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Re: OT: America's Army



On Mon, 2003-06-23 at 05:10, Alex Malinovich wrote:
> On Sun, 2003-06-22 at 18:17, Mike Dresser wrote:
> > On Sun, 22 Jun 2003, Jamin W. Collins wrote:
> > 
> > > It was fairly common in the early 80's for application source to be
> > > printed in a variety of magizines and to be shared between users.  I'm
> > > not referring to pirated software, but rather Free software.  I remember
> > > Commodore (yes Commodore) magazines with the source for applications
> > > printed among their pages.
> > 
> > Home comput(er/ing) Magazine (HCM) used to publish code for 5 or 6
> > different computers, atari 800?, ti99/4a, c64, vic/20, etc.  Back in the
> > early 80's, so I dont'r emember what all they covered.  99'r mag had a
> > similar idea, but only for the ti99/4a.
> > 
> > Talk about portability, even back then.  They actually had a program you
> > inputted your program into, and it would do a crude checksum to make sure
> > you typed your code in properly.
> > 
> > Have i dated myself now? :D
> 
> Not terribly. All you've told us is that you're most likely somewhere at
> or after your early to mid twenties. :)
> 
> I'm 23 and I remember helping my dad type in code for our Commodore 64
> from a magazine... and today I'm a 'Linux Geek(tm)'... imagine that...
> ;)
> 
> Now, if you were to say that you read the original printing of 'The
> Story of Mel' during your lunch break one day and agreed wholeheartedly,
> THEN you would be dating yourself. ;)

I consider myself dated, then - I started programming about a year
before the TRS-80 hit the market, and to do *effective* things, you
programmed like Mel, on the iron, and maybe called it from a BASIC
program if you needed some of that.

I typed in all manner of programs from Creative Computing and Byte,
translating between BASIC dialects and system design differences for the
three systems I had access to at the time: the TRS-80, an Apple ][+, and
an HP 9830A with a one line, 32 character LED alphanumeric display. But
when I programmed things from scratch, I had self-modifying code and
tweaks of individual memory locations as a given.
-- 
Mark L. Kahnt, FLMI/M, ALHC, HIA, AIAA, ACS, MHP
ML Kahnt New Markets Consulting
Tel: (613) 531-8684 / (613) 539-0935
Email: kahnt@hosehead.dyndns.org

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