Gavin Scott via cctalk wrote:
BASIC was always a popular language in the Hewlett-Packard world. From the HP 2000 timesharing BASIC that was popular in educational settings similar to the original DTSS, To BASIC/3000 on the HP 3000 which was a first-class language with both interpreter and compiler (producing very fast code), to the HP 250/260 which used BASIC as their primary development language, Rocky Mountain BASIC in the technical world, the Series 80 microcomputers, HP Business Basic again on the 3000 which was probably largest and most complex language system ever created for the Classic 16-bit 3000 systems and which was intended to be both a migration path for 250/260 applications to MPE and to be a new standard Basic across multiple HP platforms.
I first got acquainted with computers in 1978-79 while in 8th grade, precisely on an HP3000 with BASIC. I was hooked.
Carlos.
