Hey, it looks cool. Who cares if it looks sane or not? Makes it look like some sort of evil genius' lair, or a recording studio. Is that a Hackintosh you've got there, or is there a Mac hidden somewhere in there? I can't imagine that poor desk could handle the weight of a Mac Pro added to it.
Nice on the M clone. What sort of switches did it have? What made you part with it? I'd love to see it. I agree on the logo. It reminds me of 80's movie evil corporation logos like Terminator's Cyberdyne Systems, or Robocop's OCP.
Did you seriously just make that for me? You must have read my mind. When I set up my profile and signature just recently I was disappointed that I couldn't find a DC-2014. Thank you, very much.
I'm glad you think so, It's not caught on with my friends, but then again they don't have my wrists so I'm cool with it. I hope someday it's either an Evil Genius lair, or a recording studio. (I'd need more genius first though.)
The Mac is actually a nomachine session to a Mac Pro in my front living room. I couldn't fit it in this room, the picture doesn't quite do the justice to how small the room is, but I manage to squeeze in what I can.
Honestly, I had the keyboard before I really got into keyboards. I wish I honestly knew. I knew it was mechanical, and it had a 5 pin DIN connector.
The story of how I lost it is fairly long, but it revolved around a guy I knew who had a teacher from the late 80's at a College up in Phoenix. Well the student caught up with his professor and found out that some of the old photo work they did on a computer from that time was STILL on the computer after all these years! (This was 2015) However no-one he knew had access to a keyboard old enough. Enter me.
I had bought the keyboard at a yard sale for a few bucks, because it was cool. I kept it in the closet, and my buddy told me about how the teacher had his pictures, but no-one had access to the computer because no-one had one with a "Strange Connector" I put 2 and 2 together and got it out and visited Phoenix with him and in the afternoon of that day, booted up Windows 95 on it, and got the photos onto floppies and then onto a Flash drive. The professor then asked if he could keep it so he could put it on display in the college up there in Mesa. I marked it as a donation and I'm told it's still sitting in a case up there in a "history of computing" exhibit, which I thought was pretty cool.
The logo for it was what got me to look at the keyboard in the first place, and when I typed on it, I realized it was mechanical and bought it. I didn't know anything about adapters at the time either so I was more than willing to give it away. If only I knew what I knew now!
Here are the only two pictures I have of it I can find right now:
And yeah, it's no biggie, I enjoy drawing the little guys. I hope you enjoy it.