You Know You Are Old When

/ You Know You Are Old When #4,101  
We didn't get a TV until 1956 when our one station started, combination of ABC and CBS. Radio before that, Lone Ranger,

Cisco Kid, I don't remember any of the others. The only time I saw NBC was at my Aunt's house, they had several channels

and a rotor. Also that was the first place I saw colored TV.
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,103  
When I started my own computer refurbishing business, in 2003, I started getting requests for CP/M, Z80 and DOS based 8086 type floppy only machines. These were getting hard to find as working models. I had to rebuild them, and reseat all the chips, and re-aline the drives. The CRTs usually had so much burn in that they were unusable. After making a few I had to readjust my prices, way up to more than what the new computers were going for. The clients never batted an eye, or questioned the price in anyway. Often they would want two identical machines. The clients didn't want to tell me what they wanted them for. And I could not give a warranty cause replacement parts were hard to find. One client did clue me in, that they needed this particular machine to run a legacy industrial press. I assume this was what the others wanted them for also. They had some mllion dollar machine with custom soft that was taylored to that computer.
That was pretty common at my old job. One machine, one task. Still running 20-30 years it's still making money.

Emulators did resolve a lot of that for us. Machine didn't know the difference. All it wanted was input and output.
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,105  
Has Hop Along Cassidy been mentioned?

I always thought Penny on Sky King was hot.
I liked the the old Bamboo Bomber better than the C310 he got later on. Round engines rule!
IMG_6051.jpegFor your viewing pleasure!
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,106  
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,107  
Has Hop Along Cassidy been mentioned?

I always thought Penny on Sky King was hot.
I liked the the old Bamboo Bomber better than the C310 he got later on. Round engines rule!
We watched Sky King since Grandad had a Cessna. I never thought about Penny since I was a kid. I just looked her up... Wow!
20241110_132544985.jpg
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,108  
Cisco Kid, Lone Ranger, Buffalo Bob Smith (I met him in later years) Roy Rogers, Spin and Marty and Howdy Doody. A little Dragnet at some point.
 
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/ You Know You Are Old When #4,109  
Captain Satellite and Marshall J and Sargent Sacto?
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,112  
I got one “ Land Of The Giants “
One of my favorites!☮️✌🏻
IMG_6053.jpeg
Now, that’s hot!
 
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/ You Know You Are Old When #4,113  
I remember watching the presidential convention with all the "I like Ike" signs around.
I remember the adult men sitting around in our parlor watching the Cuban missile crisis unfold. Very solemn events so went outside and played but were worried because they were worried.
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,114  
When I started my own computer refurbishing business, in 2003, I started getting requests for CP/M, Z80 and DOS based 8086 type floppy only machines.
My first home computer was a Commodore 64. Bought it with my brother. A whopping 64k of Ram. We bought early cutting edge home computing magazines. We’d find issues that had printed code in them for Commodore programs. Some were like 30 pages of paper edge to edge numbers. We’d take turns on whose job it was to punch in thousands of numbers on which days. Then came trying to successfully compile it, and days of finding a single bad number. A week later, and after figuring out a single mistake , cross checking the magazine, we had a simple pong program.
Storage was an external cassette recorder just like used for music, that we bought and plugged in. Memories…
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,115  
My first home computer was a Commodore 64.
Same here, but I had held out for it, since I was in the Army and employed at an Army research lab which had just started getting DEC Rainbows (with floppy drives) for all the secretarial staff.
And once I got it I found I could fit the C64, it's tape deck and power supply into a scavenged briefcase so I could bring it in to work to write reports.

Then after I produced several good reports, proving it wasn't just a toy my boss agreed I could get a DEC Rainbow. I managed to finagle that into a DEC Pro 380 (with the PDP-11/73 chipset) with a 10 MEGABYTE hard drive! I was the envy of the Lab.
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,116  
I met my favorite TV cartoon show host Whizzo The Clown (Frank Wiziarde) and got his autograph at local home show.
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/ You Know You Are Old When #4,117  
My first home computer was a Commodore 64. Bought it with my brother. A whopping 64k of Ram. We bought early cutting edge home computing magazines. We’d find issues that had printed code in them for Commodore programs. Some were like 30 pages of paper edge to edge numbers. We’d take turns on whose job it was to punch in thousands of numbers on which days. Then came trying to successfully compile it, and days of finding a single bad number. A week later, and after figuring out a single mistake , cross checking the magazine, we had a simple pong program.
Storage was an external cassette recorder just like used for music, that we bought and plugged in. Memories…
Vic20 here. (y)
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,118  
Vic20 here. (y)
Same time as me, but ours was a TI-99, sold 1979 - 1981. I think VIC-20 came in 1980.

I remember when our school got one computer, to share among 25 teachers and 600 students, an Apple-II or II+. You could sign up for an after-school club to go use it, which ended up being like 3-4 kids at a time watching a teacher use it.

Dad had two ITT PC's (probably 286's) for work, and eventually bought us an Apple II-GS for home around Christmas 1986... no hard disks in any of these computers. Heck, we were amazed when we got a 3.5" floppy, originally 880 kB. Then even more so, when it jumped up to 1.44 MB HD/DS.

It felt like damn-near unlimited storage, at the time. How the heck would we ever fill a 1.44 MB disk?!? :ROFLMAO:

I also remember paying $1200 at wholesaler pricing for 32 MB of RAM in my first Pentium computer. One of the two major factories producing memory at the time had experienced a fire (1994/95?), and the pricing of memory shot thru the roof for about two years. It peaked above $40/MB, in 4 MB SIM's.
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,119  
Apple II here with two floppy drives and Apple LQP at 40cps plus IEEE card.
 
/ You Know You Are Old When #4,120  
Apple II here with two floppy drives and Apple LQP at 40cps plus IEEE card.
My father bought an Apple IIE with two floppies. He was a construction specification writer. He'd get periodic updates to specs in huge binders and input the entire thing into the computer. He could look stuff up a lot faster on that than in the binders. He had it all digitized before digitized was cool. :ROFLMAO:
 

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