On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 2:06 PM, Dylan McDermond <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> The Macintosh Classic has a standard, 50-pin internal SCSI cable and drive.


>
>Hurrah!

In which case, the one in the CD is another screwball one-off :)

> The platters and body of a Conner CP-3040A 50-pin SCSI disk drive are 
> identical to the
> CP-3045 used in the Portable. Swapping the PCB from a CP-3040A to the 
> Portable's
>body will give you the ability to plug the Portable's drive into any internal, 
>50-pin SCSI port
> on most other vintage Macintoshes (the Classic included).
>
I have one on the way, should be here early next week.

At which point, my in-house bankruptcy program from 1989-91 will live
again, this time seeing commercial release as the only mac product in
its category (at the moment, I am the only attorney in the US
preparing bankruptcy petitions on a Mac without emulating/executing
windows, as far as i can tell, but my spreadsheets, though
sophisticated, aren't marketable).

The program was a hypercard/supercard stack, and I'll be reusing it
with LiveCode (fka runrev & revolution)

I switched to a commercial program when the forms changed in 1991, and
now the only copies are on that hard drive and a stack of backup disks
made with a 1989 version of SUM utlities (I'm also trying to recover
those).

thanks


-- 
The Hawkins Law Firm
Richard E. Hawkins, Esq.
(702) 508-8462
[email protected]
3025 S. Maryland Parkway
Suite A
Las Vegas, NVĀ  89109

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