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Subject:Re: Old PC Technology (too long, sorry) From:Liz_Vela -at- bcbstx -dot- com To:techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com Date:Thu, 8 Mar 2007 10:21:01 -0600
Remember the first mouse? My leading edge software development company
bought a couple when they came out. I tried it, hated it, refused to use
it, and swore that it would never catch on.
"Simon North"
<Simon -dot- North -at- quin
tiq.com> To
Sent by: sintac -at- home -dot- nl,
techwr-l-bounces+ techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com,
liz_vela=bcbstx.c PoshedlyK -at- polysius -dot- com,
om -at- lists -dot- techwr-l michael -dot- mcintyre -at- rosegardenmusic -dot- co
.com m
cc
03/08/2007 08:52 Subject
AM Old PC Technology (too long, sorry)
Well, pull up a sandbag ....
My first computer was a ZX81, it had 8K ROM and 1K RAM running at 3.25
MHz.
My stepfather bought an Apple II and an Apple IIe to go into business
as an
independent accountant. I can remember the excitement when we bought
the first dot matrix printer.
In 1972, when I went to study CS at university we were taught Fortran
IV on an
IBM System/360-67; it ran CP/CMS which to our delight was quite easy to
crash
(not so much fun for all the local industries that time-shared on it).
I think my
class was the first to get real-time access, through a teletype printer
(we didn't
have CRTs yet), while normal work was done on punch cards.
I got into tech writing in aerospace. At Dunlop, writers wrote in
pencil and it
was typed up by the typing pool. At Lucas Aerospace we had 2 turnkey
Diamond
systems (it had a native Pascal compiler that was really cool).
My first PC was an IBM PC-XT clone (math co-processor chip, 10 MB
Seagate hard
disk, Hercules graphics card and a Rampage Above Board RAM extension
card
pushing the RAM to 1 MB) , followed by a Compaq. As I remember, and
memories
are unreliable, I built it myself and paid about $4000 for the
hardware. The HP
LaserJet printer came out at about the same time, which was a nightmare
as they
refused to release any documentation about their PCL (it was ASCII
based, and we
were documenting using IBM DisplayWrite, which was EBCDIC for mainframe
compatibility). To justify text using WP 4.2 you had to manually
correct by adding
spaces (that's why I needed to see the codes so much).
I was working for the European Space Agency at the time, where I
installed
TeX on the mainframe; it was either that or carry on documenting using
DSR (runoff) - remember it? That was the year the Atari ST came out;
boy,
the graphics on that were nice. We did wireframe animations (satellite
solar panel deployment sequences) using stop-frame capture to a video
recorder. That was real fun.
Gem, Windows 3.0, Windows for Workgroups, Windows 3.11, 95, 98, NT,
2000, XP, Vista. Got Word for Windows, Word 6, Word think-of-a-number,
Doc-to-Help, RoboHelp ... Interleaf came and went (I miss it still, and
the
wonderful things you could do with Lisp). SGML came and went (I soooo
miss DSSSL). Frame came, and is still lingering. HyperCard died, but
HTML
came ... I hope it goes soon. HyTime was stillborn (sob, sob) and we
got
XML and XSLT instead ... sigh. Sometimes I think we're actually going
backwards.
Simon.
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