Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30

   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #21  
I still remember having to type in CD/ to change directories on the C drive. DOS was run from a giant floppy disc. Fun days until windows came along.

I still use the CD command

Used CD a whole bunch of times already today and I am supposed to be on vacation. :rolleyes::laughing::laughing::laughing:

Later,
Dan
 
   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #22  
When I started on PCs there was no such thing as a hard drive or a floppy drive. We had to boot from a cassette tape recorder!

My first dial-up was 300 baud.

300 baud, now that was SCREAMING. We had 110 in an acoustic coupler. The Pet, Commodore PET that is, was not hooked up to the phone, we had to use a teletype printer. If we wanted a personal copy of the program we had to use paper tape. I know I have that tape in a box some where. The tape had a game to play Star Trek. :laughing::laughing::laughing: Not sure if I can find the teletype printer much less the version of BASIC it needed or the Honeywell mainfraime but I still have the program. :shocked::D:D:D

The PET came with a cassette tape to save and load programs. One of our systems was the chicklet keyboard version with 4K of RAM. Yes, 4K. The new system had a full keyboard and 16K of memory!

Somewhere around 1979/1980 we the school board loaned us a dual floppy drive. Single sided and maybe could store 120KB or 160KB. Too long ago to remember. :laughing::laughing::laughing: The problem was you had to type in commands that were 20-40 character long to access the floppy. Real PITA. Make cd really nice. :D:D:D

Later,
Dan
 
   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #23  
30 years old and they still can't get it right ... still have memory leakage problems.

as said earlier , lots of bloatware that needs fast processors and tons of memory / equipment to run half decently ...

just boot up any version of Linux on a old PC and watch it run circles around almost any new machine.

still , 30 years is an accomplishment of some sorts ....

good bye to tubes , T03 transistors , paper tapes, TTY , 9 tracks , punch cards 026 and 029, SSDD floppies, 8" Wang floppies, cassette tape backup units . and all the other stuff we put up with .
 
   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #24  
When I started on PCs there was no such thing as a hard drive or a floppy drive. We had to boot from a cassette tape recorder!

My first dial-up was 300 baud.

Oh yeah! Now you are talking! My first computer was a Vic 20 and it used a tape drive. Of course everyone had the old Commodore computer. :confused2:
 
   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #25  
I've still got my Vic20 in the original box. Got a cassette tape drive and some game cartridges. Omega Race!!!

 
   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #26  
My first personal computer (bought used in '82 or so - I was 20) was a Texas Instruments TI-99-4A. The "4" was an indicator of the massive amount of RAM in the computer - 4K!! WOW! Hooked it up to a TV screen for a monitor and a cassette deck for storage. They made a chassis for floppy disk drives, but it was somewhere around $1500 so it was out of the question. It had BASIC built into it. I look back on some of the stuff that I "programmed" on that and just laugh.

In '85 or so, I bought a Wang PC with a 30MB hard drive (divided into a 10MB Wang MS-DOS and a 20MB IBM (regular) MS-DOS partitions). You got into the IBM partition by booting off a floppy. Wang Word Processing was the Cadillac back then. I also had a daisy wheel printer that churned out a lot of term papers when I was in college.

I kind of moved to Windows in '88 when I was working for one of the national CPA firms. I'd gone to a PC user group meeting at the Univ. of Cincinnati so see some guy that owned a software company demonstrate a new spreadsheet program that they had introduced. I was a big Lotus 123 user then so I was curious as to what was available. The next day I came back to the office and begged our managing partner to spend $495 on a copy of Excel that used a run-time version of Windows 2.0 in the background. Yup, Bill Gates' demo of Excel at that meeting made a convert out of me!! (I think he was only worth several million back then! LOL!)

Fast forward to now... I've been doing automated accounting / ERP systems since 1986. I've gone from DOS systems (that were super efficient and fast!) through painful transitions into Windows systems in the mid-late 90's. That meant going from Novell networks to NT to Windows Server servers on the backend. And, moving from proprietary databases (also fast and efficient) to MS-SQL. The early 2000's saw a great improvement in Windows based systems though. Graphic system management interfaces were a huge step forward. And now we're back to using "cmdlets" to manage various aspects of our systems. Isn't a cmdlet basically a batch file run from a DOS shell? Yup - I've gone full circle! I can't wait to retire! LOL!
 
   / Time Flies -- Windows Turns 30 #27  
I know were talking about windows in this thread.

But

I can remember playing the Oregon Trail game in school in the years 94 and 95 when I was in Kindergarten and First Grade.

We played it on an apple computer like the one in the pic and it was on a diskette like in the pic.

I feel so old. lol

oregon_trail.JPG

I'm still using a crt monitor on my desktop from 1993 that works great. Got All in the Family Playing on it right now.
 

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