No, we're at least tied for the title, but I don't consider myself an
old geezer. Want to run a marathon tomorrow? How about a bike ride up
Cougar Mountain? DeltaForce2 sitting in a recliner?
Age is a state of mind so keep those conversations away from me, please!
Tom
Ramon Gandia wrote:
>
> "John D. Kim" wrote:
> >
> > Wow, I've only heard about keypunch. My high school cs teacher used to
> > tell us about it. I learned COBOL when I was in high school, but we had a
> > nice VMS machine to code it on. And I thought COBOL just couldn't be any
> > worse, but I guess I was wrong.
> >
> > On Tue, 14 Mar 2000, ibi wrote:
> >
> > > And, here I thought I was the only kid on the block old enough to know
> > > what keypuch is! Shilly me. LOL .. Pj
>
> Well, I coded Fortran II and Cobol on an IBM 1620 and 7040
> back in 1964 using keypunches. It actually worked quite
> well. Fortran II is very close to the first Microsoft
> Basics (as sold by MITS for their Altair).
>
> The 1620 was slow, with rotating memory drum; but the 7040
> had hand wound core memory and it was FAST. I am not sure
> that it would not favorably compete with modern micros in
> term of speed. But you wouldn't want to pay the electric
> and air conditioning bill! That was in the days before
> integrated circuits. Each memory bit took two to four
> transistors and a toroid core with three windings as I
> recall.
>
> Does this make me the old Geezer of the Mandrake List?
>
> --
> Ramon Gandia ============= Sysadmin ============== Nook Net
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