On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 1:10 PM, Lisa2.com <rick_at_email.domain.hidden> wrote:
>
> Are Lisa's really "rare"? Apple made tens of thousands of them, and
> they were well made and usally well cared for. Over the last 10
> years, I have seen many working units sell on ebay for under $1000.
> With the membership of this group at only 125 members, there should be
> enough to go around, at least for less money than building one from
> scratch..
>
> Also, what wrong with doing a FPGA version (something like the apple
> one clone or the C-one project)? If you guys don't have a proper
> floppy drive, use a USB keyboard, and are using a VESA display how
> would it be better clone than a FPGA version would be anyway?
>
> I am not trying to be negitive, just asking the questions.
>
> Rick
>
>
> On Mar 17, 3:31 pm, Kevin Keith <krfke..._at_email.domain.hidden> wrote:
> > Hello Fellow Lisa Enthusiasts!
> >
> > I recently made a post about getting a Lisa, and much to my dismay,
> > they appear to be pretty darn rare! Now, to the point: how
> > inconceivable would it be to "build" a Lisa? Weren't they handmade in
> > the first place? I'm not talking about something in an FPGA (we
> > already have LisaEm). I'm talking about a bona fide clone! An EXACT
> > replica! This would be good because we could also replace broken
> > Lisa's!
> >
> > Just a thought
> >
> > Kevin
>
> >
>
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. Received on 2015-07-15 16:43:01
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