Another ticket to the 80s - CAF ProLITE 286/16 with Cherry MX blues
Posted: 09 Sep 2017, 10:42
Hi Folks.
I found this beauty on EBay, offered by a local powerseller, carelessly photographed, very dirty, with a horrifying crack on top of the display case and of course in 'unknown condition'.
However, I couldn't resist, and was rewarded instantly when the package arrived on Saturday evening, when I was already quite drunk.
Slightly euphoric, I immediately connected it to the mains, and guess what - it was working flawlessly.
I have a penchant for those old amber gas plasma screens, and when I stroked a key fist, I was pretty sure this thing would have to put to use somehow. It's a Cherry MX blue keyboard, with double shot keycaps, arranged in a very interesting pattern: ANSI with German legends.
It weighs about 18 pounds - I bet the retractable, solid metal carrying handle alone is slightly heavier than a current Macbook.
And that's just the device alone - no batteries included, in fact not even as an option.
Only a steady stream of electrons from an outlet (preferrably from a nuclear power plant) can feed this hungry beast.
I found this beauty on EBay, offered by a local powerseller, carelessly photographed, very dirty, with a horrifying crack on top of the display case and of course in 'unknown condition'.
However, I couldn't resist, and was rewarded instantly when the package arrived on Saturday evening, when I was already quite drunk.
Slightly euphoric, I immediately connected it to the mains, and guess what - it was working flawlessly.
I have a penchant for those old amber gas plasma screens, and when I stroked a key fist, I was pretty sure this thing would have to put to use somehow. It's a Cherry MX blue keyboard, with double shot keycaps, arranged in a very interesting pattern: ANSI with German legends.
It weighs about 18 pounds - I bet the retractable, solid metal carrying handle alone is slightly heavier than a current Macbook.
And that's just the device alone - no batteries included, in fact not even as an option.
Only a steady stream of electrons from an outlet (preferrably from a nuclear power plant) can feed this hungry beast.