Deep inside a Delaware strip mall closet, an old, forgotten Pentium computer's NPC.EXE is running wild, compiling deranged and out-dated modmails that read... well, retarded like THIS! Any local frogs up for a mission? Please find & unplug this poor museum relic of a PC! It is suffering! 🐸
(media.greatawakening.win)
YOU'VE GOT BETA MALE!
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Looks like an original IBM with the 8086 and 2 floppy drives. Could be a 286 clone.
In high school I had a 286 running Windows 3.1. I can still remember my parents picking up the phone and hearing that sound of the 9600 modem
Wow, you were lucky. I was using a 1200 baud modem. And running on a DEC Rainbow.
We had no modems or internet.....
We had a keyboard and a punch card machine with no monitor in my first computer class. We would write and run a program and then comeback in 1 to 10 hours and look at the results on paper. Their was only one computer on the whole campus shared by everyone.
Yep, I had that also. Fortran 77 on punch cards which we'd drop off at some counter for someone to run at some point and then you'd come back to find the output. Sometimes, the output would indicate one of the cards had an error so all that time was wasted as your program didn't run and produce any output. You had to fix the card and resubmit your deck.
We had pencil and paper
Yeah at my first base I was on a mainframe that still used both punch cards and paper tape. It had the disk platters that looked like a big cake with a handle on top.
One time I had to hit the emergency power off button when a new guy dumped a mop bucket full of water by the CPU. The noise of all of the disk platters crashing sounded like someone was torturing a cat. When I left that base they made a plaque for me made out of one of those disk platters. Oh - I got a medal for saving the mainframe from either burning up or shorting out when I killed the power. They saved a platter for me.
I was fortunate to be in a trade school in the early 1970's where the Board of Ed had an IT satellite office, with their computer! When their 2 programmers weren't using the computer, we got to run our stacks of cards (programs) through, and had them as our mentors. Was set up to function as their office, so we learned it all, keypunch, sorter, interpreter, printer. Also, since they didn't want us banging the keys, we got to learn typing on the IBM selectrics instead of the manual typewriters. Yes, I'm old....
80 places baby
I used to work with 1200 baud modems too. I think the slowest thing I ever worked with was 300 baud.
Back then you could easily hear the OH - DSR - DTR - RTS - CTS signals. First time I listed to a 28.8 I thought it was static.
Yep - I had a 300 bps modem with my Tandy 1000 SL with a 10MB hard card and 256kb of RAM I had to install on the motherboard. It replaced my vic20.
My dad worked for the phone company, we had two lines and a phone in every room, even the bathroom lol
I lived in a place back in 2002 where I had to go up on top of the house to use the cell phone reliably. I whistled Green Acres song every time that happened. I'm quite sure I remember someone coming to my house once while I was using the phone, and when they ask me why I was sitting on the roof talking on the phone, I told them cause the phone company didn't have enough wire to install the phone all the way inside the house.
V.32 echo canceling handshake! Bing,...bing....bing...brawwwwww......Each bing flipped the phase of the tone 180°. Made a living in modems back in the day. Good times.
Did you carry a breakout box?
Or a cap'n crunch whistle?
Yup. Green for +V and red for -V. My Tektronix 834 had one built in. We had 1914s on the benches to do repair work. They were too heavy to carry around.
My first PC was a 10MHz 286 running DOS with a 40MB HDD, and 640x480 early VGA color display. Win 3.0 was still about 3 years away.
Still have the MB and HDD. Not sure about any of the other parts. Got tired of lugging around the case - heavy steel. Now I wish I'd kept it.
Nice. My first (family PC) was a 386 20. My first one that was all mine was a 286 (it was years old but I didn't have to share it w anybody!)
I used to work on at customer sites IBM 024
I had one of those!
I used one of those with the floppy discs many years ago lol
They were diskettes where I came from. First ones were 1024 bit capacity.
Ooh yeah you right Pre floppy - they were smaller than floppies
No a diskette was larger (8 1/2 in.) than Floppy (5 1/4 in.) Floppy was what the PC world called their removable media product. IBM called it a diskette.