I'm so old...
Moderator: POL Developer
I'm so old...
... I know what a "Walkman" is.
... I remember the times when you used soap instead of shower gel.
...
... I remember the times when you used soap instead of shower gel.
...
You're not old. I know what records are. In fact I have lots of 'em.
I know what 8-track tapes are. I used to have some.
I programmed my first computer in Hexadecimal machine code. It was a KIM-1 and it used an 8-bit processor, the 6502.
I know what a MITS Altair computer is. I saw it when it first came out.
I know what a Tarbell cassette interface is. I used to use cassetes to store programs on.
I know what an ASR-33 Teletype is. I programmed in HP9000A BASIC on one and still have some of my programs on paper tape.
I knoiw what dot matrix impact printers are. Used to own several.
And finally, I was working in a Byte Shop computer store back in the early 80's when the software rep brought in a new game for sale. It was on six double sided Apple II floppy discs. You had to flip them over to use the 2nd side. It had a funny name, they called it Ultima.
I know what 8-track tapes are. I used to have some.
I programmed my first computer in Hexadecimal machine code. It was a KIM-1 and it used an 8-bit processor, the 6502.
I know what a MITS Altair computer is. I saw it when it first came out.
I know what a Tarbell cassette interface is. I used to use cassetes to store programs on.
I know what an ASR-33 Teletype is. I programmed in HP9000A BASIC on one and still have some of my programs on paper tape.
I knoiw what dot matrix impact printers are. Used to own several.
And finally, I was working in a Byte Shop computer store back in the early 80's when the software rep brought in a new game for sale. It was on six double sided Apple II floppy discs. You had to flip them over to use the 2nd side. It had a funny name, they called it Ultima.
I started my online career with a 1200 baud modem.
"Oh, a WAV file. It's description sounds interesting. But it's 60k, that'll take about minutes. Hmm..."
Today, every single menu button on a homepage is about that size
* The first video tapes I used weighed 1 kilo or so
* When I wanted to buy Joghurt I had the choice between strawberry, cherry and without any fruit.
* A pair of sneakers cost less then half a month's salary.
* There were 3 (!) channels on TV.
* When I ordered a "Coke", I got what I wanted (no cherry, light, zero, lemon blabla...)
* A mobile phone was something only secret agents owned.
"Oh, a WAV file. It's description sounds interesting. But it's 60k, that'll take about minutes. Hmm..."
Today, every single menu button on a homepage is about that size
* The first video tapes I used weighed 1 kilo or so
* When I wanted to buy Joghurt I had the choice between strawberry, cherry and without any fruit.
* A pair of sneakers cost less then half a month's salary.
* There were 3 (!) channels on TV.
* When I ordered a "Coke", I got what I wanted (no cherry, light, zero, lemon blabla...)
* A mobile phone was something only secret agents owned.
I remember my first exposure to a computer in school. We programmed in pascal.
I had a TRS-80 for my first computer at home and wrote my first programs in basic.
I remember DOS and how to use it still. Hell I even took college classes for DOS and basic. Not visual basic but dos basic.
I remember using tape drives for program storage and when the first floppy drive came out for the TRS-80 it was blazing fast.
I remember when modem speeds were 600 baud and we thought that was fast.
I also remember when windows came out and every one thought it would ruin the world of computers that I worked with.
Now I try to tell my kids about things when I was growing up and they think I am older then dirt.
I had a TRS-80 for my first computer at home and wrote my first programs in basic.
I remember DOS and how to use it still. Hell I even took college classes for DOS and basic. Not visual basic but dos basic.
I remember using tape drives for program storage and when the first floppy drive came out for the TRS-80 it was blazing fast.
I remember when modem speeds were 600 baud and we thought that was fast.
I also remember when windows came out and every one thought it would ruin the world of computers that I worked with.
Now I try to tell my kids about things when I was growing up and they think I am older then dirt.
Re: I'm so old...
LOL. My first computer? The first I owned was a Tandy CoCo 8bit. I still have it somewhere. And the original Dungeon of doom. I still remember those old text games.
Now I am building a new system with 16k ram, Never thought I would ever NEED 16k ram. Heck my first child just retired from the Rail Road. And 2 have retired from the navy and army, after 20 years. proves they are smarter then the old man. All I ever did was put flowers in the gun barrels At the White house.
Now I am building a new system with 16k ram, Never thought I would ever NEED 16k ram. Heck my first child just retired from the Rail Road. And 2 have retired from the navy and army, after 20 years. proves they are smarter then the old man. All I ever did was put flowers in the gun barrels At the White house.
Re: I'm so old...
Hackem, did you mean 16 Gigs RAM?Hackiem wrote:Now I am building a new system with 16k ram
Re: I'm so old...
Yup, Told you I was Old. If you have ever been to Moonglow, You have seen my OLD work, it was all mine to build.Yukiko wrote:Hackem, did you mean 16 Gigs RAM?Hackiem wrote:Now I am building a new system with 16k ram
Re: I'm so old...
Hahaha.
I'm probably as old as you. I remember the CoCo. I did some BASIC programming on the TRS-80 for a precious metals refining company but my first computer was the KIM-1. It didn't have any video display. All it had was a 6 digit, 7- segment hexadecimal display. It was built by MOS Technology in 1976.
Anyway, it's good to see us "old-timers" are still around.
I'm probably as old as you. I remember the CoCo. I did some BASIC programming on the TRS-80 for a precious metals refining company but my first computer was the KIM-1. It didn't have any video display. All it had was a 6 digit, 7- segment hexadecimal display. It was built by MOS Technology in 1976.
Anyway, it's good to see us "old-timers" are still around.