On Sun, Sep 25, 2022 at 10:39:46AM -0500, Adrian Stoness via cctalk wrote: > On Sun, Sep 25, 2022 at 10:26 AM Tony Duell via cctalk < > cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote: >> Does anyone have a Philips P2000C CP/M luggable with the carrying strap? >> I will be restoring such a machine in the near-ish future and mine is >> lacking the strap. Clear photos of the end fittings that slot into the >> machine, the dimensions of them, etc would be a great help in making >> something up.
> get ahold of the phillips radio museum in holland they might have photos? > they have some of the computers on display Note that there are (at least) _two_ Philips museums: the "Stichting tot Behoud van Historische Philips Producten" (Foundation for the Preservation of Historic Philips Products) and the Philips Museum. Their websites are https://www.sbhp.nl/ and https://www.philips-museum.com/. Both are in Eindhoven, as is much of the interesting bits of Philips itself. The former appears to be volunteer collectors of mainly analogue-era Philips gear and I can almost smell the chain-smoked roll-ups just from the photos, whereas the latter looks rather more corporate. (I am occasionally contacted by Philips' recruiters trying to lure me to work at some nasty industrial park near Eindhoven airport. There is usually tumbleweed after I point out the seven hour commute and ask if they've considered remote-working.) I only note this because I have Weekend Vrij and a Museumkaart, and my random spin for where to visit this weekend landed on Eindhoven and thence to the Philips Museum, which reminded me of this thread. Unfortunatly, SBHP is closed at weekends (and doesn't accept Museumkaart, but I could have probably scraped together the €4 entry fee) which is a shame as it looks by far the more interesting of the two. If I spot a P2000C and remember, I'll try and get a photo although I doubt they'll let me dig it out of the cabinet and go over it with my micrometer... It may also be worth reaching out to the HomeComputerMuseum (sic) in Helmond (https://www.homecomputermuseum.nl/) who are quite friendly and have a well-curated collection, including quite a lot of Philips gear. It's not directly relevant to this query, but they have a very impressive collection of CD-i machines, hardware prototypes, and media. They have a P2000C, which is on display for the public to use, and a suitable donation would probably get all the photos and measurements you want: https://www.homecomputermuseum.nl/en/collectie/philips/philips-p2000c/ As a last resort, there's the Bonami Games and Computers Museum in Zwolle (https://computermuseum.nl/) although it's basically just a huge barn with a load of random stuff piled in it and poor labelling, so I'd try them last: I took some lovely atmospheric pictures of 60s and 70s Big Iron when I visited, but have no idea what half of it is. I suspect they don't know either.