Ok.....I have to add to the fun...My "first computer" was a teletype machine that dialed into a CDC (?) mainframe somewhere. No punch cards, just a paper tape about 2" wide. The only language was Basic. Make a typo, and you had to start all over again from the beginning.
My first significant program (outside of homework) was a computer dating service in high school - made a lot of money for the sophomore class. Ok, after all these years I will confess the truth - the program couldn't run because we ran out of memory on the mainframe - too much data and we actually crashed the mainframe at one point. The principal got a phone call and asked me what the heck was going on. So I had to match everyone by hand. Everyone got their current boy friend/girl friend, so the program was a huge success! Those not already dating actually had fun on their "blind date".
Mark
On Wed, Jul 8, 2009 at 1:04 AM, Mark Jarvis
<m.jarvis@cox.net> wrote:
O the "joys" of standing in line to use one of the department's hulking
026 (later 029) keypunches, the tricks of duping a card up to the point
where you needed to either add or delete punches and then holding one
card while letting the other feed. Heaven forbid if you dropped a 2000
card box or a 3000 card tray and the cards weren't sequenced in cols.
73-80. You learned quickly to sequence by 10s or 20s or even 100s to
leave room for the inevitable insertions. It was well into the 70s or
early 80s before we trusted tapes and disks enough to give up our
trusty file cabinets full of card decks.
The binary cards from punched object decks could be folded at one end
to make a point, arranged & stapled on cardboard in concentric
circles (point out), and sprayed gold to make a very pretty Christmas
wreath. We still have one tucked away with the old Christmas stuff.
Although it's somewhat the worse for wear, it's probably the only one
left in existence.
Although I wouldn't give anything for the experiences of those days, I
wouldn't do them again for anything, either.
Mark Jarvis
old IBM & GE mainframe, 80s PC, and 90s Unix veteran.
Lyle Tuttle wrote:
At 04:33 PM 7/7/2009, you wrote:
You
little youngsters don't know
the meaning of hardship.
Back in my day you got monochrome and 40x25 characters and counted
yourself lucky!
Before that it was fuzzy white on black with a dumb terminal and a
300
baud acoustic coupler.
Before that it was on a dot matrix printer with a keyboard. Get
it
right quick or you waste a lot of paper!
At least I'm not old enough to have suffered with punch cards
I am......while the SDS computer system (16K core) ran 5 real-time
experiments on the face of the reactor.......and another x-ray
diffraction counter in another area.......careful!! Don't drop
those!!!
That was a looooong time ago.........
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