Hi :)
First time i went up to Manchester the university had just completed building a 
huge building that had been designed to fit the latest best machine of the 
day.  

Unfortunately by the time the building work was done a better machine was small 
enough to fit on one of the desks in one of the rooms.  I'm not quite sure if 
that says more about the speed of computer development or the slowness of 
English builders!  
Regards from
Tom :)  


--- On Thu, 24/5/12, webmaster-Kracked_P_P <[email protected]> wrote:

From: webmaster-Kracked_P_P <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Re: LibreOffice is listed as an educational 
software for math
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, 24 May, 2012, 19:30

On 05/24/2012 12:14 PM, Joep L. Blom wrote:
> On 24-05-12 16:06, Tony Sumner wrote:
>> On May 24, 2012, Jay Lozier wrote:
>> 
>>> This trip down memory lane makes one feeil old. Anyone remember
>>> teletypes with punched tape?
>> 
>> Of course. My favourite paper tape story. At AEE, Winfrith, we did
>> serious computing on the IBM704 at Risley in Lancashire. We would type
>> the program onto paper tape and run it though a teletype to send it by
>> phone to Risley. At their end they would punch it out and to check that
>> it was ok they would send it back. At the Winfrith end we then had the
>> original tape and a copy and we would hold these up to the light to
>> check for errors. If there were none we'd phone Risley and say yes ok
>> go ahead.  This was a communication protocol, yes? Later we installed a
>> punched card system so we could put the program on cards and fly them
>> to Risley by plane.
>> 
>> Tony
>> 
>> 
> I assume you never worked with the folded papertape used with the DEC PDP-8! 
> coded in ASCII. Years before we used an  Electrologica X-1 with papertape 
> coded in EBSDIC!You could edit the tapes with a manual punch and 
> nontransparent sellotape. We thought punched cards were old-fashioned!.
> Joep
> 
> 
DEC PDP 11 and similar was most of my main-frame and mini-main-frame work back 
in the 80's and early 90's.  I used  IBM main-frames in the late 70's bunch 
cards and dumb terminals in then in late 90's with terminals dumb and smart.  
In the mid 70's I used a teletype style printer/terminal connected via phone to 
a computer 50+ miles way, for my first coding experience, then went to punch 
cards before I ever got to use a dumb terminal CRT display and text editor to 
type in and edit program code for COBOL, FORTRAN, BASIC, RPG-II/III, Assembly, 
and a few other languages.   Now people use PCs with "smart" color coded 
editors to help them code, edit, and debug their programs.

I wrote an RPG-III coding editor so it would be easier to line up the cryptic 
codes in their proper columns.  It was well received at that place that used 
RPG-II/III.  It took half the time to type in the programs in the dumb 
terminals.

I started my computer work experience when most computers I had "terminal" 
access to, or had to load tapes for, were bigger than all my apartment rooms 
combined, and then some.  I worked a terminal with one that used more floor 
space than a basketball court.  I remember when a college put up a Bulletin 
Board System [via phone modems] that had a brand new 10 MEG of drive space and 
the people could not think of why it needed so much space to store files.  10 
MEG was too large to imagine using.  Those were the days when floppies were 
floppy.

---

Well we really went off thread topic with this one.

As I stated in the original post, it was interesting that LO was listed under 
free Math software.

Now it seems we are talking about the "grand old days" of computers before they 
could fit on a desk.

I still know many people who do not have the money to buy a computer or if they 
have one be able to get online with broadband.  In the '50 it was thought there 
was no need for more than 50 to 100 computers in the whole USA.  Now there are 
millions of them in the USA, with people like me having several 
desktops/laptops running side by side when needed.  Then add their smart 
phones, tablet phones, and the wifi reader/tablet non-phones that people [and 
kids] thing are a requirement it their lives.  Well, this generation does not 
appreciate what their fathers and grandfathers had to deal with when they were 
working with computers in those early years when the smallest computer was the 
size of a stove or refrigerator.


-- 
For unsubscribe instructions e-mail to: [email protected]
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted

Reply via email to