I have a large collection of VGA cables and proprietary phone charging cables.
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If you have a Samsung PCB115UBE USB cable for an old SCH-A870 I will seriously give you money for it right now
Guy got a whole hoard of old geeks going through their cable stashes right now 😋
I hope so, my only alternative to get my old data off this phone is desoldering the NAND chip lol
i bet that motorola cable is gold. : D
I have an old 6 volt lantern that uses a battery that is 6 inches wide, 4 inches tall, and 3 inches deep.
If I turn it on it gives you almost enough light to actually see where you are going and the battery lasts for about 2 hours.
With two 18650s I could replace that battery for a package 2/3 the size of a pack of cigarettes and run that light for a day or so.
If I replace the bulb in it with an LED equivalent I could probably stretch that out to nearly a week.
Ouch I remember thouse fat 4.5 volt battery who had like 2 long tongues, going into those old flashlights, glowing in the dark at best with a super small incandescent lamp.
TI-89 graphing calculator
There's an app for that now
Ti-83 plus silver edition, baybee! I learned to code (badly) on that bad boy.
- CLS
- PRINT "Same,"
- PRINT "BASIC was my first programming language."
- GOTO 1
Look at this guy who doesn't number his commands by tens! Such confidence!
Exactly! And a TON of labels with single character names. GOTO E
Rewritable CDs? Technically I can still use them, but I don't really expect to use them and I wonder if they are still worth keeping.
Sliding ruler for doing multiplications (1). Still have it for nostalgia or post-apocalyptic scenarios.
A large reel to reel tape recorder.
A few early pentium laptops that no longer turn on.
If you are interested in fixing those I might be able to help.
The most common reason is the internal CMOS battery exploding or needing replacement.
Not mine personally, but my town still has some hitching posts and mounting blocks
Reminds me of another thing: you see these boot scrapers all across european cities (1) They're usually victorian era, and were used to clean horse shit from your shoes before entering a house.
I have an ISA soundcard around here somewhere.
You will only take my Gravis Ultrasound Max from my stiff cold dead hands.
Not before.
I moved heaven and earth to find and buy one back in the day. We will never part ways. I don't have had a system to put it in for the last 22 years. I dont care. It's resting in its box untill.. I dont know, the rapture or something. It's mine.
I have an old dial telephone from the 1940s. A couple years ago I saw an Arduino project to make them dial digitally, but it's not the top item on my bucket list.
A coat with a phone pocket. If you have something shaped like a Nokia 3210, you can actually use that pocket. Modern phones are the exact wrong shape to fit in there.
A Minidisc player. First, music went to mp3 players and then it went completely online. Fortunately I sold that thing while it still had some value.
A battery powered GPS device. It’s just for navigating in the forest, and nothing else. It doesn’t even have a map, so it’s pretty useless while driving.
I have a hoodie with a little tunnel sewed in it to route your headphone wire down to the phone pocket.
Oh, and some backpacks have a hole for headphones. I guess you’re supposed to keep a CD player in there or something.
What does that GPS display? A direction?
A direction and coordinates most likely. You can use the paper map for the rest. It makes sense in some scenarios, mostly doesn't anymore.
Most of the ones I've seen actually had a map but the problem is that since it has no internet connection it can't update when changes happen in real life.
Therefore you have to go and find new and updated maps for it and a lot of them cannot be updated either due to new maps not being released for them anymore or the manufacturers expectation that there aren't enough of those devices in service anymore for a map release to make sense.
Film canisters. People saved the plastic canisters photo film came in because they were so well made, waterproof, airtight, and ubiquitous. They were used in all kinds of DIY designs. I've heard some companies still make them, without the film, for people who need them for crafts. I still have some in the junk drawer.
Scientific calculator.
I got a graphing one from TI. It was really expensive and was marginally useful during college. Then I had a cheap one that just did numbers.
And those were way better than sliding rulers.
I have a sony mini cassette video camera. Got a new battery for it and works like a dream. Really fun to record modern events in that format.
I also have a Sears VHS video camera. Working on getting a battery for that.
A functional electric Smith Corona typewriter
8mm slide projector
Too many CRTS
It's a good time being a Junkman
I have a sheet of foam with 40 or 50 old 7400-series chips - mostly simple logic gates. I could probably make some fun retro led blinky things.
It's crazy what the talented engineers in the 1970s were doing with those 7400 series logic. It's a lost art these days, just throw a 10c microcontroller on your board and control everything with code.
I have a stereoscopic viewer. Like a desk version of Google Cardboard. You tape down two photos taken from different angles and view them in 3d. It has an adjustment knob like binoculars for your pupil distance, and some legs to hold it parallel to the desk. It’s made for aerial photographs. Maybe I could turn it into a VR viewer.
I've got a film negative scanner. I've also got a big pile of old negatives. I keep telling myself that someday I'm going to scan all those old negatives. We'll see.
I have my dad's old Pentax camera and accessories, as well as a Super 8mm film camera, unused film cannisters, and a projector with a screen. It's all still functional, and I could still film stuff with the 8mm. I could use the Pentax but I would need to go out of my way to get film for it. Shit probably costs way more now than it did when I first got into photography.
I also still have one of those CD/DVD repair things. Put a scratched CD in, run it, and it smooths out the scratches and, most of the time, makes an unplayable disc perfectly fine again.
My modular synthesizer.
I love it and I've poured far to much money into it for something that doesn't come close to the power of making music in a DAW. But I do love it, and it can do some cool stuff that I've not been able to reproduce in a DAW - like random triggers and probability. It's also nice to get away from my computer.
A tone dialer. Like this
https://images.app.goo.gl/fbdmckv44BY7fdWw9
Not for phone phreaking, just for speed-dialling.
I would make international calls frequently. I would buy calling cards. The process was: dial the 800 number on the card. Enter the id number on the card to use some of its credit. Dial the number to call. Their service would then connect me at a low rate to another country(probably making a voip call).
So I'd set up the 3 speed dial buttons with those. For each new card I'd only have to change the card's unique number.
I found my old TomTom GPS in a box last year. I struggled to find a reason it might be worth keeping. In the end it got recycled.
An iPod. It's still the same iPod I got for my birthday 20 years ago. It probably still works... If I'd be able to find a cable for it.
We still have a landline (technically VoIP) phone. There's also a list of important phone numbers written on the fridge. Good for emergencies.
There are few things more nerve wracking than frantically trying to find your cell phone and the number for poison control after your kid just swallowed something they shouldn't have.
I guess my only thing like that is a DVD burner. I threw everything away when moving countries 10 years ago and then moving between homes three times. That DVD burner was just stuck in my old PC case which I carried with me through decades. I only got rid of this PC case this year, it got quite a bit of damage through the years.
I had a large collection of antique computers and adjacent technology. Although I lost most of it in a natural disaster 😭. But I still have my commodore 64, vic-20, and 90/00s apple computer collection.
I have a rope lighter.
It's like a normal lighter but it uses a flammable rope instead of gas.