Nope, I'm far too young to remember that!
Please enlighten me
Those are systems like Road Runner and Verowire -- a little spool of fine enamelled wire that you wrap around component pins using a pen-like tool, then solder in place. The enamel burns off in the joint to make a connection, but insulates the run of the wire from its neighbours.
Various folks offered advice on different prototyping methods in response to a question I posed a while back -- curiously, for exactly the same sort of project. I ended up taking the 'try everything out and see what sticks' approach, although the computer itself is still stuck in the design phase due to lack of time; what I can say from building other projects is that pretty much everything that was said in that thread was worth heeding. I picked up a collection of wire-wrapping bits and pieces from eBay and used that to wire up my backplane (the board I had was mostly uncommitted), and will use a mix of PCBs and a wiring pencil with premade Eurocard prototyping boards for the bulk of the design.
That was an interesting thread to read.
I posted on piclist too and seems someone on there might be willing to sell me one of the boards I was looking for.
Tripad boards similar to
this also seem like an attractive option, possibly along with a wiring pen.
I know square pins are required for wire wrapping - I guess you could solder ICs in to tripad board along with 0.1 inch headers (that have square pins), pull off the black plastic strip after soldering the headers for extra room, and then wire wrap the pins. Obviously the wiring would then be on the component side. I'm thinking this may be more hassle than it's worth.
David.