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#1
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CANDC, nonightowl
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#2
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@Travelinglady
I remember the first computer I worked and played on a Commodore 64 connected to a TV. And the first real computer that everyone in the house could run ran on windows 3 and took 100 3.5" HD floppies to back up. Fortunately I never had to do a reinstall with all those disks.
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Super Moderator Community Support Team "Things Take Time" |
East17, Travelinglady
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#3
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The first computer ever dealt with was shared between two universities. I had to punch keys on cards, and they were "read" by the computer and the results sent back.
No such thing as a personal computer back in the early 1980's. |
nonightowl
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#4
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@Travelinglady I actually remembered that I did a programming course with punch cards back in the 70's. Nothing like a personal computer.
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Super Moderator Community Support Team "Things Take Time" |
Travelinglady
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Travelinglady
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#5
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I remember when we all got personal computers at our own desks in the late 80's. They had representatives from the company come in and explain how everything would work. When they got to the point where they said we'd all have windows at our desks, one worker piped up and asked how she could have a window at her desk when her cubicle was slap dab in the middle of the office. We all busted out laughing, and thankfully the employee had a sense of humor and was able to laugh along with us once they explained to her what Microsoft Windows were!
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CANDC, nonightowl, Travelinglady
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#6
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@Pflowers that was a funny moment and we were not real computer savvy then.
I used to sell computer supplies when backing up a computer meant saving to a floppy disks. Big companies would buy hundreds of boxes of them. @CANDC
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Super Moderator Community Support Team "Things Take Time" |
Travelinglady
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#7
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Commodore 64, 3.5" floppy disks.... wow, a blast from the past (I remember them well!)
Hard to believe that now a mobile phone has more speed, memory and processing power than those computers, and everything fits on a tiny microchip.
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To the world you might be just one person; but to one person you might be the world. |
Angelique67, nonightowl, Travelinglady
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#8
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My mum is in her 80s and still uses maps, she has an Atlas and an A-Z street directory- we all had them until 15 years or so ago.
I must admit if she shows me directions on her map I’ve found myself going to pinch with my thumb and forefinger to enlarge it lol. |
Nammu
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nonightowl, Travelinglady
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#9
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I prefer the old-fashioned foldable maps, too.
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Discombobulated
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#10
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And you don't have to worry about something not "loading" right or fast enough. Or a weak signal or battery. Paper always works. Stuff like Google Maps, Mapquest, etc. all have glitches in them. I've read relying on them 100% isn't a good idea.
I remember computers that were bigger than my refrigerator, when I had to enter some information on it. I guess that was the "brains" of it, as I sat at a monitor that was as bulky as those old-fashioned TV's.
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Call me "owl" for short! Hmmm....looks like some good tips in here. "Okay, enough photos. I'm a very BUSY Business Kitty, so make an appointment next time." |
Travelinglady
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Travelinglady
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