tt post oct 7, 2016 - b http://toledotalk.com/cgi-bin/tt.pl/article/206706/07Oct2016/Glass_City_Skyway_Pylon_Lighting q. enjoyeverysandwich posted at 09:13:28 PM on Oct 07, 2016: as soon as they can find another Commodore 64 to run the electronics. q.. #history #technology quote=206710 Those are hot items. For parts. September 2016 Gizmodo story : "This Old-Ass Commodore 64 Is Still Being Used to Run an Auto Shop in Poland":http://sploid.gizmodo.com/this-old-ass-commodore-64-is-still-being-used-to-run-an-1787196319 q. Yes, the same Commodore 64 released 34 years ago that clocked in at 1 MHz and had 64 kilobytes of RAM. It came out in 1982, was discontinued in 1994, but it’s still used to run a freaking company in 2016. q.. From the "Commodore USA’s Facebook page":https://www.facebook.com/CommodoreUSA/photos/a.224898297528365.64728.181491231869072/1279382015413316/?type=3&theater&_fb_noscript=1 q. This C64C used by a small auto repair shop for balancing driveshafts has been working non-stop for over 25 years! And despite surviving a flood it is still going... q.. !https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/s--ManuEJ5B--/c_scale,fl_progressive,q_80,w_800/zdsgzq2fsbyminket7qi.jpg! hr. br. Closer to home ... June 2015 woodtv.com [Michigan] story : "Commodore Amiga controls the heat and air conditioning at 19 Grand Rapids Public Schools":http://woodtv.com/2015/06/11/1980s-computer-controls-grps-heat-and-ac/ - the news story contains a video q. The Commodore Amiga was new to GRPS in the early 1980s and it has been working tirelessly ever since. It replaced a computer that was “about the size of a refrigerator.” “The system controls the start/stop of boilers, the start/stop of fans, pumps, [it] monitors space temperatures, and so on,” Hopkins explained. *A Kentwood High School student programmed it when it was installed in the 1980s.* Whenever the district has a problem with it, they go back to the original programmer who still lives in the area. Parts for the computer are difficult to find. “It’s a very unique product. It operates on a 1200-bit modem,” said Hopkins. “How it runs, the software that it’s running, is unique to Commodore.” Hopkins said the system runs on a radio frequency that sends a signal to school buildings, which reply within a matter of seconds with the status of each building. If the computer stopped working tomorrow, a staff person would have to turn each building’s climate control systems on and off by hand. A new, more current system would cost between $1.5 and 2 million. q.. !https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7476/30181872155_6006825c91_z.jpg!