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Replies: 34 / Views: 8,087 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
2448 Posts |
I wish I knew what you guys are talking about! 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts |
Quote: Maybe if you had the old "You've got mail" sound I actually do have that sound on one of my droid 2 phones whenever a new email comes in. I never thought of myself being a geek though. A little nostalgic at times yes but definitely not a geek. Heck I may be a geek to some as I am always unlocking just about every piece of hardware I own so that I can control just about every aspect of it instead of only being able to control what the manufacturer wants you to control. And I am also the one all my friends brings their problem computers and other hardware to for me to fix for them so they may actually think of me as a geek also. I actually do have my atari 2600 with the fake wood grain hooked up in my daughters bedroom right now along with the 30 or so games I have for it. my buddies and I will go in there and play it about once every year or so when we start to get that nostalgic feeling
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
I do remember being a kid and waiting for the 36k dial up to connect to AOL and after the 45 seconds of signing on or so hearing the "Youve Got Mail" and how exciting it was.
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Rest in Peace
United States
7075 Posts |
This thread is making me remember the hours I wasted playing Pong.
And now I am remembering my first computer -- a Sinclair built from a kit -- no video card, no graphics, no color, no sound, and no mouse. Also, we had to pay by the hour to go online.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
965 Posts |
woah... you people are old   
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Lol I remember my first computer too. It was decent at the time an under powered mac with a floppy drive. Trying to look at a picture of anything on the internet was always interesting watching it load line by line for several minutes wondering if it will freeze the computer
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1374 Posts |
I remember installing a pirated version of Windows 95, in 1995. It took well over 20 floppy discs. However, Yahoo took even longer to load on the 3200 baud modem.
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Oh man I completely forgot about the multi floppy disk installs
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
7096 Posts |
Quote: Oh man I completely forgot about the multi floppy disk installs
Yes was definatly a pain. 3 disks for Dos, 3 disks for windows 3.11 then a whole bunch of disks to install win95   
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Valued Member
 United States
242 Posts |
I remember saying to someone we just changed the bandwidth equally before everything went internet there was like 3 or 4 disks and a 2400 baud modem then it went to 3 or 4 CDs and kilabit internet now its 3 or 4 DVDs (for like games and stuff) and mbit internet. Question is how long till we get out of the whole 'disk' thing all together and everything is a USB or whatever access key that downloads the software from the server for you or worse uses it straight from the server like doing more and more stuff on google drive etc.
I'm doing my coin database for my collection on a wiki on my website. Lets me cross reference everything, create listings in categories by every aspect, auto update every listing just by changing the template. Plus when I want to I can make it internet searchable and let others find information usefull for themselves from my collection.
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Moderator
 United States
188952 Posts |
Quote: And now I am remembering my first computer -- a Sinclair built from a kit -- no video card, no graphics, no color, no sound, and no mouse Nice!  My first computer was a Sinclair ZX-81. You should see the "coin inventory" program I wrote for it. I still have it... on cassette. 
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
I always wanted to get one of those awful word processor computers the schools had just so I could play oregon trail at home. No matter what choice you made it was always the wrong one to cross the river
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Valued Member
 United States
242 Posts |
To add to the computer history side of this thread I remembered my first real interaction with a computer was a Commodore 64 back in the 5th grade. We had a programming class using a language called "Logo". (Had this turtle you moved around with programming commands to draw pictures and the like.) I remember it was the first time "I did something I wasnt supposed to." with a computer. Didnt even know it.
I figured out how to use the computer to make noise and I wrote a program that played music but the music wasnt coming out of the computer and so I dug around behind the machine and figured out how to rewire it to get the sound to work. Freaked the teacher out when my computer made music because apparently they had all been disabled so that you couldnt annoy the teacher with music lol.
Hey. How was I supposed to know it was "broken" on purpose. lol. :D
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Moderator
 United States
188952 Posts |
The Commodore 64 was my second computer. I still have it, but it does not work.  However, my Commodore 128 and Amiga 500 still work. They are both hooked up and I boot them occasionally just to remind myself how far I have come. By the way, my coin inventory spreadsheet began on the Commodore 128. 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
2448 Posts |
Edited by carmykle 09/18/2012 5:26 pm
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