[olug] "I remember when..."
Kelly Williams
kellywilliams81 at gmail.com
Sun Apr 26 18:30:14 UTC 2009
My first computer was a Packerdhell 486sx processor, 32 mb ram, 350 mb
hard drive, Windows 95a, office 95 that I bought at a garage sale for
2.00, and then a friend of mine was throwing out there computer and I
swapped the CPU from them and it was a 486DX. It worked good enough to
play doom and do homework in college. Just for typing papers.
charles.bird at powerdnn.com wrote:
> My first machine was a com64 with cassette, that thing pissed me off a lot, I was maybe 8yrs old, left computers alone for about 12yrs then bought parts and built an amd thunderbird based machine, lived with windows for a short time until the aeroE students that worked for me got me into linux, I was hooked.
>
> I recently saw a homemade sythesizer that used parts from an old commedor64, had some cool sounds!
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Curtis LaMasters <curtislamasters at gmail.com>
>
> Date: Sat, 25 Apr 2009 11:34:28
> To: Omaha Linux User Group<olug at olug.org>
> Subject: Re: [olug] "I remember when..."
>
>
> I'm munch younger... First family computer (that I remember) was in
> 1988 an Apple SE20.
>
> Curtis LaMasters
> http://www.curtis-lamasters.com
> http://www.builtnetworks.com
>
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 25, 2009 at 11:00 AM, Eric Lusk <wyrmzr72 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>> My first computer was a Texas Instruments TI-99/4A - Fortunately not the previous version with the "monitor" included...
>> That was the early 80s, and from there the next real step was an Apple II knock-off, the Laser 128....
>> Never really bothered with much until the 486, when RAM was something like $200/16MB.
>>
>> I ran the Harry Potter books through a spell checker; none of those spells should work.
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----
>> From: Don Kauffman <dekauff at cox.net>
>> To: Omaha Linux User Group <olug at olug.org>
>> Sent: Saturday, April 25, 2009 9:30:13 AM
>> Subject: Re: [olug] "I remember when..."
>>
>> Between 84 and 97, I had the following machines. I didn't realize this
>> until just now!
>>
>> First was a transportable Kaypro 2 CP/M with the Perfect Suite. Perfect
>> Writer worked just like emacs (which explains my preference for emacs)!
>> I then got a Kaypro 10 which had a 10 MB Hard drive -- pretty big for
>> those days. I kind of wish I still had it. I graduated from that to an
>> Amstraad 285. Worst purchase ever!
>>
>> Next was a whtebox 386 I got when I was in Canada. Then I skipped the
>> 486 and got a Pentium I when I started working in Omaha for USWest.
>>
>> Kind of dates me, I guess.
>>
>> Don K.
>>
>> On Sat, 2009-04-25 at 06:17 -0700, Joe Gulizia wrote:
>>
>>> Okay I'll get in on this.
>>>
>>> First computer Amiga 2000...still working...bought in 91. I was looking at a computer to do video work with (graphics and titles) and the PC field dodn't have anything at that time. Still downstairs and still works. Then was given a 386 or 486....before buying a generic white box PC in (99?)...upgraded it....changed cases...changed motherboards (bad caps with a diagnosis by Wolf). Basically still running thesame machine. Bought a newer machine a couple years ago with VI$TA on it for the wife and daughter (so I don't touch it unless I need to update the AVG or troubleshoot it.....or switch to the linux side of it and use Kubuntu 8.04). Son's first machine is a HP laptop that he bought a year and a half ago for college...running Kubuntu 8.10 and a virtualized Windows XP Pro for his Windows based computer classes at IWCC).
>>>
>>> I did some work learning the Tandy 1000's that my National Guard unit had for the field journalists.
>>>
>>>
>>> Joe
>>>
>>> --- On Sat, 4/25/09, Christopher White <slaeyer at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> From: Christopher White <slaeyer at gmail.com>
>>>> Subject: Re: [olug] "I remember when..."
>>>> To: "Omaha Linux User Group" <olug at olug.org>
>>>> Date: Saturday, April 25, 2009, 2:50 AM
>>>> Ah Synchronet,
>>>>
>>>> I remember you so fondly! Such fun times playing
>>>> those door games.
>>>> My first computer that my family bought was a Macintosh
>>>> LC580 (I
>>>> pitched in nearly $200 of my own money from my part time
>>>> job in school
>>>> to get this beast!). It was an upgrade from the Mac
>>>> Classic we were
>>>> "borrowing" at the time to get onto the local bbs.
>>>> When I'd saved
>>>> enough, I splurged on a 28.8 modem and later uploaded the
>>>> 33.6
>>>> firmware to it! Such speeds!!! And the LC580
>>>> had a color screen!!!!!
>>>> Simply amazing!!!
>>>>
>>>> I've owned many machines since then but will always have a
>>>> fond place
>>>> in my heart for that beautiful little Mac!! It was so
>>>> much fun to use
>>>> and seemed lightning fast compared to it's actual speed of
>>>> 33 mhz!!!
>>>>
>>>> Thanks for the trip down memory lane,
>>>> Chris from Kearney
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 11:20 PM, Thomas D. Williamson
>>>> <twilliam at inebraska.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> My first exposure to computing was through a share
>>>>>
>>>> from HDR in high
>>>>
>>>>> school, with a phone modem and paper punch tape to
>>>>>
>>>> "record" the
>>>>
>>>>> programs we were required to write.
>>>>>
>>>>> I had friends who bought and used the Osborn computers
>>>>>
>>>> with dual 8"
>>>>
>>>>> floppy drives, so CPM could operate on one and a
>>>>>
>>>> program could be
>>>>
>>>>> loaded on the other.
>>>>>
>>>>> My first personal computer was a Sanyo with dual 5
>>>>>
>>>> 1/2" drives for the
>>>>
>>>>> same purpose as the Osborn. I believe the processor
>>>>>
>>>> was an 8086. The
>>>>
>>>>> package came with a dot matrix printer and was about
>>>>>
>>>> $1400. That was
>>>>
>>>>> the most I've ever spent since then. I was in college
>>>>>
>>>> and it was used
>>>>
>>>>> for writing papers for the most part. The MS-DOS was
>>>>>
>>>> modified by Sanyo
>>>>
>>>>> so any upgrades were required through them at an
>>>>>
>>>> exceptionally high
>>>>
>>>>> price. I stopped using because of that.
>>>>>
>>>>> My first more standard PC was one I ordered built to
>>>>>
>>>> my
>>>>
>>>>> specifications. This was at the time the 486SX-16 was
>>>>>
>>>> being pushed,
>>>>
>>>>> but I went with the 386DX-16 from AMD because it
>>>>>
>>>> actually processed
>>>>
>>>>> faster than the SX. I later upgraded to a 486DX-16,
>>>>>
>>>> installed a modem
>>>>
>>>>> and other items before it ran out of it usefulness. I
>>>>>
>>>> got it with out
>>>>
>>>>> MS-DOS and used DR-DOS instead with Windows 3.1 and
>>>>>
>>>> 3.11. I worked
>>>>
>>>>> with a MS-DOS Machine with Windows 3.11 at work and
>>>>>
>>>> found that DR-DOS
>>>>
>>>>> worked better with memory management and cause fewer
>>>>>
>>>> crashes.
>>>>
>>>>> Since then I have continued to stay behind the curve
>>>>>
>>>> on most equipment
>>>>
>>>>> since I do not have high end demands, and am able to
>>>>>
>>>> pay less for what
>>>>
>>>>> I need and can use.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Tom Williamson
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> OLUG mailing list
>>>>> OLUG at olug.org
>>>>> https://lists.olug.org/mailman/listinfo/olug
>>>>>
>>>>>
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