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It was only 3 hours ago that he posted, I doubt if he's smashed his computer and burned his modem yet.Probably will wait until tomorrow morning!Lannis
All the best, I've often considered a break as well but I'm not quite there yet.
I was an early adopter. My first programming classes were on a Univac, for heavinsake.
The U of MD had an 1106 and an 1108 when I was in engineering school there. We put our programs on punch cards and handed the decks to the counter guy who ran them and handed you the cards back, along with the paper output. I don't miss that procedure much, but it was educational to go through it.
I remember first year of college (forestry) we took Fortran computer programming. I can't believe I ever passed that course. JD
Fortran? WATFOR?
I would never want to go back to pre-smart phone, pre-internet days. I really love having the world and its information at my fingertips.It is, though, way too easy to just aimlessly scroll the phone to satisfy whatever the information addiction is in our brains.
Rocker sez..and I totally agree. The information in the Library of Alexandria is at our fingertips. but comma.I have two kids that work for me part time.. I don't pay them, Ed the Rocket Scientist does that.. and one is totally addicted to a phone. The other just looks at it a lot.BIL Harley Bob and Dorcia's sister Carol came over for dinner tonight, and I almost took a picture. I was making fajitas, Dorcia was making Margaritas, and they were looking at their phones constantly. Nice visit..
I went to work for Friden, Inc, a company based out of San Leandro CA, in 1969. I sold their billing /accounting products, known as Flexowriters and Computypers. These were what was known as 'source date recorders.' In other words, our products, while producing necessary printed documents such as purchase orders and invoices, created punch paper tape that could be used as input into larger computer systems. It was early office automation.In actuality, these machines were very heavy typewriters that could read paper tape, edge-punched cards, and IBM tab cards. They could output tape, and cards. And they could calculate ..... addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Sounds pretty mundane today, but back then, one machine and one operator could do the work of 2,3,4 routine office workers.Fun stuff, nearly 50 years ago!!