Just found two IBM keyboards few days ago in a friends basement while I was in Bruxelles (Belgium),
they were happy to give them to me when I asked for

Thanks !
Ahem! Greenock, no Greenwich!webwit wrote:I think M and F were solely made in Greenwich for Europe.
Surprised to see the word, "doohickey" coming from Scotland. I had thought this was of North American origin and that it had remained localized, but upon researching it a bit, it appears that the word might have originated as slang among US servicemen during WWI and thereby spread overseas. Not as obvious a term as, say, whatchamacallit or thingamabob.Muirium wrote:Such fancy doohickeys are beyond our Scottish ken!
Springs, perhaps, but Scottish hammers are another matter! Seriously, however, my favorite full-size Model M was made in Greenock. There is some subtle indefinable difference that sets it apart from others in my collection.Muirium wrote:Such fancy doohickeys are beyond our Scottish ken!
http://deskthority.net/post162622.html#p162622quantalume wrote:I've taken about half a dozen M-122 and F-122 terminal keyboards apart in the last month, and they all used the same color code, regardless of the connector at either end of the cable. Black = +5, white = ground, yellow = clock, red = data.
I'm not. IBM's part numbers are largely random, and multiple part numbers existed for the same thing. This is before you account for different language layouts. As consequeunce, it's much easier to reason/talk about the keyboards in terms of the systems that they were intended to be attached to, except perhaps for the 101-key Model Ms, of which there is a list of most of the important variantsDaniel Beardsmore wrote:I am surprised that all the IBM devotees/worshippers haven't got all this down on the wiki yet. The wiki doesn't even have a half-complete list of Model M and Model F part numbers, let alone a near-complete one.