazed at how active this
> community still is.
>
> But some thanks are in order. To Ken and Steve especially, but also to the
> whole group here who put up with my 15 year old socially inept homeschooled
> self making a general ass of myself 10 years ago. Your collective kindness
> and patience (so much patience) is in no small part responsible for my
> current life and career here in Wichita.
>
> I believe I fell off of the vintage computer hobby after my junior year of
> highschool (the first year I'd gone to a public school after being raised
> homeschooled) and my mental health took a nosedive. Graduated by the skin
> of my teeth and floundered through a year of state university before
> dropping out to drift aimlessly for a while working as a car mechanic. Cars
> became my main hobby at that point, and I quickly realized the entire
> industry was a septic tank of horrible people top-to-bottom and quickly got
> out to get back to what I was good at: computer things. Ended up at a small
> datacenter run by one dude with the task of keeping the lights turned on
> while the company could sell off its assets (as many as possible) and cease
> operations. It was a crash course in Linux server admin, IP telephony,
> wireless multipoint networking, and managing multiple buildings entire IT
> infrastructure here in downtown Wichita. Eventually it closed and I've
> worked at a few MSPs here in Wichita honing my people-skills and developing
> my knowledge of Microsoft-based infrastructure, cloud tech, etc. It's been
> fun.
>
> In the interim I moved out, got married, lived barely paycheck-to-paycheck
> in a trap house in the rough part of town, got a small fixer-upper in
> the... less rough part of town? No kids; a few pets. Simple stuff. Kept the
> automotive thing as a hobby and realized that a good mechanic and a good IT
> guy have very similar skillsets, just different occupational hazards. A
> couple years ago I started a vlog-style YouTube channel at the urging of
> some friends given my hilariously poor luck with cars and the potential
> entertainment value. That has since been monetized to an extent that
> allowed my hobby (with an extreme amount of work; two 10-20 minute videos
> per week for the last year and a half) to more or less pay for itself and
> afforded me opportunities I could never do otherwise (there are some 4-6
> other automotive youtubers here in Wichita with substantial followings; I'm
> the 

Re: [M100] (re)introduction

2021-11-26 Thread John R. Hogerhuis
Hi Jake,

I've read other list members say it was a popular hack to put orthodontic
rubber bands in the keys to dampen the key board noise to make the laptops
more acceptable in meetings.

-- John.