Thanks, again, Evan, for the fun at the warehouse last Thursday. As a neat freak with a love of vintage computer stuff, it was nearly perfect for me. There is a *lot* of stuff in the warehouse, but lots of it isn't museum quality and really shouldn't be there (how many broken TI-99/4a's does anybody really need?). It was extremely satisfying sorting out the wheat from the chaff and organizing things into standard boxes on standard shelves and away from the random, waterlogged boxes people donated things in. All in all, this was a great experience. I highly recommend it if you can make the time (I happened to be in the neighborhood, which almost never happens) and enjoy reducing entropy while getting a history lesson. The OCD part of me loved starting with a bunch of teetering piles of mismatched boxes on the floor and ending with all the boxes gone and replaced with newly assembled rolling shelving units. Speaking of which, I just bought a couple for myself. Also: consider what needs to happen when you donate something. Someone needs to sort through it, decide what, if anything, is worth keeping, and then figure out where to file it. If you really want to be generous, do some of that sorting yourself before you donate it. For example, floppies with personal data (e.g., pirated software) on them really aren't something anybody's interested in.