TractorTYMe
Veteran Member
I had an internship with Unisys in 1994, oh and whom doesn't remember the Italian Computer company Olivetti. They were famous for their wired patches of leads of their PCB's on their computer system.
I worked in NASA STDN 1968 to 1972 every computer we had was one of a kind.I worked in NASA communications for a while
Wang had an interesting marketing approach in the days before they became mostly a word processor company. Prior to that they built & sold "programmable calculators". In reality, they were minicomputers but in those days (60s/early 70s) the word "computer" conjured up images of big scary mainframes that were expensive and complicated to use, and a lot of companies may or may not have had a budget for that, but it seemed there was always room in the budget for a programmable calculator.I will never forget the year when we got Wang. We ( Env Health Dept ) were chosen by Wang to test their new systems. The secretaries were overjoyed. They could edit/correct any correspondence - right on the monitor. Once in final state - the printers would print out as many copies as needed.
And most of us geeks with tractors have ones with NO-TECH. Who wants a machine with a computer, only for it to fail into limp-mode or worse. Then you have no Right-To-Repair other than the dealer.This thread has turned into total tech ****. Geeks with tractors... Who would of thunk?
I used to get a lot of service calls from friends that had bought Packard-Bell computers, and once they were out of warranty they were junk. I could usually salvage the HD and put in a new computer. I found that the power supplies were the weakest component, but keyboards were junk too.no mention of Packard Bell? Boo.. my first computer or Gateway?
PB and Gateway did somethings well in advance compared to other brands that offered the same stuff.I used to get a lot of service calls from friends that had bought Packard-Bell computers, and once they were out of warranty they were junk. I could usually salvage the HD and put in a new computer. I found that the power supplies were the weakest component, but keyboards were junk too.
Yes and Yes… and don’t get me started on license to use, etc.And most of us geeks with tractors have ones with NO-TECH. Who wants a machine with a computer, only for it to fail into limp-mode or worse. Then you have no Right-To-Repair other than the dealer.
So, us geeks, having to live with tech for years, know the right answer, no tech means easy fixings and less things to break.![]()