Well of course, something as big as Robotron never goes away ;]
(check ebay.de for robotron stuff

most of which works good as new)
let me check..
Infineon and AMD chose Dresden for their most modern fabrication plants. Both produce their top-end chips here, making the city crucial to their long-term success.
Dresden owes much of its good fortune today to the inefficiencies of the old regime. Bloated work forces at the likes of ZMD left behind armies of highly skilled, out-of-work engineers, nearly all willing to work longer hours with fewer perks than their counterparts in Western Germany.
"My engineers work 45 to 50 hours a week, which is normal," said Klaus-Detlef Paesch, who began at ZMD in 1979 and now leads a 44-person-strong chip-quality testing team at AMD.
Unions have made few inroads here, he said, adding, "Thank goodness." And the proud Saxons have a famous disdain for Western Germany's notoriously tangled bureaucracy.
"If you have a reasonable proposal, you can call the mayor and he will accelerate it for you," said Thilo von Selchow, ZMD chief executive. "For Germany, that is still not typical."
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Locals joke that everything began in 1961 with the original AMD — Arbeitsstelle fuer Molekularelektronik Dresden, or Dresden Workplace for Molecular Electronics. Even by communist standards, the name lacked pizzazz, and it became Zentrum Mikroelektronic Dresden in 1969, the same year AMD was incorporated in Sunnyvale, California.
Leaning back in his cubicle, Paesch at AMD likes to reminisce about decades of Iron Curtain subterfuge known euphemistically, he said, as "reverse engineering" and today as simple piracy.
Buying technology licenses, like Western companies do, was politically impossible. He knows colleagues who reverse-engineered DEC desktops, a complete IBM mainframe and just about every chip imaginable. Several of them hold senior AMD management jobs today, he said.
ZMD also fostered an East German computer-hardware combine on the other side of the city, Robotron, once the IBM of Eastern Europe. Nearly all of Robotron's pre-1989 production went to the Soviet Union, often in exchange for Soviet oil and gas. It also built the electronic cockpit components for Soviet fighter jets.
(from an article on
www.iht.com)