I know you guys read the register, but this is just too funny:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/07/07/ebuyer_runs_site_on_commodore64/

Online retailing can be a rough sport. The competition is rabid,
customer loyalty is fickle, and IT expenses can go through the roof.

That's why The Register can appreciate an e-tailer with a unique business model.

A hawk-eyed El Reg reader points out that UK online retailer
Ebuyer.com appears to be cutting costs by running its site on servers
dating back to the late Cretaceous period - roughly speaking.
According to internet monitoring company Netcraft, the e-tailer has
bypassed run-of-the-mill legacy servers for some serious heirlooms.

Take a gander at the Netcraft site report for Ebuyer.com:

Ebuyer server report:
http://toolbar.netcraft.com/site_report?url=http://www.ebuyer.com

For starters, there's a Toshiba HX-10, built in 1983. The HX-10
features 64KB of RAM, a 3.6MHz CPU, and a stunning 256x192, 16-color
hi-res mode.

Next, you'll find not one but two Commodore 64s. The Commodore debuted
in 1982 with 64KB RAM, a 1.02MHz MOS Technology 6510 processor, and a
16-color, 320x200 resolution monitor. Not to mention a creamy BASIC
2.0 operating system.

Then comes the Dragon32, a machine that arrived in 1982 featuring
partial compatibility with the Tandy TRS 80 color series. Its Motorola
6809E processor clocks in at 0.89 MHz and runs Microsoft Extended
BASIC.

But clearly the real workhorses of the operation are the three ZX
Spectrums. These babies were also made in 1982, used a Z80 processor
running at 3.5 MHz, and offered up 128KB of memory - a great way to
run that Sinclair BASIC operating system.

--------------------------

Err... anyone know any pre-auth attacks for the Tandy web server?

-JP
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