Betty by Gary Delainey and Gerry Rasmussen for February 22, 2024

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    a sage  9 months ago

    I still have a pile of punch cards I use for notes.

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    Richard Howland-Bolton Premium Member 9 months ago

    40-ish years ago I was doing graphics by programming in PostScript.

    Ahhhh! Those were the days my friend…

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    markkahler52  9 months ago

    Xerox 860

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    Serial Pedant  9 months ago

    Commodore, any model. 2 kb of RAM-woohoo!

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    david_42  9 months ago

    Cromemco Z2 2 MHz Z-80, 48k and a paper tape reader. Definitely no vector graphics, no graphics at all.

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    saywhatwhat  9 months ago

    I’d say no more than 35 years ago.

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    Skeptical Meg  9 months ago

    I programmed a monitor and control system for a satellite earth station in the early 80s. The user interface was a huge (for the day) colour vector monitor. Periodically, you had to pull out a control card and adjust one or more of nine variable capacitors (with a wooden tool, of course) to adjust the position of lines in different sectors of the screen.

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    ChessPirate  9 months ago

    My first Home Computer was an “Interact” from Protecto Enterprises. After everything it needed was loaded into memory, I had about 2k for my BASIC Programs. It was less expensive than the VIC-20, had no real “drives” (it used tape cassettes for storage space), and I loved it. I wrote Battleship and Robot Wars games, and a sort-of Screen Saver program that just displayed random-color ASCII Characters to random parts of the screen. After the screen had become filled with characters, it was kind-of like watching moving art…

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    mourdac Premium Member 9 months ago

    Funny how those “ancient” computer skills like DOS came in so handy to actually know and work with Windows and its applications.

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    abennett Premium Member 9 months ago

    Learn C and Unix in the 1980’s and you’d still be using them today!

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    HappyDog/ᵀʳʸ ᴮᵒᶻᵒ ⁴ ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵘⁿ ᵒᶠ ᶦᵗ Premium Member 9 months ago

    My first computer was a mainframe, 60 years ago. I think I still have some parts from it.

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    Andrew Bosch Premium Member 9 months ago

    Behind the fancy graphics and ways of interacting (fingerprints, cameras, etc.) computers now are mostly smaller, faster versions of computers then.

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    zmech13 Premium Member 9 months ago

    Don’t knock vector graphics, it’s great for logos and stuff that you might need to resize.

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