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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20220117015412/https://twitter.com/Foone/status/1316012008257449986
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Foone's profile
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@Foone

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foone

@Foone

Hardware / software necromancer, collector of Weird Stuff, maker of Death Generators. (they/them) ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/fooneturing 

floppy.foone.org/w/Main_Page
Joined February 2008

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    1. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      so the 3.25" is a sort of prototype disk and it's kinda amazing I have one at all. Supposedly they did see one use, in the Seequa Chameleon 325, an obscure variant of an obscure portable Z80/8088 PC.

      1 reply 1 retweet 37 likes
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    2. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      So unless you find one of those rare portables, you're not finding a drive for a 3.25" Flex Diskette... and this is an external drive. so it's definitely from something else. So either we're wrong about what used it, or it's a prototype of something that never came out

      1 reply 1 retweet 42 likes
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    3. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      but the label makes it even weirder: Tabor.

      1 reply 0 retweets 39 likes
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    4. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      So IBM was working on a 4" disk drive in the early 80s, which they called the DemiDiskette eventually. It was canceled before coming out.pic.twitter.com/HoPjtRaSGp

      3 replies 2 retweets 47 likes
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    5. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      But you know what they labeled the drives when they were first showing them at trade shows? Tabor!

      1 reply 0 retweets 43 likes
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    6. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      and there were pre-release versions of the Tabor disks that looked nothing like the "final" one. I've got one!pic.twitter.com/6urZIHNG9a

      1 reply 0 retweets 44 likes
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    7. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      so, either: 1. this is a massive coincidence and Dysan decided to name their disks the same as upcoming IBM disks 2. It's a hoax someone is playing on floppy disk historians (all 5 of us) 3. Dysan at one point worked with IBM on Tabor prototype

      1 reply 2 retweets 70 likes
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    8. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      but as far as I can tell, until this auction showed up, there was no hint of any Dysan disk called "Tabor" and no hint Dysan & IBM had worked together on any version of the DemiDiskette.

      1 reply 0 retweets 33 likes
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    9. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      So, the auction pictures. The back seems to have some card edge connector, and an external power plug.pic.twitter.com/A3IR1IyTbv

      1 reply 0 retweets 33 likes
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    10. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      The label seems to say TLC or TTC Tabor. Anyone recognize that logo? it also looks like it might be some kind of sticker, which'd make sense if it's a prototype.pic.twitter.com/0QkNbqYQCI

      10 replies 0 retweets 40 likes
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      foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

      The disk definitely matches the Dysan Flex Diskette, other than the label. Interesting that the recorder number is "3251". The final one says 802950pic.twitter.com/b7MvhHRDOj

      6:44 AM - 13 Oct 2020
      • 37 Likes
      • Chris Israel Barker Vitaly Grischenckoff Lee C. Julien Ars 🇪🇺🇧🇪 daKaosjr 2y0uha22s ʎǝsɐɔ Marty
      3 replies 0 retweets 37 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          The auction does give a hint as to where this came from, which makes no sense at all. This came from the Estate of CB Wilson, who worked for Texas Instruments from 1967-2000.

          1 reply 0 retweets 41 likes
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        3. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          so what the fuck does TI have to do with this? who knows.

          4 replies 0 retweets 37 likes
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        4. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          anyway the ended auction is here: https://www.ebay.com/itm/VTG-1980s-RARE-TABOR-IIC-3-1-4-034-FLEX-DISKETTE-Disk-Drive-CB-Wilson-Estate-/203129773006?nma=true&si=PA19jki%252BreqIzp12UxaDJrtKSIo%253D&orig_cvip=true&nordt=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557 …

          2 replies 0 retweets 26 likes
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        5. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          I'm gonna see if I can message the winner to make sure we're in contact, because I'd love to see what's inside this and any additional info they have.

          1 reply 1 retweet 39 likes
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        6. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          there's some weirdness going on with the auction. since it ended, they relisted it twice, deleting the first one, and then relisting it as "for glimminge only". glimminge is the person who won the first auction, and I think they re-listed it because of international shipping

          1 reply 0 retweets 30 likes
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        7. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          the seller's in texas, and glimminge is in Germany somewhere.

          2 replies 0 retweets 22 likes
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        8. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          anyway I've messaged them now.

          1 reply 0 retweets 23 likes
          Show this thread
        9. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          foone Retweeted Patrycja

          and @ptrcnull pointed out that the logo is the same as the one on the TC500 drive, which I really should remember because I OWN ONEhttps://twitter.com/ptrcnull/status/1316015010758320130 …

          foone added,

          Patrycja @ptrcnull
          Replying to @Foone
          It looks like the same logo is on TC500, which you posted 2 years ago: https://twitter.com/foone/status/991063360455131138 … pic.twitter.com/tEhYyM1KvR
          1 reply 0 retweets 39 likes
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        10. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          which suggests it's related to Tabor Corporation, which was founded in 1982 and dissolved in 2000: So maybe it is just a coincidence? Tabor built drives for Dysan's 3.25" Flex Diskettes.pic.twitter.com/KIy2JW2oEY

          1 reply 1 retweet 27 likes
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        11. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          A mention in Byte from October 1984 says that Tabor was only making 3.25" drives for the past year, before adding a 3.5" drivepic.twitter.com/vkZazCkEMM

          2 replies 0 retweets 22 likes
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        12. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          This does add some other interesting info: Educational Microcomputer Systems had announced a 3.25" system but was changing it to 3.5", and General Scientific Corporation was shipping workstations with 3.25" drives.

          1 reply 1 retweet 24 likes
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        13. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          So maybe this is from a workstation from General Scientific?

          1 reply 1 retweet 23 likes
          Show this thread
        14. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          BTW another possibility is that there's no IBM connection at all. The "fact" that the IBM disks were called "Tabor" at some trade shows has a [citation needed] on it and there don't seem to be any mentions of that on the web that don't relate back to wikipedia

          1 reply 0 retweets 29 likes
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        15. foone‏ @Foone 13 Oct 2020

          so maybe the DemiDiskette was never called Tabor in the first place and this is just someone misremembering something from 40 years ago and stuffing it into wikipedia

          3 replies 0 retweets 31 likes
          Show this thread
        16. End of conversation

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