[ih] Archive of internet-history email (and others)
Brian E Carpenter
brian.e.carpenter at gmail.com
Sun Mar 9 11:27:02 PDT 2025
On 10-Mar-25 06:12, touch at strayalpha.com wrote:
>> Historians and repositories typically do NOT want the 450th copy of IBM
>> manuals (or DEC manuals or whatever). Though I note some stuff is
>> difficult to find -- so worth doing a web search to see if the manual you
>> have is available on-line. If not, it may be useful.
>
> Yeah - but I’ve seen this work to the detriment of those manuals.
Also for tech reports. The CHM was very happy to accept a bunch of Amdahl tech reports a few years ago.
Brian
>
> Historians say “toss it” because the vendor probably has a copy or there are too many copies.
>
> But vendors disappear and there’s the tragedy of the commons for the latter. E.g., I was looking for manuals for the Fairchild F8 in 1990, just three years after they had been consumed by National Semiconductor, who promptly discarded Fairchild’s tech library*.
>
> I found a kind soul on a mailing list (before the web took off) who had an intact *set* of manuals on the line *and* an operational development board - which he gave me (and even paid postage). I do still have it and am now thinking it might be time to ship it off to the Computer History Museum…
>
> Joe
>
> *So that’s where ISI learned it from ;-)
>
> —
> Dr. Joe Touch, temporal epistemologist
> www.strayalpha.com
More information about the Internet-history
mailing list