Back in my day, the "laptops" were the size of a suitcase and called
"luggables".  Compaq's luggable had a small monochrome crt, about 4 or 5
inches.

As far as a command prompt is concerned, coming from a Novell
environment, I always felt like you had to actually know what your were
doing because of the CLI, as opposed to poking around with the mouse
until you got lucky and found what you needed

-----Original Message-----
From: Reimer, Mark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 09, 2008 9:10 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: for old timers


I still have a Toshiba T1000 Laptop, and it still works. It has one
floppy (720K), no HD and 512K RAM (IIRC), and Dos 2.11 on ROM (with
BASIC of some variety). On another note, I'm still using a 300 Baud
modem (actually a 2400 Baud modem downgraded to 300 Baud) to connect to
a fairly old PBX phone system to download logs.

But those were the days. We actually got quite a bit done on those old
machines, and I still prefer a command prompt over Windows Explorer for
many file functions. I'm sure I'm not the only one on this list like
this. Showing my age...

Mark


-----Original Message-----
From: Angus Scott-Fleming [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 09, 2008 1:45 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: for old timers

On 8 Apr 2008 at 23:52, Benjamin Zachary  wrote:  

> You know I was right on that page and flipped through it real quick 
> and went on to look up the original ibm pc and a bunch of other
things.

FWIW I still have an IBM XT on the shelf, monochrome monitor, IBM
keyboard, and all.  One of these days I'll have to see if it still boots
--before I put it up for sale on eBay ;-)

My first personally-owned PC was a Zenith Z-152, 4.77 MHz, 320k of RAM
and dual 360k floppies (320k/360k ? memory fades with time).  It cost me
over $3,000, with Microsoft Word 1.0 for DOS and an Okidata MicroLine
9-pin dot-matrix printer (which I still have).  My
brother-the-computer-scientist was jealous -- he worked at the local
university and "only" had 64k of workspace on the CDC mainframe.  

On Dec. 31 one year (don't you love the income tax?) I upgraded the
Z-152 to 640k RAM and a 7-MHz NEC V20 chip and added a $399 20-megabyte
full-height hard drive.  Ended up giving it to my kid's pre-school
loaded with reading and other 
teaching programs, all pre-Windows, of course.    

When I upgraded my 1200-baud modem to 2400-baud I had to find an
off-line Compuserve-forum-saving/reading program (OzCIS -- for the "old
timers" -- did anyone else here use it?) -- at 1200-baud I could read
the forums as they scrolled by, but at 2400-baud I could no longer keep
up.  Egad, I still remember my Compuserve ID: 75500,3223 and there's
even one Google "hit" on my CIS ID still remaining "out there":

    http://www.google.com/search?q=%2275500%2C3223%22

Anybody here remember TeamB for dBASE?

Angus

P.S. Yes, I have a (partially) grey beard -- not quite Sid Dabster but
"one of these days" I'll get there ;-)


--
Angus Scott-Fleming
GeoApps, Tucson, Arizona
1-520-290-5038
+-----------------------------------+




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