Posted on 04/01/2012 6:21:36 AM PDT by Stoat
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Excellent!!!
It sends a thrill down my leg....
Is that an ashtray on his desk? Wow! This ad must be old!
3D-printing technology; this came in an email from the MOtley Fool.
My dad brought home a Radio Shack TRS-80 in 1980. We loaded our games with a cassette drive that took an eternity. If somehow you even looked at the wires going from the cassette to the computer it would fail to install properly-very frustrating for a 7 year old who just wanted to play a game.
18 years ago I was with a girlfriend touring the Smithsonian and looked up and saw my dad’s old “trash 80” system on display. It made me smile thinking of all the interesting times I had on that system.
Hard to believe I’m typing this on an iPhone 32 years later...
Roscommon
System Industries was the first place I interviewed with when I was looking to relocate to the “Sand Box,” i.e., Silicon Valley in 1982. I wound up working for a competitor of theirs called “Data Systems Designs.” The real point of the post though is that back then a Moderate GOP member of the house was elected from the Bay Area (the mind boggles at the concept.) His name was Ed Zschau and he founded Systems Industries.
In ‘93 I took an Autocad course a local college. I think the machine was a 13mhz. You could draw one tooth of a gear and then have the machine do an “array”, draw the other teeth. You could get a cup of coffee while it was doing this!
Coffee table made from an original 26-inch hard drive platter from a 1967 Control Data Corporation 6603 Disk File Controller
My unit was a tiny AF activity on an Army Base. We were the forgotten step kids and had antiquated equipment.
I'd go in, turn on the computer, start the coffee. Click on a few options, pour a cup of coffee. Finish the booting up sequence, go out back with my coffee and have a cigarette while Soldiers marched by. I'd smile, wave and think to myself..."Thank you God for steering me into the Air Force because that looks like it sucks!"
“White water Prodigy boards?”
I logged onto prodify a few times, but by that time I was regular on compuserve. From compuserve, I went to AOL.
All pay services. Imagine that?
We used to have competition to see who could make it do the most interesting display with only one line of (BASIC) code. Those were the days.
My first machine was an Apple IIc. I was one of probably five people in the world who bought one. It came with a blazing 1.77 MHz Motorola 65C02 microprocessor, two 64K “bank-switched” RAM boards, a green monochrome monitor and a built-in 5 1/4” floppy drive. The OS (ProDOS) had to be loaded from a system disk every time the machine started and it had a built-in BASIC interpreter coded onto the ROM (the “Monitor ROM”). I still have the machine and all the peripherals, including AppleWorks, Apple’s integrated spreadsheet, database, and word processor.
Those were some fun days, but it could sure get expensive.
Not necessarily. I think the 8088 processors were out when I bought my 8086. Its real value was the education in MSDOS.
Show-off. Mine had metal rods and colored beads....called an "aba-something"......
Sucker had a turbo charge button on it toio, which tooking it to a blazing 7 mhz processor speed.
Windows?, what was that? Back then DOS was our friend.
Which model of CoCo?
The last ones could go up to 512K and could support OS9 Level II, using a memory control device called a “GIME” chip. It would have been slightly more capable if Tandy had used Motorola’s 6829 memory mapping chip.
I had a couple different CoCos, including one marketed through Tandy. I did get OS9 level II running on it.
I have a couple of connections to those HW and SW products.
People are still supporting the CoCo, with advanced video and storage add-ons. There’s a couple of annual meetings of CoCo partisans, one of them near Chicago.
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