I'm like you guys. I enjoy playing with gadgets a lot. As I was
growing up this is all I did, take things apart, see how they work and
then tried to put them together again. The putting together thing
never worked, I always broke whatever I took apart.

On May 6, 12:42 pm, "Andre.Legendre" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Good old time good new times
> For my concern I start by drawing my own board based on a 6800 chip.
> From Motorola specs nothing else...
> We had to load our Operating System and to code using assembly
> language.
> First program was a Go Game.It start then to have some specialized
> newspapers where we found some good information.
> Then we was able to use some Os names Flex and we got basic...and C
> language later.
>
> No hard disk, no floppy disk : music tape with some modem like system
> to record and to read....
>
> At that time professional side was PDP11 at Digital and some other IBM
> staff with Huge 5Mo (Yes Mega Bytes) hard disks...
>
> Then IBM PC arrived with DOS and then I succed to get Unix on PC (with
> 64 Ko Memory and floppy disk.
>
> etc....
>
> And now we work on Android and would like to get somebody to look
> after or work....
>
> But any way we enjoy a lot and we will for a while.
>
> Andre
>
> On May 6, 7:17 pm, baldmountain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Nah, probably about the same age. The TRS80 was my dad's. (He liked
> > gadgets. :) ) I didn't see anything like a PDP-11 until I was a
> > teaching assistant in grad school for a machine architecture course.
> > (I learned PDP-11 assembly language in about 3 days so I could start
> > correcting homework and work in the lab.) I did my thesis project, (a
> > Fortran simulation of a fast Raleigh fading communications channel)
> > using a Commodore 64 connected through a 300 baud modem to a CDC Cyber
> > mainframe at the University. I was a EE major and didn't really start
> > programming until I was out of school for a few years. I wanted to be
> > a Radar engineer but that didn't work out.
>
> > And nah, I'm sure I'm not the oldest. Just reminiscing a bit about the
> > old days. The only thing I feel like I missed out on was not getting
> > the chance to work on a Lisp Machine...
>
> > On May 6, 11:29 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Baldmountain,
> > > I don't know if you are older from a more affluent background, or
> > > actually younger. All through undergrad we used punch cards submitted
> > > to the data center wrapped in rubber bands. The punch card machines
> > > were hidden in stairwells around campus. Terminal time was too
> > > expensive for our department... The National Labs were more
> > > sophisticated – batch processing through modeling programs... but
> > > surprisingly a summer job at a start up was even better. We were doing
> > > a networked instrumentation system for nuclear power plants:
> > > Instrumentation carts polled by PDP-11s reporting to redundant VAX
> > > 11780s driving graphical displays that communicated state information
> > > to the control room... I think about the same time an economics
> > > teacher from high school was using a Tandy or TRS 80 to predict
> > > football opponents' play calling tendencies based on game context:
> > > down, distance, clock,...  Anyway, I don't think you are the oldest.
>
> > > Ed
>
> > > On May 6, 9:12 am, baldmountain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > The prizes are nice, but that is not what it's about. It's a new
> > > > platform to explore that is not Windows. With the BeOS it was about a
> > > > new OS designed using the latest software engineering techniques
> > > > rather than as a mutation of an OS designed in the 70s for a 8 bit
> > > > microprocessor. I love platforms. I love to learn about them and take
> > > > them apart to figure out how all the pieces fit together. The best way
> > > > to do this is to build something using the platform. I wasn't planning
> > > > on submitting anything to the ADC but one thing lead to another and
> > > > the app I started to explore Android turned into something usable so I
> > > > submitted it. The same thing happened with the BeOS.
>
> > > > On May 6, 9:34 am, Incognito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > > Why don't you go mainstream rather then with an unknown operating
> > > > > system? Only reason I'm with this new operating system is because of
> > > > > the cash prices. Although, now that I look at it my chances are quite
> > > > > slim if not nil.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Android Challenge" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/android-challenge?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to