I am soooooooooooooooooooooo #7 and #18
http://www.devx.com/DevX/Article/46382?trk=DXRSS_
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I am soooooooooooooooooooooo #7 and #18
http://www.devx.com/DevX/Article/46382?trk=DXRSS_
7, 8, 9, and 18, at least...
7 & 18 definitely.
Can anyone enlighten me as to the TV Show reference in 12.
Also where can I get the language/compiler for 20.
Some part of #2, though I don't instigate debates all the time.
#5 Yes, I did have a computer with 32KB memory :p
#14 yes, except the book writing part. Too lazy to write anything other than code.
#20 a bit, because I tend to write fewer lines now, whenever I have the occasion to write.
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#6 I can relate to.
#18 is something I can relate to.
#3, #6 and #18 for me
I think #5 is the only one I relate to. Guess I'm just not "geeky" enough.
-Max :D
#99 You take up electronics instead and regret ever touching anything that doesn't run on valves.
If you can't do it with 32kb of eeprom then it's not worth doing.
#18 is me, i never cared about others positions, i got what i got and i accept that :D
I guess #16
Did I ever tell you that I started with Commodore 64? It's called that because it had only 64KB or RAM, and everything worked in those 64K. It also had a CPU of less than one MHz.
Showoff. :)
what is UNIX shell ?
The command prompt that you see when you log into a Unix system, without using any UI tools. Equivalent of what you get if you start a PC that only has MS DOS as the operating system.
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Oh OK,now I get it. We're now going to start with the one-upmanship as to who had to program on the oldest hardware, eh? OK ...
My first programming experience EVER was on a CDC Cyber 74 located in the Computer Center at Georgia Tech. Wrote FORTRAN on IBM 029 punch cards. (Terminal, what's a terminal?). That was for my EE-1010 class back in 1976. The staff at the center had to keep throwing me out at 4AM because I wouldn't go back to my dorm: I always had one more run to submit. I'd go home at 4AM when they threw me out then I'd be back there at 7AM when the center re-opened. How I passed any of my other classes is a deep mystery!
The first "PC" I owned was a Timex Sinclair 1000. It had 2K of onboard memory and a 14K plug-in memory module. It ran a Z80 processor, also less than 1Mhz. My first program on that guy was a Z80 assembly program that I encoded into a BASIC program's DATA statements which allowed me to manipulate the MEMTOP location in the computer. With this ability I and a friend could co-develop a program. I could load my half first (from cassette) then run the MEMTOP program and then load his in from a difference cassette. I wrote the entire Z80 assembly program using only a yellow legal pad and the Z80 manual. It ran correctly the first time.
Next!
-CB :D
I wasn't even born in 1976! I surrender!!
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Quote:
the one-upmanship as to who had to program on the oldest hardware, eh? OK ...
Ehhhh....radio bulbs?Quote:
Next!
-CB
apparently unix shell = a kind of command prompt
@Honeybee - Surrender accepted! ;-)
@namrekka - Well, not QUITE that far back, but close! ;-)
-Max :D