My first PC with a Hard Drive was a Tandy 286 (at $1800 this was also
the first computer I bought myself - put those McDonald's paychecks to
good use!)


It had a 20Meg Hard drive - I remember when "King's Quest II" came out -
it came on 5 disks and took up something like 6 WHOLE MEG!


I had a great time with that PC. I played "Star Trek" and the first
Laura Bow mystery and another really great game that I just can't
remember the name of. it involved interstellar trade among three races.
I remember you could choose how you wanted to respond to contact.
"Bellicose" and "obsequious" were among the choices. I remember I had to
look them up.  ;^)


Jim Davis


-----Original Message-----
From: Charlie Griefer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 8:45 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: The old days


I had a Franklin Ace 1000 (apple ][ clone).  No HD...one 5 1/4" drive (a
friend of mine had two 5 1/4" drives...we all thought he was way cool).
Monochrome monitor, of course.

I don't remember the model of printer...but it was a Panasonic (i want
to
say KXP1090)... I remember all those hours in my room, fiddling with my
dip
switches.  I blame the hairy palms on that.

charlie

  -----Original Message-----
  From: Jim Davis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 5:40 PM
  To: CF-Community
  Subject: RE: The old days

  Lemme see - I started on a TI99/4A (I was about 13 or so).  I built
that
  system UP tho.  ;^)  Added the expansion box (merely the size of a
small
  footlocker) with Dual 5 1/4 inch Floppies (single density) and the
  MASSIVE 32kb memory expansion (the 32kb module was roughly the size of
a
  hardcover book) the rs232 Interface and the TI Speech Synthesizer
  (actually still pretty good. why hasn't Speech been done better I
  wonder?)

  I also had the needed Cassette tape adapter and a snazzy 300 Baud
  acoustic coupling modem.

  I wrote my first programs using TI Extended Basic - I actually did a
  full, two level video game.  It featured sprite animation, collision
  detection and even some rudimentary AI.  The "story" was that a
  high-rise building had put in a new security system (sliding panels
and
  such): you played the old-fashioned janitorial robot who was
forgotten.
  You could make yourself invisible to the moving security sensors by
  hitting the button (which turned you red) - but if you held it too
long
  you'd burn out and "die".  You had to empty all of the wastepaper
  baskets on the 10 floors.

  I was stylin'.  ;^)

  Jim Davis

  -----Original Message-----
  From: brob [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 6:18 PM
  To: CF-Community
  Subject: The old days

  hey guys, I would like to know of any stories you might want to share
  about the old days when chatting/computer was just for geeks and the
  internet was dormant.  Here's mine

  I used a 637 Performa CD mack that came with 300MB of space.  Half of
  that space was taken up by software and the operating system.  I had
to
  constantly delete anything i can to save precious space.  The coolest
  game i played on it was Burn Cycle, which i still believe is the
coolest
  game ever.  The first time I got internet was AOL 2.6, with a 2.4kbps
  modem.  CHatting was so fun, and that IM sound so catchy.  It would
take
  anywhere from 5-10 minutes for my modem to load up a decent page with
a
  fair amount of graphics.  I would just walk away for a bit and do
  something else.  When i got my $150 56k modem, things were alot more
  nicer!

  Also, I subscribed to computer magazines and used to drool over 150mhz
  machines.

  Comparing then to now, I'd say that i've been getting more impatient
and
  greedier.  I know thats a bad thing, but I'd rather have it this way,
at
  least with technology!
    _____

  _____  


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