QMODEM on the Commodore PC40-III running MS-DOS 5, connected via serial port to a crude simplex current loop adapter to attempt interfacing with a Decitek paper tape reader & punch.
seen from Russia

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seen from United States
QMODEM on the Commodore PC40-III running MS-DOS 5, connected via serial port to a crude simplex current loop adapter to attempt interfacing with a Decitek paper tape reader & punch.

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Intel 80287 Math Coprocessor upgrade!
My Commodore PC40-III has been successfully upgraded with the 287. I don’t know what I’ll need it for, but I wanted to add one.
I’m rearranging my bench equipment layout again to try and find a suitable new layout.
Commodore 1352 Mouse for their PC compatible family.
This is not a serial mouse, and thus it requires the use of a specialized mouse port on the back of the PC-III series. The utilities disk was never unsealed, so I get to do that too.
New layout, same problems: PC40-III doesn’t take to installations onto IDE drives that aren’t in its list.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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The Commodore PC40-III finally has a keyboard to match!
There is a chorus of 5¼“ floppies singing away in my room.
Commodore PC40-III
Commodore made IBM compatible machines, believe it or not. This is a later 286-based machine with an IDE hard drive, both 5¼ and 3½ floppy drives, embedded VGA, and 1MB of base RAM in a small form factor. This one has a bad hard drive, but that can be fixed.