texbaylea
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2004
- Messages
- 1,923
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- Brazos County Texas 77808
- Tractor
- Kubota L3130HST w/LA723 loader
I might as well dig out my old computer stories too. My first was a CP/M 2 with an Z80 processor that I built up on an S-100 chassis. It was portable: one suitcase sized cabinet (with handles) for the computer and another with 2, 8 inch floppy drives and a daisy wheel printer. Had a Heath H19 monitor on it also. Those 4 pieces could be hauled about with a hand truck!! The most useful software was Word Master editor plus a formatter that produced documents as good as today's machines but without the graphics. That machine cost me a total of about $8000 in the mid 70's
My son was the only student at Rice University with his own computer/word processor
I then move to a DEC Rainbow 100 with a 20 meg hard drive that I partitioned to run both CP/M and MS-DOS. DEC's biggest mistake was going to their own floppy format so that floppies were not interchangeable.
At the time of the Apollo missions I was in a team that built up low level radiation measurement equipment for looking at the moon samples. My job was an analylizer and detector system that we used to scan the astronauts to see if there were any induced radiation in their bodies. The analyizer was built around DEC PDP 8. Those were the heady days. My wife also worked in the Lunar Receivng Laboratory doing biochemical analysis on the astronauts.
I have since built up several PC's using at various times CP/M, DR-DOS, MS-DOS, OS/2 Warp (much superior to Windows but Microsoft used F,U,D against it) I am using Windows XP now but wish I did not have to (don't use any other MS software). Some time soon I will move to Ubuntu Linux.
Vernon
My son was the only student at Rice University with his own computer/word processor
I then move to a DEC Rainbow 100 with a 20 meg hard drive that I partitioned to run both CP/M and MS-DOS. DEC's biggest mistake was going to their own floppy format so that floppies were not interchangeable.
At the time of the Apollo missions I was in a team that built up low level radiation measurement equipment for looking at the moon samples. My job was an analylizer and detector system that we used to scan the astronauts to see if there were any induced radiation in their bodies. The analyizer was built around DEC PDP 8. Those were the heady days. My wife also worked in the Lunar Receivng Laboratory doing biochemical analysis on the astronauts.
I have since built up several PC's using at various times CP/M, DR-DOS, MS-DOS, OS/2 Warp (much superior to Windows but Microsoft used F,U,D against it) I am using Windows XP now but wish I did not have to (don't use any other MS software). Some time soon I will move to Ubuntu Linux.
Vernon