Date: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 21:10:28 +0100 From: Arthur Chance <freebsd@qeng-ho.org> To: Bob Hall <rjhjr0@gmail.com>, FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Greybeards (Re: Netbooks & BSD) Message-ID: <4CBF4CB4.6070902@qeng-ho.org> In-Reply-To: <20101020194605.GA78565@stainmore> References: <op.vj5o9ixxhtl4zj@ack5833s2.ad.service.osu.edu> <20101017143901.GA71132@current.Sisis.de> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1010171215030.96626@wonkity.com> <20101019074615.GA2183@current.Sisis.de> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1010191448390.6689@wonkity.com> <20101020022946.GA23035@thought.org> <20101020052601.GA1977@current.Sisis.de> <4cbe9e9a.3qT7q8JUqJxSD8/V%perryh@pluto.rain.com> <20101020165526.GA25310@thought.org> <4CBF21EB.1080003@tundraware.com> <20101020194605.GA78565@stainmore>
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On 10/20/10 20:46, Bob Hall wrote: > On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 12:07:55PM -0500, Tim Daneliuk wrote: >> On 10/20/2010 11:55 AM, Gary Kline wrote: >>> On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 12:47:38AM -0700, perryh@pluto.rain.com wrote: >>>> Matthias Apitz<guru@unixarea.de> wrote: >>>>> El d?a Tuesday, October 19, 2010 a las 07:29:46PM -0700, Gary Kline escribi?: >>>>>> PS: I really _was_ current on hardware stuff. Back in the VAX >>>>>> 780 days :-) >>>>> I booted my first UNIX V7 tape on a PDP-11 around 1982, I think. >>>> >>>> Gotcha beat :) UNIX V6, PDP-11/34, RK05 disk cartridge, 1975. >>>> The whole runtime fit on one RK05. The sources took a second one. >>> >>> I remember the 11/34 fondly. The whole EE department at Cory >>> Hall was running one one; then when I interned at Livermore my >>> job of porting the "Portable F77 Compiler" was done with vi and >>> the source code that Stu Feldman wrote. I love[d] those bloody >>> old computers, :-) Dunno why. Maybe because they really >>> *were* about computing. Not streaming [[whatever]] or having >>> php running. (Blah^9^9^9) >>> >>> :) >> >> Heck, when I started out, they didn't even have zeros and ones yet. >> We had to settle for "o"s and "l"s ... > > When I started out, we didn't have read/write heads for the hard disks. > We had to copy the data from the screen to the disk by hand using > magnetized sewing needles. In order to read the damn things we had to > pass a compass over the disk and see where the needle deflected. Enough Monty Python Yorkshiremen claims, already. :-) Getting back to reality, although I never did it (fortunately), a friend of mine who was about a decade older than me (I'm mid/late 50s) had the experience of programming microcode on a machine by inserting brass slugs for 0s and ferrite slugs for 1s on a pin board. Anyone got any idea what that was? He was (UK) military so maybe it wasn't a generally known box. -- "Although the wombat is real and the dragon is not, few know what a wombat looks like, but everyone knows what a dragon looks like." -- Avram Davidson, _Adventures in Unhistory_
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