And I learned to program with punch cards. Had to stand around waiting for the computer ops to run the job and bring out your output. Rinse and repeat if you had errors (usually.)
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Yeah, also did a little BASIC on a Teletype.Learned BASIC on a teletype, but COBOL programs were punched on cards, input through the card reader and batched to the mainframe at the government center
Gas was $1.10/gal. too.
Remember when gas was $0.35/gal? I do. Was ~ 1962.
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Remember when gas was $0.35/gal? I do. Was ~ 1962.
You lived where gas was expensive as I remember paying 25 cents a gallon around then.
And I still had to dig deep to fill the tank...
Cheers! (everything is relative)
I can remember my mom paying $0.37/gal for "ethel" (oxygenated with ethanol) gasoline. I can also remember getting a hamburger, sm. fries & a sm. drink for less than a dollar at Burger Chef.
Remember the nice purple hue of the mimeograph?
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Remember when you used to have to wait for what seemed like an eternity to get the score while watching a sports game? I think this goes back to the 80's...
Hell, I remember when you had to check the "Box Scores" in the news paper the next morning. Any game that wasn't in your home city was never on TV in your city. I used to have to wait until my father finished reading the parer cover to cover before he would let me check the sports page.
The paper used to be about 3 times what it s today too.
When you know what these are...
When you know what these are...
People shouldn't be wondering what it is, since it says what it is right on it!
Maybe they don't know what it's for. I'm betting my kids don't. I'll have to find one in the... Hell, I have no idea where I can even find one!
We had one that was just a disc. No spring action.
It worked great for single play, but not at all for stacking.
And I learned to program with punch cards. Had to stand around waiting for the computer ops to run the job and bring out your output. Rinse and repeat if you had errors (usually.)
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[...]And the computer equipment filled a very large room, and probably had the same, or less, capability as a laptop today.