Quoth RichS
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It's an original silver model, and came with a few dozen cartridges, including some by Atari, Parker Brothers, and some oddball company called Romox. Included with it was a Peripheral Expansion Box, loaded with a series of add-on cards (32K RAM, disk controller w/ drive, RS-232 interface). Should be fun! 
In other news, I picked up another oddball computer last month that I'd been too busy to post about here. It's a Rockwell AIM-65, re-branded/packaged by a company called "Aeolian Kinetics" as the "Microcomputer 65". It was intended to be used as part of their PDL-24 Monitoring System, meant for maintaining solar heating systems or somesuch. Hopefully, it can be made to work for general purpose computing as well. Anyway, here are a few pics:




I have 2 extra, and tried one with my original C64. It came one, but the READY came up as weird symbols, so I turned it off. Tried to power it on with that and the supply from my newer C64D, and no go. My tape drive turned out to be non-working also; tried with both C64s I had before the whole power supply fiasco, and it wouldn't power on.
Here are some pictures:



While not as bad as the SE/30 seen in the above link, it was still pretty nasty.
Fortunately, I'd had the foresight to save various spare parts for these Macs when my high school was junking them. I checked the spare Mac Classic logic board I had, and its battery had been pulled. I installed the spare board in place of the corroded one, put the computer back together, powered it up, and the machine lives again.
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