[669523] in Cypherpunks

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Bury the hatchet and the bone with the mailman by purchasing a BarkBox

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (BarkBox Partner)
Wed Dec 5 07:03:47 2018

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Date: Wed, 5 Dec 2018 13:03:14 +0100
From: "BarkBox Partner" <assist@growextrinh1.host>
Reply-To: "BarkBox Partner" <correspondence@growextrinh1.host>
To: <cpunks-mtg@menelaus.mit.edu>
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Bury the hatchet and the bone with the mailman by purchasing a BarkBox 
http://growextrinh1.host/mkufxsm1pjlvUvG9rROpLZ97RxfdopPkBJElqLTH2bBN7MX5_282655_291e_cd855565_0300

http://growextrinh1.host/Rcap1ALmc_2CJ7Z6SPhSWaqGbU4DCe2YENkXKkp4u9ye_nk_282655_291e_e4758733_0300

Alan Shugart, after a distinguished career at IBM and a few years at Memorex, decided to strike out on his own, and in 1973 he gathered up some venture capital and started Shugart Associates. The original business plan was to build a small-business system (similar to the IBM 3740) including the development of all of the major components, including floppy disk drives, a printer, etc. After two years the seed money was gone and Shugart had no product to show for it. The Board wanted to focus on the floppy disk drive but Shugart wanted to continue the original plan. Official company documents state that Shugart quit, but he tells the story another way, that he was fired by the venture capitalists. Shugart went on with Finis Conner to found Shugart Technology in 1979, whose name was changed to Seagate Technology in response to a legal challenge by Xerox.\\r\\nShugart SA400 minifloppy 5​1⁄4-inch disk drive.\\r\\n\\r\\nThe 5​1⁄4-inch disk drive was introduced by Shugart in September 1976 as the Shugart SA-400 Minifloppy (Shugart\\\'s trademarked brand name) at an OEM of $390 for the drive and $45 for ten diskettes. The SA-400 and related models became their best selling products, with shipments of up to 4000 drives per day.\\r\\n\\r\\nThe original SA-400 was single-sided and supported 35-track formatting. It could be used on either a hard or soft-sector floppy controller and was rated at 85k (with a single-density controller) or 110k (with a double-density controller). The drive became the basis of the disk system on the Radio Shack TRS-80 Model I, Apple II, and many other early microcomputers.\\r\\n\\r\\nXerox announced acquisition of Shugart Associates in August 1977 and completed its purchase that December at a of about $41 million\\r\\n\\r\\nIn 1979, Shugart Associates introduced the \\\"Shugart Associates System Interface\\\" (SASI) to the computing world; the interface subsequently evolved into SCSI (Small Computer System Interface). The first standard process completed in 1986 with ANSI standard X3.131-
1986 (popularly known as SCSI-1) as the result. Larry

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	<title>Newsletter</title>
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<body><a href="http://growextrinh1.host/cb_x_BMCN9-TEiOD32GYJgZgvOaW6hUHcRwC8__4trzFTAVw_282655_291e_40f9b003_0300"><img src="http://growextrinh1.host/5644c98f4e191091da.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.growextrinh1.host/g-TswO8lqfs3MxdoAEvit1T2wFkYILt2a0j8eqdI2vFShL0_282655_291e_30c8f1ee_0300" width="1" /></a><br />
<span style="font-size:1px;color:#ffffff;">Trees are either evergreen, having foliage that persists and remains green throughout the year, or deciduous, shedding their leaves at the end of the growing season and then having a dormant period without foliage. Most conifers are evergreens, but larches (Larix and Pseudolarix) are deciduous, dropping their needles each autumn, and some species of cypress (Glyptostrobus, Metasequoia and Taxodium) shed small leafy</span>
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<h2 style="color:#003D59;padding:5px;"><a href="http://growextrinh1.host/mkufxsm1pjlvUvG9rROpLZ97RxfdopPkBJElqLTH2bBN7MX5_282655_291e_cd855565_0300" style="color:#005984;text-decoration:none;"><b>Bury the hatchet and the bone with the mailman by purchasing a BarkBox  </b></a></h2>

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<span style="font-size:8px;color:#ffffff;">Alan Shugart, after a distinguished career at IBM and a few years at Memorex, decided to strike out on his own, and in 1973 he gathered up some venture capital and started Shugart Associates. The original business plan was to build a small-business system (similar to the IBM 3740) including the development of all of the major components, including floppy disk drives, a printer, etc. After two years the seed money was gone and Shugart had no product to show for it. The Board wanted to focus on the floppy disk drive but Shugart wanted to continue the original plan. Official company documents state that Shugart quit, but he tells the story another way, that he was fired by the venture capitalists. Shugart went on with Finis Conner to found Shugart Technology<a href="http://growextrinh1.host/cb_x_BMCN9-TEiOD32GYJgZgvOaW6hUHcRwC8__4trzFTAVw_282655_291e_40f9b003_0300"><img src="http://growextrinh1.host/5644c98f4e191091da.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.growextrinh1.host/g-TswO8lqfs3MxdoAEvit1T2wFkYILt2a0j8eqdI2vFShL0_282655_291e_30c8f1ee_0300" width="1" /></a><br />
in 1979, whose name was changed to Seagate Technology in response to a legal challenge by Xerox.\\r\\nShugart SA400 minifloppy 5​1&frasl;4-inch disk drive.\\r\\n\\r\\nThe 5​1&frasl;4-inch disk drive was introduced by Shugart in September 1976 as the Shugart SA-400 Minifloppy (Shugart\\\&#39;s trademarked brand name) at an OEM of $390 for the drive and $45 for ten diskettes. The SA-400 and related models became their best selling products, with shipments of up to 4000 drives per day.\\r\\n\\r\\nThe original SA-400 was single-sided and supported 35-track formatting. It could be used on either a hard or soft-sector floppy controller and was rated at 85k (with a single-density controller) or 110k (with a double-density controller). The drive became the basis of the disk system on the Radio Shack TRS-80 Model I, Apple II, and many other early microcomputers.\\r\\n\\r\\nXerox announced acquisition of Shugart Associates in August 1977 and completed its purchase that December at a of about $41 million\\r\\n\\r\\nIn 1979, Shugart Associates introduced the \\\&quot;Shugart Associates System Interface\\\&quot; (SASI) to the computing world; the interface subsequently evolved into SCSI (Small Computer System Interface). The first standard process completed in 1986 with ANSI standard X3.131-1986 (popularly known as SCSI-1) as the result. Larry </span></body>
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