Edit: okay, except for these kids: http://changelog.complete.org/archives/ ... -delighted. Those kids are awesome


xenopeek wrote:Those kids are awesome



odo5435 wrote:Orbmiser wrote:Now Where Did I Store those 5" Floppies?
5"?? Who remembers using 8" floppies?![]()
In an IBM Series/1?![]()
Announced by IBM's General Systems Division (GSD) on November 16, 1976.....


3fRI wrote:I remember main frame IBMs and Univacs and inputting data on punch cards

odo5435 wrote:3fRI wrote:I remember main frame IBMs and Univacs and inputting data on punch cards
You win, yours is bigger than mine. As @xenopeek so succinctly put it "How did we get this old"?
Without trying to highjack the thread I suppose, like most old timers, I can't help but envy today's up and comers who have so much more information and technology available to them. Then again, what if our parents had had what we had? What if Alexander the Great had had strike bombers? What if the Egyptians had had the crane?
Trying to get back on-topc I'll add that it is not new to say that change is inevitable. In the modern world change is both obligatory and rapid. To remain relevant software developers and users need to be aware of this. Us old farts may bask in past glories but we need to accept that what was, is no more.


tdockery97 wrote:I just read the whole article on the state of Windows, and I am not one bit surprised. I really think Windows 8 is a big nail in their coffin. It's going to be a horrendous failure following too closely behind the Vista debacle.


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