Ah yes, the "good old days." How many times did you drop your cards,
just as you were handing them to the operator? Did you number them so
they could be resorted? Hmmm, I didn't either. How far down the line
were you when you handed the stack over to the operator? Is it better
to submit them at 3:30 PM or 3:30 AM Curious people want to know?
John
On 2/24/2014 4:35 AM, Peter McIntosh wrote:
On 24 February 2014 07:37, steve harley <[email protected]> wrote:
i found it by way of this amusing tool which executes google searches by
teletype:
<http://www.masswerk.at/google60/>
i didn't use punch cards much - at university i was lucky to plunge directly
into interactive CRT terminal use in 1978; on the side i had a research
assistantship with Arthur Swersey, a disarmingly non-conformant biz school
professor who wouldn't blink when i showed up at his office in bare feet and
cutoffs; one of my many tasks with Prof. Swersey was to set up some SIMULA jobs
to run on an IBM 360; i think that, about 1981, was my only contact with punch
cards, and it felt pretty old-fashioned
This is great! I'm taking that link to work tomorrow to show the
"gun" web-devs what they missed. Along with my 96-column IBM punchcard
template, if I can find it. Makes a great coffee coaster...
I used 80-column punch cards on Burroughs machines from the late 70's
thru the mid-80's. The whole cold-start deck for b4xxx mainframes was
on cards. You dropped the (very large) deck on pain of death...
manual resorting was punishment.
Also used to boot a couple of their "mini" mainframes from cassette.
Ciao,
Pete Mac in Melbourne
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