Roger Doulis wrote:
>
> "Bill Caroselli @ Q-TPS" wrote:
> >
> > OK, OK.
> >
> > Who else remembers writing Tic-Tac-Toe on an Altair 8800 in 128 bytes? All
> > you had to do was flip bit switches to play.
> >
> > Boy those were the good old days. "OS? We don't need no stinking OS!"
> >
> > "Igor Kovalenko" <
kova...@home.com> wrote in message
> > news:9gs8n1$ooh$1...@inn.qnx.com...
> > > "Oleg A. Khamayko" <
ole...@mail.ru> wrote in message
> > > news:3B31A2A0...@mail.ru...
> > > >
> > > > Igor Kovalenko wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > > Dude, I remember doing Photon development on 386 with 8Mb ;)
> > > >
> > > > The same, but 4Mb :-) Who less?
>
> My wife was cleaning up some stuff a couple of months ago and asked me
> "What's all these cards??"
> It was my first computer program (Ok It was the mid '70's), That did all
> the times tables on punch cards :-)
>
> The computer industry would never have gotten of the ground if elastic
> bands had not been invented.
>
> --
> Roger Doulis
> (A polar bear is a rectangular bear after a coordinate transform).
>
> Dept Civil Engineering (Clayton Campus) Ph 9905-1165
> Fax 9905-1483
> Roger Doulis
> Structural Testing Officer
> Dept. Civil Engineering
> C/O P.O. Box 60
> Monash University 3800
> Victoria.
> Australia.
I was cleaning out the basement recently and came across my old Seattle
Computer Products QDOS manual, the original MS-DOZE. I'm thinking of
donating it to the Computer Museum... :-) Somewhere I have my old QUNIX
Beta diskette as well, I'm sure.
-Bill Boyle