Bah, a real youngster! IBM 1130s had sense lights and switches! (And some of the physics undergrads learned how to do some pretty neat pranks with them)
It is ever thus. The way every generation learned something has always been better than whatever the newest generation is being taught about the subject. We always prefer what we already know. It’s meaningless. As long as the answer is correct, who cares how the engineer arrived at it?
When my father started, there were NO switches, just jumper boards, where you moved the jumpers for what you wanted the “computers” to do. You could use that computer til the vacuum tubes got too hot, thus the reason for the air conditioning. It was not for the employees, but to keep the computer cool.
Computer magazines had columns with DOS batch files that were actual programs. They were insanely complicated and borderline incomprehensible because DOS commands weren’t designed for that. Batch files made UNIX commands and scripts seem simple and straightforward. Minis and mainframes had better scripting.
I loved cheating on early DOS computer games because I could read the code, figure out where to go to max character stats, boost treasures, special objects, etc. and fly thru the games. Especially if I was having problems with certain sections. :o) I also had endless lives.
If modern programmers paid as much attention to memory management as programmers had to in the past, programs would run a lot faster. Of course, it was also easier to write buggy code that failed to do memory management and crashed because of it back then…
My first computer was a quantum computer. We’d chisel the code onto stone tablets and give the tablet to a trained pterodactyl who would then fly off into another Universe where the processing would take place. A different pterodactyl (which was actually the same one just super-positioned and entangled) would return with the results on printer paper. Of course, back then, we didn’t know what printer paper was…
Baslim the Beggar Premium Member over 2 years ago
Bah, a real youngster! IBM 1130s had sense lights and switches! (And some of the physics undergrads learned how to do some pretty neat pranks with them)
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member over 2 years ago
It is ever thus. The way every generation learned something has always been better than whatever the newest generation is being taught about the subject. We always prefer what we already know. It’s meaningless. As long as the answer is correct, who cares how the engineer arrived at it?
Ricky Bennett over 2 years ago
The first computer I programmed used an ASR33 teletype for the keyboard.
Kirk Barnes Premium Member over 2 years ago
…uphill both ways, in the snow!
Walkdad2 Premium Member over 2 years ago
I like the “dual processor” setup of the old guy.
fuzzybritches over 2 years ago
oooh—“jamjillion”—a new unit! Is it more, or less, than a metric bonkers’ worth?
vernfaulkner over 2 years ago
I have programmed in Basic on a TRS-80… I think that makes me old.
tcumming over 2 years ago
punchcards …. need I say more?
Lee26 Premium Member over 2 years ago
“I miss having to backspace thru a gazillion characters because I mistyped the 4th one” said nobody ever! And I LOVED playing with DOS, LOL.
goboboyd over 2 years ago
C:\
DawnQuinn1 over 2 years ago
When my father started, there were NO switches, just jumper boards, where you moved the jumpers for what you wanted the “computers” to do. You could use that computer til the vacuum tubes got too hot, thus the reason for the air conditioning. It was not for the employees, but to keep the computer cool.
llosik over 2 years ago
DOS is still there…check out its home in command prompt.
watcheratthewell over 2 years ago
DOS? How about CPM?
willie_mctell over 2 years ago
Computer magazines had columns with DOS batch files that were actual programs. They were insanely complicated and borderline incomprehensible because DOS commands weren’t designed for that. Batch files made UNIX commands and scripts seem simple and straightforward. Minis and mainframes had better scripting.
contralto2b over 2 years ago
I loved cheating on early DOS computer games because I could read the code, figure out where to go to max character stats, boost treasures, special objects, etc. and fly thru the games. Especially if I was having problems with certain sections. :o) I also had endless lives.
I'm Sad over 2 years ago
Hey!!! Somebody I can relate to!!!! I miss the good ol’ days…
jbarnes over 2 years ago
If modern programmers paid as much attention to memory management as programmers had to in the past, programs would run a lot faster. Of course, it was also easier to write buggy code that failed to do memory management and crashed because of it back then…
AndrewSihler over 2 years ago
I kind of miss DOS and command lines and all that. You knew what was what. Programs were small and simple.
donwestonmysteries over 2 years ago
IF dos equals ‘I remember when,’ THEN laptop must be a teenage whippersnapper.
syzygy47 over 2 years ago
Ol’ PC had to get the same from his dad, about his punchcards and his whirling reel to reel tapes
Pedmar Premium Member over 2 years ago
I remember coding with Basic on the Trash 80.
CoffeeBob Premium Member over 2 years ago
Hey young pad(awan) let me show you what “Reset to default” means.
William Bludworth Premium Member over 2 years ago
My first computer was a quantum computer. We’d chisel the code onto stone tablets and give the tablet to a trained pterodactyl who would then fly off into another Universe where the processing would take place. A different pterodactyl (which was actually the same one just super-positioned and entangled) would return with the results on printer paper. Of course, back then, we didn’t know what printer paper was…
martinman8 over 2 years ago
most of the kids to day have no idea of what dos is or even CPM.