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| subject: | TS 1000 |
-=> Dave Drum spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=- DD> I built my first confuser from a sandwich baggie of parts and DD> mimeographed instructions that were sold as a "kit" in the back pages DD> of Mechanix Illustrated magazine. There was no storage and input was DD> via dip switches. You really were a hearty soul :) With no storage did you have to leave it run to maintain whatever program you were running or did you have to reprogram it evry time? DD> First "store bought" item was a TRaSh-80 Model 1 (level 2 dos) with the DD> 16K memory expansion already installed. At the time if one owned stock Hmmm those seem popular to some nostalgic collectors these days. :) DD> 'puter. I remember pounding in the basic programs from the back of DD> BYTE, Creative Computing and .info. And logging on to my first local hehehe never tried those but as a proud Coco computer owner and a subscription to Rainbow magazine.... spent hours pounding in those programs myself. I even created a few programs of my own and sold a couple of them to Tom Mix software. DD> BBS (home brewed on a Burroughs Mini-Frame) a multi-line affair which DD> would get me connected to (gasp) usenet. And trying to view 80 column DD> porn on a 40 column screen. Bv)= hehehehehe, that must have been quite a trick. DD> Which prompted my next computer purchase - a PET 8032 ... still a DD> monochrome, cassette storage machine with a lordly 32K of ram and an DD> 80 column display. It also had a real ieee printer port and supported DD> a disc drive (only $395). wow, that was a bargain back in those days. :) DD> Ahhhhh .... the best thing about the good old days is that they're in DD> the rear view mirror. ah come on now, just think how much fun you had learning all this stuff and it carries on to today. Imagine growing up and getting into computing with only the point and click interface. :) ... All warranties expire upon payment of invoice. --- MultiMail/Win32* Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200) SEEN-BY: 1/123 15/2 18/200 226/16 17 229/354 426 452 728 981 1014 240/5832 SEEN-BY: 249/206 317 317/3 322/757 342/200 393/68 633/0 267 280 281 408 410 SEEN-BY: 633/412 712/848 @PATH: 18/200 229/426 633/280 267 |
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