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Memory lane
Vintage tech: Looking back at the Commodore 64 - News - PC & Tech Authority
I remember bringing home my powerful Commodore - 64 to replace my pitiful Commodore Vic 20. I had a 300 baud modem that was not even an autodial. It was technically illegal to use the modem since I did not call the phone company and register it. I got on Compuserve and ordered a pair of jeans in the early 80s. That was my first on-line purchase. |
How many of you remember the days when NO ONE owned a phone? We all just rented them from the Bell Telephone. The one and only phone company.
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And they were hard-wired.
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...and on a "party line" with a nosey 'ole biddy as a neighbor (who like to listen in) :)
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. . . . and we were glad to have it!
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Yea, in the first house I bought there was one phone in the center of the house. There was not one other phone wire anywhere. I had to go to Bell telephone and pick up a phone that I had to rent. There was simply no other option.
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That's nothing guys. I remember back before we had the wheel. It was a pain to get around. And don't get me started on the cuisine before we captured fire... :)
Seriously, I had a VIC 20 as a kid. My parents wouldn't buy me an Atari and I liked that you could at least get cartridge games for it. My dad tried to get me interested in BASIC, but I didn't like that you spent all this time writing a program, and it just went away when you turned off the computer. Later on my dad got a tape drive, but I seem to recall it took forever to store stuff and by that time I'd lost interest in everything but the video games. |
I think it would be cool to take the old keyboard and use it to house a modern PC and an LED projector...
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Talk about an early immersion in Customer Service! "Number, please?" :D Best Les |
Yep, we bought a C64 when I was about 12. I think my parents paid about $600 for the "keyboard". The floppy drive hadn't been released yet, so for the first few months we used
http://www.old-computers.com/museum/...1530-c2n_1.jpg Until the floppy drive came out. I think we paid about $400 for the floppy drive. Do you remember when you discovered that the disks were dual sided and you could just cut a notch out of the other side of the 5.25 to use the back side? Yes, about the same time, we still had "rented" phones, except that my parents had a phone that we owned and plugged it in. At some point the telco called and said something like "you're only renting one phone, but you have 2 rings on the line" and wanted us to pay extra or something. I remember my parents plugging and unplugging the second extension to fool the telco for a while. We also had a remote control TV that was not IR. If you opened a beer can, soda can or sneezed, the sound would sometimes trigger the TV to change channels. I never did understand that because the remote wasn't noisy when you used it. |
http://krapps.com/wp-content/uploads...IIBoxFINAL.gif
Funny thing is... there's an app for that! http://theportablegamer.com/wp-conte...-1978-2009.jpg |
The phone on the wall in my garage righ now was a phone that I bought from Bell when they finally started selling phones. It still works great.
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My first computer experience was learning to program in binary onto a paper tape at Mercersburg Academy in Pennsylvania in 1967. The class was called Finite Mathematics for some reason. I found it fascinating.
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Evel Knievel was my hero as a kid. :) -Z |
I had one of those as well, with the van for him to jump over.
Had a C64 as well. Programmed my own games and had lots of fun. even had my own cheat codes but was found out when I drag raced a Dodge Omni against a 426 Charger and won. My friend was both ticked and impressed at the same time. Of course back then I didn't have a way to simulate traction but we had weight, gear ratios, red line and torque curves in a sequential database on the disk. (and the hidden NOS button for me :) ) A good reaction time and shifting properly were the only interactions but it was fun in Jr High. |
My first computer was a DEC PDP-11. No, I didn't own it, heck I couldn't afford the annual maintenance contract, but it was "mine" in the lab.
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Tonka Trucks, Matchbox/Hot Wheels, and Evel Knievel stuff, those are the toys that I mostly remember from when I was 3-5 or so. I still have a lot of my matchbox cars, but the rest is gone. |
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