Originally posted by: meltdown75
hey, i wasn't the one who named it... they called it a 1200 baud modem. *shrug*Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: meltdown75
that depends if you consider a 1200 baud C=64 modem "hardware" 😛
technical aspect: 2004
you mean 1200bits per second right? I can't recall any 1200baud modem. The 1200bit per second modem were operating on 600 Baud. Baud = symbols per second. In essence, the only time Baud rate = data rate was when 1 symbol = 1 bit.
As an example, 56k modem operate on 8000 baud.
Originally posted by: mxyzptlk
In 1996 when I was 15 my granny bought me my first computer. It was a p200mmx built by some guy who was renting a house from her. When I got it, I promptly took it a part and spent the better part of a day putting it back together. I was interested then, but I had no money of my own to really make much of a hobby out of it. I did a lot of reading on forums and hardOCP. On my 18th birthday I bought another computer, a slot A athlon 650. I didn't put it together myself, but I did goto a local computer shop and spend an hour or so picking out every part for myself so I felt like I had some input. I remember being disappointed at the selection. They had the one motherboard I DIDN'T want as pretty much the only available choice. Took that one apart too. I had broke open the CPU's casing so I could attach some little gadget I got online to the PCB so I could overclock it, but I forget what it was called..
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: meltdown75
that depends if you consider a 1200 baud C=64 modem "hardware" 😛
technical aspect: 2004
you mean 1200bits per second right? I can't recall any 1200baud modem. The 1200bit per second modem were operating on 600 Baud. Baud = symbols per second. In essence, the only time Baud rate = data rate was when 1 symbol = 1 bit.
As an example, 56k modem operate on 8000 baud.
I had a 300baud modem . My mom was furious when she got a call from the telephone company wanting to know if we were aware our long distance had reached $450. I thought the BBS I was using was local . oops 🙂
Expensive lesson in telecommunication 😀
At least you were not on phone systems that charge by the minute like Taiwan.
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: meltdown75
that depends if you consider a 1200 baud C=64 modem "hardware" 😛
technical aspect: 2004
you mean 1200bits per second right? I can't recall any 1200baud modem. The 1200bit per second modem were operating on 600 Baud. Baud = symbols per second. In essence, the only time Baud rate = data rate was when 1 symbol = 1 bit.
As an example, 56k modem operate on 8000 baud.
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: meltdown75
that depends if you consider a 1200 baud C=64 modem "hardware" 😛
technical aspect: 2004
you mean 1200bits per second right? I can't recall any 1200baud modem. The 1200bit per second modem were operating on 600 Baud. Baud = symbols per second. In essence, the only time Baud rate = data rate was when 1 symbol = 1 bit.
As an example, 56k modem operate on 8000 baud.
I had a 300baud modem . My mom was furious when she got a call from the telephone company wanting to know if we were aware our long distance had reached $450. I thought the BBS I was using was local . oops 🙂
Originally posted by: BW86
I'm 22 now and I got into hardware around 8th grade, when I built my first gaming computer to play Half-life/Counter-Strike. So around 1999/2000.
Originally posted by: metalmania
Originally posted by: mxyzptlk
In 1996 when I was 15 my granny bought me my first computer. It was a p200mmx built by some guy who was renting a house from her. When I got it, I promptly took it a part and spent the better part of a day putting it back together. I was interested then, but I had no money of my own to really make much of a hobby out of it. I did a lot of reading on forums and hardOCP. On my 18th birthday I bought another computer, a slot A athlon 650. I didn't put it together myself, but I did goto a local computer shop and spend an hour or so picking out every part for myself so I felt like I had some input. I remember being disappointed at the selection. They had the one motherboard I DIDN'T want as pretty much the only available choice. Took that one apart too. I had broke open the CPU's casing so I could attach some little gadget I got online to the PCB so I could overclock it, but I forget what it was called..
You were back to the future or something? Pentium MMX was NOT out in 1996.