• The Computer Chronicles

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    No one has replied
  • Jim Butterfield on the Commodore 64

    IT Discussion
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    scottalanmillerS

    Amiga 1000 was my first computer that we owned ourselves. Borrowed lots before then but that was the first that was ours.

  • Bits and Bytes Academy (1983)

    IT Discussion
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    Reid CooperR

    It is really quite amazing how much they knew about how computing would evolve. It isn't very impressive.

  • Bits and Bytes (1983)

    IT Discussion
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    brianwinkelmannB

    Until now computer games are fascinating!

  • Comparing the CBM PET and the TRS80 in 1977

    News
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    scottalanmillerS

    @Nic said:

    SAM's getting old and senile and reminiscing about the good old days 🙂

    Getting?

  • Teens Viewing 1997 Internet Training Video

    IT Discussion
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    C

    I dunno, a still find a lot of the pre-internet stuff quite shocking, even though I was there at the time. One of my best mates as a kid didn't have a phone in their house. So if I wanted to see him, I'd have to walk a mile to his house and knock on his door. Only to find he was out, and I'd have to walk home and try again later. Even though this was a part of my childhood, it still seems weird when I think back on it.

    Or in my first job, if I had a problem with Windows, I'd have to phone Microsoft, wait on hold for twenty minutes, then describe the problem to them and they'd give me the answer (or not!).

    Even sitting at a desk and feeding in 150 floppy disks in order to install Microsoft Office now seems totally weird.

    On the other hand, I'm still supporting dBase III applications, which is equally weird.