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Frank Durda's Collection

pski

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I'm posting this on behalf of Paul Schreiber. He hangs out on Facebook.
...............

Just a 'heads up'.......

Some of you may be familiar with former Tandy R&D engineer Frank Durda IV who recently passed away.
Frank was a SW (and also a bit of HW) genius. Really. A more loyal Tandy employee/fanatic does not exist. And he kept EVERYTHING.
Frank left, most importantly, a wife and 4month old daughter, a daughter he never saw, or got to hold, as he was hospitalized during her birth and died, without regaining consciousness, soon after.
His wife Corrine now has the task to sort through Frank's "collection", which by my estimate, is over 300 file boxes of "stuff". The Tandy stuff appears to range from Model 2/3 up to the AST computers (4000SX). I even uncovered a box of VIS hand controllers [shudder].
Frank and his team wrote the BIOS/drivers for probably 100 things, as well as TRS-DOS/LDOS/XENIX and so on.
It's going to take MONTHS to get it all sorted (she lives about a 40min drive from me), today I just grabbed the first 12 boxes in the garage I could access (there was a 1964 Teletype machine in the way).
WHat I plan to go is sort as follows:
a) SW - floppies, SyQuest drives, 8mm tape. You name it, Frank has it.
b) HW - board add-in boards and full computers. I counted about 12 Tandy computers. There may be 50 more, I don't know. There are 100s (yes 100s) of add-in boards.
c) books/manuals - I spotted several HW Reference manuals, a FORTRAN binder, and a photocopied dBase III manual. About 70% are Tandy originals, 30% copies.
What is the goal? The goal is 2-fold:
1 - Preservation
2 - raise funds for Frank's wife & baby daughter

Now, as we all are aware, this stuff is HEAVY. I'm in Texas, and have Fed-Ex, UPS, and USPS options. In some cases, I will put individual items/small lots on eBay, but for the most part, this stuff will be sold by weight. Like $15/pound or some such. I some cases I will be specific, other cases might me a "treasure chest of Tandy Wonder".
Now, I was 100% a HW designer at Tandy, but I have a few ex-R&D folks in my network I can see if they remember this stuff. If you are collecting 'rare' Tandy items, the 2nd box I looked in had 2 internal R&D use boards that were the audio and video portions of the Tandy Sensation! PC. Only 3 sets were made (2 for Tandy and 1 for MicroSoft) and Frank has a Tandy set (I even forgot I designed them!). These were used to write the drivers before the 'real hardware' was developed, and they were also used for the VIS development.
I hope to have 'a new batch of stuff' every 2-3 weeks. Mainly, I want this stuff to find "good homes", not to be flipped. I want to be able to have a decent amount of $$$ for his family.
Lastly: Frank ran a few ISPs as well. I'm not an 'IT Guy' by a LONG shot. But he has 10-20 Cisco doo-dads as well (1U rack routers, etc). I'll post a few photos for giggles, and next week hope to have the first batch for sale.
 
I'll ask here as I don't know Paul at all . . .

pski - would it make sense to catalog an hold some(/most) of the stuff and live-auction it off at the Assembly? I know it's nearly 6 months away still, _and_ some distance from Texas, but from the perspective of "raising money for the family" it might make more in that environment.

PJH
 
I don't know Paul, either, so I'll ask here:

Frank's garage sale site is still up. Is Paul considering using that? I had checked it every couple of months before Frank passed, but it might be a alternative to ebay.
 
I chatted with Paul a bit last night and facebook is definitely the best way to get in touch with him.

He mentioned that this would be a long process and he'd eventually put up some things on his own website (www.synthtech.com).
 
Well I'm not on facebook so that will be a problem for me. Pete, you know what I'm looking for. try to keep an eye out for me.
 
Paul is working on a plan with the goals of both preservation and helping Frank's family. Items will become available in due course. Let's keep in mind he's volunteering to do this so its a good idea to be respectful of his time and effort. We don't want these historical artifacts going to a recycler or dumpster or to someone who has no idea of their significance.
 
Several pictures down, "my friend's garage needs cleaning": right side, interesting hardware and a box labeled "diagnostic cards, tools, extenders"
 
Yes, I have never signed up an I can go through them. Its a part of Facebook now so probably just press a button and you're in.

Really neat stuff. The modem he designed, I wonder what other modems he did. I was always impressed with the guts of my Modem II given the era.
 
Yes, I have never signed up an I can go through them. Its a part of Facebook now so probably just press a button and you're in.

Really neat stuff. The modem he designed, I wonder what other modems he did. I was always impressed with the guts of my Modem II given the era.

If I remember correctly he designed either all of them or almost all of them.
 
Wow did any of that source in the 1st image come in the xenix devkit? Blows my mind you actually have backups from one (the?) of the guys who maintained xenix for Tandy!

There's nobody else in the world who will do a better job of preserving that stuff than you Pete!
 
Well, since the cat’s out of the bag...

You can imagine what is on these carts. These are backups of most of the Xenix development machines in Tandy engineering from the late 1980s.

Here is my plan.

First, I am reading all of the cartridges into DREM based HD images. This will preserve the data before it is lost due to failing media issues. A number of the carts are unreadable or only partially readable. They are coming from a Texas garage which gets HOT in the summers.

Next, I will be going through and filtering out personal information. This was a condition to receiving the carts and I will certainly honor that. This has always been one of my priorities with archiving software.

I have not thought much past that point. There are obviously a lot of considerations with this data. And the amount of data is overwhelming. It will take some time.

89B590D1-593F-4924-A40A-6D187D31EBED.jpgC54759AE-619F-4CB6-A41B-C71BDF786E07.jpg
 
You can imagine what is on these carts. These are backups of most of the Xenix development machines in Tandy engineering from the late 1980s.

Anything from Steve Williams you've come across? He did the original model 16 work, I think, then he worked on CP/M-68K at DRI before coming to Apple where I knew him.
 
I wanna hear all the juicy tidbits about Bob Snapp! I bet there was tons of internal talk about him especially since Frank spent so much time on that last "re-write" of z80ctl to try and keep him from patching it.

Seriously though you've got the goldmine of big Tandy Xenix! I wonder if they built it natively on the 6K or cross compiled on a larger system? How cool would it be to build it again!
 
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