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House of Mabel Computer Museum
This was supposed to be a serious history of Acorn hardware using my own collection as a cheap source of photo models, but somewhere along the way it just turned into a list of stuff I have in my collection, with recollections of how they were bought, what they were used for, and any gossip on their creation I can remember. I've also added a quick buyer's guide in case you're also trying to get hold of classic Acorn machines.
Many of these machines have been collected since I started to earn soooo much money that I could afford twenty or thirty quid for a piece of junk/history and still be able to eat at the end of the month, but some of them are what got me where I am today - so you can take this as a cautionary tale perhaps. I spent my formative years with an Acorn Electron; tried and failed to take things seriously with an A310; and still go to work toting a RiscPC on my shoulder.
Some of the pictures are a bit dodgy - at the time I didn't have my own digital camera, so both size and camerawork are somewhat lesser than that which I aim for now - but they should do for illustration purposes.
8 bit machines
 BBC Model B
 Acorn Electron
 BBC Master
 Master Compact
ARM Development System
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32 (or 26) bit machines
 A310
 A440
 A3000
 A3010
 A5000
 RiscPC
 Phoebe
 NCs
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Operating Systems etc.
 ArthurOS
 RISC OS 2
 RISC OS 3
 RISC OS 4 Including RISC OS 3.5 onwards
 My desk at work circa May 2002. You need JavaScript and a big screen mode to see it properly.
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Other stuff |
 Linux server
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 NetWare machine
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 Apple hardware
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 Palm V
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