I'm not complaining about it, just pointing it out in case there is something to worry about
ah, to be the generation that experienced the beginning of internet and puberty at the same time'Some y'all never waited 17 minutes downloading a grainy Penthouse centerfold pic and it shows.
ah, to be the generation that experienced the beginning of internet and puberty at the same time
I started on a PDP 11 running RSTS. PIP was my friend, was glad it got adopted by CP/M.Some weird flexing going on in this thread... might as well join in.
In school, we worked on PDP-11s running a variant of Unix. I was a few years too late and missed the hole (pun intended) punch-card era but my teacher had a big box of them sitting on his desk.
Got my first computer around 1982. It was an Apple ][ clone. A couple of years later, I had it hooked up to a 300 baud modem and was running a BBS, trying to remember the name of the SW... GBBS, I think? Acoustic coupler FTW. I could whistle the proper frequency to connect to another 300 baud modem.
By ~1988, I was running Opus BBS on a 386 PC connected to FidoNET, getting batch mail and messages from inter-BBS forums overnight. F-n state of the art at the time. Started working at IBM in 1990, and they had *all* the toys there, I had unlimited access to luggables and then later on Thinkpads. All running OS/2 ugh. Started messing around with multi-user telnet BBSes, hooking up Opus to the Internet. This was the direct precursor to the Internet forums of the late 90s (of which we are all talking on right now).
I had ran the gamut of 1200, 2400, 9600, 57.6K baud modems, from Hayes to US Robotics, acoustic couplers to PCMCIA. You name it, I had it in the back of a drawer somewheres.

Also $400 for a 64Mb plugin memory card made by a Markham company called 'ATI'.