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Today
Computers are my friend. I remember back in
1980 when I was a High School student in Palo Alto,
California, all we had was a central HP-3000
computer, DSL modems that were considered something
like Hard Line WANs, at only 300 baud
rate, ( 1/187th ) the speed of
dial-up today, and some CRT Terminals. I
learned how to program on a terminal from our
school districts computer system in the Computer
Study Room at High School and there were about
20 of us students usually around there, a couple of
the gang even had slower dial-up terminals for the
districts computer at home and we could connect
and do some simple computing 24/7. Of course
being in Palo Alto there were a few other computers
in town and we had lots of fun dialing into the
Apollo System at Stanford University just minutes
away by Bike. Hewlett Packard was and is still
only 4 miles from there and other companies like SRI,
Varian and Zialog were nearby
too.
The
first IBM based computer I helped build was an IMSAI
8080, the first computer in history that resembled
anything like a modern desktop. Shortly
afterwards Apple computer came out with another, they
were located in Palo Alto too. Although the
Apple and the IMSAI came about the same time the
Apple was by far more user friendly! The IMSAI
had to be programmed using about 32 switches on the
front of the chassis which you had to switch-in each
bit of information manually, four bits at a time, its
Assembly Language didn't understand how to load a
program automatically unlike the "Install
Shield" we have now, doing anything was a very
time consuming process. Most people weren't into
small (personal) computers because even if you could
program it there were not any useful programs you
could run, if you were lucky enough to have a
compatible video card then you would get something
like (and was) an early DOS on the screen, two
colors, black and white, the background being black
and the text, white. These early computers looked
impressive though, for their time high-tech, with
lots of LEDs and Integrated Circuits under the
cover. About this same time Apple did away with
the DOS Command Line looking interface and focused on
graphics and a user friendly GUI that was the basis
of all GUIs (Graphical User Interfaces) we have
today. As Microsoft developed Windows 3x, Intel
was just getting on their way into the personal
desktop computer hardware business, an obviously good
move and we still have the evidence in our desktop
computers today, "EMM386, extended memory,"
twenty years later.
There
was no Internet, no "www,"
"http:," no "ISP," or
"e-Mail," only small corporate networks
here and there owned by the prospering businesses or
colleges that could afford the luxury, but it
didn't take an insightful person to imagine what
it would become and even today computing may be well
behind what was predicted by us
then.
Networking
was beginning to bloom early as I progressed through
High School, it wasn't long before almost every
business had a "Network." These early
networks, I hate to say it, had almost no security
features and before I got to my senior year a few of
my friends from the Computer User's Group had
been busted for doing what they knew was wrong,
changing grades, which, trust me, wasn't
tough. My mom did ask me, after it made the
local paper, "So, were you in computer study
with them?" I was really almost never
around when the system was cracked, the one time I
was I walked away as quickly as I
could.
I lost
interest in computing about my Junior year in High
School partly because DOS looked mostly drab and also
because programming was changing so rapidly, I saw
few programming languages that I believed would be
around today and my predictions were correct.
Since age 16 I had been working as a Prep-Cook for a
family owned restaurant nearby my father's
residence and graduated High School in 1984 with a
diploma because I had kept good study
habits.
My
first year at college I took up employment as one of
many telemarketers working on commission, I was
selling businesses advertisement space in some
charitable publications so that they could be
distributed freely throughout the nearby area, and
that's how I put myself through a Mechanic's
training program through Consumer's Affairs and
the local Junior College. In 1985 then too I
had completely forgotten about computers, it was
around nine years ago after my being a Licensed Smog
Mechanic for the State of California since 1986 that
I was turned on to computers again in 1999. I
had just finished writing my Novel that I started
while I was in the ARMY, in 1989, and a friend gave
me his NEC laptop after upgrading to a newer one, it
had Windows 3.1 installed but I still had to type
"WIN:" at the DOS prompt, I used its
program called "Write" that was useful to
me. My neighbor came by one day and started
teaching me the DOS that I didn't know or had
forgotten since school and after seeing his desktop
system with Windows 98SE it was time for me to
upgrade. I saved some money by working in
restaurants, since 1997, and went to a nearby
"Circuit City" electronics store and bought
an e-Machines desktop computer with Windows ME, a
2000, and wow, what an upgrade! "The thing
was pretty awesome, for what I paid for
it." Next year Windows XP was coming out
and it was supposed to be more stable, but as far as
I had learned it was going to be a first release of
the working Window's "kernel" from NT
designed for home use, I didn't upgrade until
2006, but my version of XP sp2 will probably be a
collectors item someday!
Everyone thinks Windows is really the greatest
and I too have upgraded to Windows 7, it
blows away Windows XP. I have
found Windows 7 to be highly functioning
and also the model for customizable and
developed with an advanced power management (ACPI)
system so efficient my little ME machine is
still working good, it will install
on some of those smaller motherboards that
XP wouldn't! This is one highly advanced
piece of software.
Lately
I have been getting more attached to my computer,
I'm becoming optimistic again about personal
computing and Publishing as a Hobby,
like I was when I was first introduced to them
back in 1979. The projects
that I'm trying to accomplish
presently, learning ASP.net and also the C# language,
will improve my website
designing techniques. More Soon
...
"Generator"
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