> -----Original Message-----
> From: Karl Vacek [mailto:kvacek@ameritech.net]
> Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 10:12 AM
> To: John Innis; shop-talk@autox.team.net
> Subject: Re: [Shop-talk] Quick question on garage floors and
> garage lifts
>
> Wow - UNIX ? E-mail ? Sounds pretty modern. When I was at
> Purdue we had an IBM 7094, and Fortran was translated onto
> tape by an IBM 1401 from the cards we punched. About the
> computing power of a desktop calculator with much better I/O,
> assuming you like cards or tape. No such thing as e-mail, no
> UNIX. If you were lucky, though, you might get to use one of
> the two IBM
> 029 card punches rather than the 026's. All of this had to
> be done in the sub-basement of the newly-opened (sophomore
> year) Math-Science Building.
> Ahhh, the good old days.
>
> When I returned for grad school a few years later (1973),
> there were remote terminals to directly input FORTRAN
> programs at a few campus locations. No trudging to the M-S
> Building to punch your cards. No e-mail then either, though.
> And I bought a TI SR-10 calculator ($119.95) just before
> going back to grad school - it could DO SQUARE ROOTS !!
>
> Karl
>
I suspect this will quickly digress into ...
Computers? we had no such thing when I was going to school. But
my roommate in grad school was Chuck Babbage kept messing with a
contraption that he claimed would compute. I don't think he ever
finished it while I was there and those darn metal filings got
into everything!
My roommate in undgraduate studies was Gottfried Leibniz. He claimed
he was working on a computer too but we all thought that he just
used it mostly as a pick up line...
singed
Some days I feel older than othters...
Stuart.
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