I was discussing with my brother discussing how uber-cool technology is these days.  (He's a fairly new "convert" to the "real world" outside of AOL.)  
I know I'm not the "oldest" guy in the forums - but I've been around the block a bit. I thought it might be fun to share some memories of being a geek in the "good old days."
You other old farts - feel free to add YOUR anecdotes.
What we now have at our fingertips power and speed that would have absolutely made us giddy 20 years ago. I still remember how "fast" my first 486-33 was. Now - I'm impatient if I have to wait more than 3 seconds for a page to load. How times change.
One of my fonder memories of growing up was when my brother took me to his work, and we played a scintillating game of tic-tac-toe with a reasonably polite machine called a Burroughs L-3000. This particular machine accepted its programming via punched paper tape. :Q
I remember when disk drives were fragile boxen the size of a stove or refrigerator - costing tens of thousands of dollars -- and one molecule of dust, or a hair, or a bump, or a sneeze would send them into a grinding, sickening mish-mash of heads, platters, and ground-up data. Now? Gracious. I have a bloody 80 GB main HDD. I could easily have afforded the 120 - but why bother? I'll never fill this volume -- I don't think
I began programming using Basic BASIC on IBM punch cards (nope... not the little ones... the big ones.)
If one card got out of sequence... TOAST. No compile. GIGO. Guess how easy it is to drop a 24" tall stack of punch cards on the floor?
Anyone else remember RPG?
Ahh... then there was my first "real" PC. It was a beaut.
Intel 8088-2 Processor - 8 KB of RAM! - and a good 'ol RGB monitor.
20 MB HDD!
I also had (insert dramatic music here) - a Bernoulli box! Yes - a 20+20. Those - were (as I recall 8" floppies) 20 MB removable storage. WOW.
We'll all doubtless remember alot more - but I thought maybe some of this might be fun for the younger guys to hear about... the days when EVERYTHING was command-line.
			
			I know I'm not the "oldest" guy in the forums - but I've been around the block a bit. I thought it might be fun to share some memories of being a geek in the "good old days."
You other old farts - feel free to add YOUR anecdotes.
What we now have at our fingertips power and speed that would have absolutely made us giddy 20 years ago. I still remember how "fast" my first 486-33 was. Now - I'm impatient if I have to wait more than 3 seconds for a page to load. How times change.
One of my fonder memories of growing up was when my brother took me to his work, and we played a scintillating game of tic-tac-toe with a reasonably polite machine called a Burroughs L-3000. This particular machine accepted its programming via punched paper tape. :Q
I remember when disk drives were fragile boxen the size of a stove or refrigerator - costing tens of thousands of dollars -- and one molecule of dust, or a hair, or a bump, or a sneeze would send them into a grinding, sickening mish-mash of heads, platters, and ground-up data. Now? Gracious. I have a bloody 80 GB main HDD. I could easily have afforded the 120 - but why bother? I'll never fill this volume -- I don't think
I began programming using Basic BASIC on IBM punch cards (nope... not the little ones... the big ones.)
If one card got out of sequence... TOAST. No compile. GIGO. Guess how easy it is to drop a 24" tall stack of punch cards on the floor?
Anyone else remember RPG?
Ahh... then there was my first "real" PC. It was a beaut.
Intel 8088-2 Processor - 8 KB of RAM! - and a good 'ol RGB monitor.
20 MB HDD!
I also had (insert dramatic music here) - a Bernoulli box! Yes - a 20+20. Those - were (as I recall 8" floppies) 20 MB removable storage. WOW.
We'll all doubtless remember alot more - but I thought maybe some of this might be fun for the younger guys to hear about... the days when EVERYTHING was command-line.
				
		
			