PET Computer Article, Circa 1978 193
Anonymous Coward writes "Every month, Playboy features excerpts from current and historic issues. This month's historic issue is from 1978 and features a very brief write-up of the new Commodore PET computer."
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
Maybe I'm just a female who could care less about playboy...
oh, spare us the lame 'golly, i'm a girl and someone just mentioned playboy and i think i'm supposed to be offended or something' horseshit. face it - you got distracted by the fact that it said 'playboy' and missed the entire point of the article - the computer. your geek-barbie comment is the only thing that is incongruous in this scenario.
Re:Outta my league... (Score:1)
add S0:respawn:2345:/sbin/getty ttyS0 DT9600 vt320 to
Re:Static RAM? (Score:1)
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
OTOH, at that time, personal computers still had a "toys for boys only" social sticker on them. Stupid, but heh, we can't rewrite history. Hence the presence of such an article in a magazine which target market is men.
OG.
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
--
Whatever happened to Jack Tramiel? (Score:1)
I know that he went on to Atari after getting out of Commodore, but what happened to him after Atari went ballzup?
Anybody want one? (Score:1)
Re:Sigh... (Score:1)
Same here. Our high school had 5 or 6 of them and one even had a floppy drive. I spent tons of time playing around with the PETs. They were the reason the janitors had to kick me out of the computer lab at 7 or 8pm.
Re:Toke / 1Mb Disks and self destructing poke (Score:1)
I remember Toker. Some friends of mine would play that during study hall. I seem to remember that if the guy hit a seed it would make him cough or something. That game was forgotten as soon as the couple Franklin Apple clones. Then it was on to some 16 color pirate game.
Re:Overclock??? (Score:1)
Oh no!! (Score:1)
Everywhere I look - sex! I come to slashdot to get away from it!
I haven't done it since April 1997.
This is like pouring petrol on the fire!
Waaaa!
Re:Pet?Pah! (Score:1)
I was too poor for one of them. I had a ZX81 with a multi-tasking FORTH ROM (ny Skywave Software).
It's still in the cupboard at my parents; house
Re:Lemonade Stand (Score:1)
Re:Overclock??? (Score:1)
Doh, they wrote the BASIC that was in the PET ROMs. I believe they also wrote some games for the PET.
Re:Just remembered a thing from childhood. (Score:1)
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
Re:Specs and such (Score:1)
Re:...American culture... (Score:1)
See the point? What's one of the biggest mags you can publish your short story in? What magazine will actually get circulated to more than 10 people in a college town? Thousands of small publishers that nobody ever heard of. The big ones are mostly all gone now.
Re:Sigh... (Score:1)
I had nothing but questions back then. I even remember testing if it was possible to assign a variable to another variable.
30 let a=i
All my experiments stayed in that little program, so by the time it could print out consecutive numbers it was 25 lines long.
Lemonade, Queen, and Space Invaders on the PET (Score:1)
Yes, we had some in 5th grade.
I still remember the joys of typing BASIC programs from some book chock-full of games like King, Queen, Wumpus, poker, etc. "Basic Games" and "Basic Games II" were huge at my school.
Space Invaders was cool cuz it used those alternate characters (and inverse characters) and looked KINDA like the real game.
My friend in 5th grade wrote a cool car-driving game. Amazed the class. But that, the TRS-80, and the TI-99 were my first exposures to computers.
Then the Apple II came to town and everything changed.
W
-------------------
I remember those! :) (Score:1)
It had an awful slow tape thing built in, and it kinda looked funny with the lil monitor built on top of it...
Every once and a while the screen would go weird on it... and me being a lil brat, just screwed open the thing and pushed the chips in there a lil... well... it *did* help.... for a while
I played pacman on it... and space invaders, i think... *sigh* good 'ole times, when life was easy
Re:commodore had the right idea (Score:1)
Hey Didn't some of the PET's have a 6809 CPU opt? (Score:1)
Anyway I remember wanting to get a PET with the 6809 option, but decided not to because there was more 6502 software.
Re:Slighty OT - Registers to OC CoCo (Score:1)
You know there were quite a number of good hacks for that machine. I used to use one that increased the already fast tape drive to 2400 baud. Good for the day. It was very tolerant as well as it used actual d-a a-d conversion for the data. Most of the others used digital, or cheap square waves that were both overly noisy, and very intolerant of speed changes. The COCO tape would deal with all of that, and had filenames!
I never used the keyboard code hack, but did see one coco overclocked. I can't remember which one 2 or 3, but basically you lost the video. If you were running os9, then you could get the additional speed, and just use a terminal via serial port.
I think hitachi made 6809E clones. The will clock to about 12Mhz these days. Still a pretty good choice if you are going to have to use assembler to build your project. There is probably no easier instruction set.
Later,
Ahhh...my first computer... (Score:1)
What sucks is that nothing I learned on it then is worth anything now (it was an antique when WE got it!).
Sometimes I miss that thing, just because I could do anything on it. It's more fun to solve problems for myself when my understanding of the environment isn't the primary limiting factor.
Life goes on...
Re:...American culture... (Score:1)
Let's try this again.
1. There are less and less small publishers due to conglomeration, rising costs, and competition from large chains, and other entertainment options.
2. More importantly, there are less and less small bookstores willing to *carry* "non-grisham" books.
3. How many independent publishers are carried by the "big 3" bookstores?
And finally, using you as an example, americans are less likely than ever to get off their asses and go out of their way to attempt to patronize stores other than wal-mart and mcdonalds.
Go back to sleep, sweetie. It'll all be over soon.
Re:...American culture... (Score:1)
Maybe cuz the article is older than you? (Score:1)
On a side note, I wonder how many people are unable to read this article because it's been blocked by netnanny or it's ilk?
Re:Overclock??? (Score:1)
Microsofts copyrite dose not show up on any of the other Commodore 8 bits...
To make maters more confusing... it's the date Microsoft last updated the copyrite so it's not the same year Microsoft first made Microsoft basic..
There are some clear diffrences in the Microsoft code and the Commodore code.. those diffrences introduced bugs into the C128..
People would like to blame the long standing history of bugs in Commodore basic on Microsoft however that history is also found in Commodore hardware and not in Microsoft basic during that time piriod...
Basicly Commodore develupers were allways in a rush to get the project they were working on into a state where it can be shown at a computer show... This is where they live or die..
Microsoft however was pritty content to take there time and get things right... Microsoft basic however did suffer from feature stuffing Microsoft would fix the bugs before shipping.. or remove the defective features...
Dos was where Microsoft first started releasing buggy code... Windows where they first started producing bloat...
With Commodore the R&D costs were reduced simply becouse the beta was a "release it and see if any anyone reports bugs" method...
Re:Overclock??? (Score:1)
> the other Commodore 8 bits...
Yep, it does. My first computer was a PET 4016 (16k Ram) and it definitely had software by "Micro Soft" in the ROM, because you could peek for that string.
My PET memories (Score:1)
Also my grandfather made an amp for it from an old trannie radio, which plugged into the 'User Port' at the back, and we then installed it internally in that acre of white metal above the keyboard. Wow, custom hardware!
Lastly, you could buy custom ROM chips for it (from a company named Arrow?) which would give you more BASIC commands like cursor positioning. We borrowed an Arrow chip from another PET, broke a leg off it while getting it out, and simply soldered it back on. Try that these days. Not to mention that when I had to give the Arrow chip back all my code broke because it depended on the extra routines...
What a machine!
Re:Specs and such (Score:1)
Of course, the amiga formatted the same 3.5 inch floppies to 880k without variable spin-speed trickery...
I had one! (Score:1)
I have CBM PET 96KB !!!! (Score:1)
Re:Don't forget the Timex Sinclair (Score:1)
On second thought, forget it. As soon as I got my Vic20, I forgot it.
Re:This takes me back to high school. (Score:1)
Alternatively... (Score:1)
Sorry to Slashdot readers however, because the aliens aren't interested in humans in our IQ range.
We'll make great PETs.
Re:Sigh... (Score:1)
Heh. Someone moderate this up as "funny."
Re:Victor 4000 (Score:1)
I did some contract work for Kodak in the 80's and they used the Victor 4000 to control Microfiche printers. (The Tandy 2000 and Victor 4000 were both very innovative MS-DOS compatibles introduced during this period, but since they weren't also PC-Compatible they failed miserably.)
By the way
-Eric
PET - recovering from crashes (Score:1)
I tried this and it actually worked! Does anyone with more knowledge of the PET know why this was possible? RAM refresh not as unforgiving in those days? I'd really like to know :)
grrr...smartfilter [OT] (Score:1)
Gee, and I was really going to read the article...honest.
nice...but what were the specs? (Score:1)
mmmmm...retro computing....
{/homer}
Seriously though, what were the specs for these machines, and how did they compare to the ubiquitous Apple II's that most schools had instead?
I'm assuming my Vic20 with it's blazing 3.5K was one of the offspring of this fellow, but how did the original rate?
Re:Specs and such (Score:1)
(This comment brought to you by H4X0RK1D999@AOL.COM)
Seriously, please post it somewhere!
(Wouldn't it be cool if you could post to slashdot with attachments?)
Re:This takes me back to high school. (Score:1)
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
still alive (Score:1)
Slighty OT - Registers to OC CoCo (Score:1)
CoCo 1 (some models) and 2 - POKE 65495,0
CoCo 3 - Poke 65497,0
To shift down:
CoCo 1 (some models) and 2 - POKE 65494,0
CoCo 3 - Poke 65496,0
Remember to clock down when writing to disk or tape, then back up...
BTW - from what I remember, in one of the last issues of Rainbow Magazine (the ones that were printed on newsprint, and looked like a newspaper), there was featured a program that would speed up the system about double again, by replacing the keyboard handling routine with a better version. There also used to be a way to replace the CPU with a different (Hitachi?) CPU that was a clone, but could be clocked up further via a crystal change. However, since the crystal in the CoCo controlled the video and disk as well as the CPU, changing this could cause unpredicatable (or predictable - it simply wouldn't work!) results.
It's scary what you remember after nearly 15 years!
Stupid moderators (Score:1)
Moderaters are like the dinosaurs.
Atari (Score:1)
The 800 could come with less than 48K RAM, and had at least one memory expansion slot that the 400 didn't have.
The 1400XL was not a successor to the 1450XLD, but rather they were both members of a set of four computers that were once planned to be released. I think the first two in the list may have been the 600XL and the 800XL, but don't quote me on that -- it's been a long time.
The 65XE had ithe typical 64K of RAM as opposed to the 130XE's 128K.
You could replace with extra 64K RAM in the 130XE with 256K, 512K, or 1024K through a couple different hacks described in text files that floated around the BBS's. Some DOS's (e.g. SpartaDos, MyDos) had ram disk programs that would support such an upgrade, and this was how the extra RAM was used most of the time.
The 130XE's extra memory (whatever amount you happened to have) was bank switched 16K at a time by one of those FREDDIE chips mentioned in another review. The 65XE lacked this chip.
I'll cut it off here.
P.S. that web site has too many frames.
My first published source code... (Score:1)
The magazine was having a contest for programs with less than 1K of source as "KByters" they could run as the last column in the mag. I forget what the dollar amount of the prize was, but I remember the classmate kept every darn dime...
Last code I ever open-sourced.
Still, the PET rocked. I still can type one-handed, I learned how by holding a magazine in one hand and pressing chiclet keys with the other. (I still can't type two-handed from learning that way...) And I still treasure the poorly-laminated piece of red construction paper that certifies me a member of PETCO, the high-school computer organization.
"Oh My" how times have changed. (Score:1)
Then here we are 22 years later. The only things that have changed are the colours and the speed to which we can View Star Trek and porn.
Wordstar anyone?
Ahh, the PET Computer, the first, the deadliest. (Score:1)
I remember in 1st grade when we used to play a really old version of Oregon Trail all free-time long (btw, the 'Hunting' was made up of guessing which line of the screen (1-32?) a piece of 'Food' was, and then you shot to see if you were right... after a while you are right every time).
Anyway, that was my first experience with computers, and I already knew more than the teachers ^^.
Then, they decided to get rid of the non-working models, so they had me go and check each one to see if it was in good working order (What an honor for a 1st grader, ne?).
This is when the bad thing happened. As it turned out, one of the computers I had never used before was not only broken, but the cylindrical plastic cover near the 'on/off' switch on the back left of the machine was broken off, and had been replaced by nylon tape (which had fallen off) so that when I reached back to turn it on, I managed to give myself a good jolt of electrity.
I don't know how bad it was, but it was bad enough that my hand clutched the computer so that I couldn't do anything but stand there and get fried until I fell over.
Anyways, This is the story of how I got into computers. Anybody know how many volts I got? I've been wondering that for a long time.
Re:Bypassing Firewalls (Score:1)
Re:You're mistaken (Score:1)
Re:...American culture... (Score:1)
I think the original poster meant most respected mainstream publishers of short fiction. I'd still take issue. Alice K. Turner is a fine editor and she still manages to get some decent fiction published in Playboy, but there are still other magazines closer to the mainstream that publish more fiction (The New Yorker, Harper's, The Atlantic Monthly).
As someone who publishes a small magazine of fiction, I can vouch that there is no shortage of outlets for short fiction writers to get published (on paper) in the US. Get published and *paid* or published to a mass audience, that's a different story.
ObOnTopic: I'm sure that some stories submitted to Playboy two decades ago were composed on a PET.
Girlfiend would kill me (Score:1)
Sigh.
Re:finger memory... (Score:1)
REG PC ALTER 030 000 ALTER GO
(Unless you had the nifty auto-start PAM-8 ROM mod kit, that is)
Re:Lemonade Stand (Score:1)
I guess that I am an average to young slashdotter (23 years old), but I had a C64 with a Koala pad. Now that I think about it, I wonder if that is why I am so interested in computers and art. Currently I am a Computer Science major, but I plan on going back to school to get a masters in art.
I also remember writing programs like lemonade stand and such from those BASIC programming books. I think that I was too young to understand the code, but I had fun typing it in and trying to run it.
Ahhh, the good ole days, thanks Slashdot for the memories.
eric
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Mirror Site (Score:2)
Pet's are cool (Score:2)
Viruses on CBM? (Score:2)
Unless you refer to the trick by which the cartridge signature and start vector were written into the RAM under where the cartridge ROM would go (it only had 64K address space, so things had to double up, or even triple up), so that on reset the machine would think it had a cartridge and jump to the address specified. A lot of games did this.
Pirate Game (Score:2)
Tai Pan by any chance? For a game with almost NO moving pictures, it was a blast!
and don't forget those games! (Score:2)
*sigh*
That was the first great RPG game... waaay before Lord British.
Oh, and let's not forget those star trek sim games! What realism! And the Wumpus hunt!
The Commodore Pet was my first exposure to computers, too. I still think that computers with free-standing keyboards and monitors look funny...
I felt cheated when the C64 came out, b/c the whole thing was in the keyboard! I mean, where's the boxy metal and glass! The Pet felt like the control panel of a spaceship, or something! (Hey, I was eight, gimme a break).
This takes me back to high school. (Score:2)
Anyway, we had someone gotten our hands on a PET and its printer. Yeah, the technology was old even then, but we found a way to make it useful. A few hours of coding some horrible looking basic and we had our "DJ request computer." Instead of bugging us, people would walk up to the pet, see our attractive logo (much like you say Playboy's in the article,) answer a few questions and their request was answered. On days when the printer was actually working, it would then print out behind the DJ booth. On days when it wasn't, the requests would be stored in a big ass array that we would go and check with our backdoor password into the program. It was pretty cool and very geeky, but it impressed people.
Maybe on another occation I'll get to post about how we used discarded TRS-80s and a homemade board to control and create a lightshow.
Re:PORTABLE?!!!!!? (Score:2)
Portable had a different meaning back then. IBM called their 5100 a "portable" computer as well, causing some to (mistakenly!) consider it the first portable computer. (It's not, that's most likely the STM Systems Baby! 1).
Today, people think of a "portable" computer as one that you would normally take with you during the everyday course of business, to be used in many different locations. These can range in size from wearables to Handspring Visors, to notebooks, to lunchboxes, all the way up to the sewing-machine-sized osborne 1 and similar.
But back then, "portable" would have meant a computer that didn't need to be in a specially-built, air-conditioned, extra-clean room, and you didn't need to hire a team of specialists from the manufacturer just to move it to another part of the office. You could unplug it, put it on a cart, wheel it over to where ever you wanted it, and plug it back in. It was relatively portable.
These were not something you would move around all the time; they were something you could move when you had to.
Later, a new level of functionality began to emerge -- computers designed to be taken with you and used in multiple locations, perhaps even during the same day. "Portable" computing took on a new meaning, fostered by such innovative or popular computers as the Osborne 1 [sinasohn.com], GRiD Compass [sinasohn.com], Sharp PC-5000, Panasonic HHC, Epson HX-20 [sinasohn.com], TRS-80 Model 100 [sinasohn.com], and of course the Compaq Portable.
You can see more venerable portable computers in my collection [sinasohn.com], or elsewhere on the web. You can see many of them in person at the next Vintage Computer Festival [vintage.org].
Re:Outta my league... (Score:2)
A few years back, I was working with a company that had a 15-year-old software package and, at the same time, was developing a new, PC-based package. I sat there with the old guys, updating the existing package, and listened to the young micro-weenies trying to figure out solutions to the same problems others had solved 20 or even 30 years prior.
Those who do not study history are doomed to repeat it.
As to your terminal and 2400bps modem -- I doubt you type or read more than 240 characters per second, so why not use it as a dial-up terminal to a unix box? No X-windows, of course, but then that's for micro-weenies anyway. 8^)
Re:PORTABLE?!!!!!? (Score:2)
I don't think Commodore marketed the Pet as a portable either.
But, it's a matter of viewpoint. Looking back from today, where we have visors and psions and sony vaios and so on, a young person of today could look at an Osborne and say, yeah, I could see where that might be considered portable back in the dinosaur age.
But someone from the 60's or even 70's computer industry, looking forward to the Commodore Pet (or the IBM 5100 or the TRS-80 Model III) would see a small, all-in-one, computer that they could pick up and move themselves to another cubicle without having to call a bunch of specialists and schedule it 3 months in advance (hoping the air-conditioning guys actually show up before then.)
Get your hands on a Pet! (Score:2)
There is a lot of work going on to preserve the history of the computer industry, but there is still a lot that needs to be done. Much of our past is disappearing before our eyes as we continue to move forward.
(You can see part of my collection [sinasohn.com] on-line as well.)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
There's a picture [sfsu.edu] in Hal Layer's [sfsu.edu] collection, or check out Deep Space Tech [deepspacetech.com] if you want to buy one.
And of course, we have to have the obligatory Linux on NeXT [geocities.com] link.
But not Commodore's first computer... (Score:2)
Ah, the good ol' days of hand assembly code.
mike
Honest, dear... (Score:2)
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Re: About the poll - Mod that guy up! (Score:2)
I think this is a good idea. Do the "What is your estimate of the average Slashdot reader's age?" poll first, and then the "What is your age?" poll a week later.
This actually sounds fun!
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Re:PORTABLE?!!!!!? (Score:2)
Back the, "portable" would have meant a computer that didn't need to be in a specifically-built, air-conditioned, extra-clean room, and you didn't need to hire a team of specialists from the manufacturer just to move it...
I don't recall Apple as having pawned their Apple ][ off as being "portable." (Apple ][ was introduced in 1977) Neither was the Altair (1975).
Although I suppose I can understand what you mean...
PORTABLE?!!!!!? (Score:2)
LMAO....
Re:Bypassing Firewalls (Score:2)
Re:finger memory... (Score:2)
I must have done that hundreds of times, it's now burned into my wetware... Still retains the data after 25 years.
Hunt the Wumpus for the HP48G (Score:2)
I bet... (Score:2)
If you could get them on a network, of course...
Ahh, the good old days of sneekernet.
I remmeber my high school had whole labs of these, and during the era of the C64 a friend of mine brought me over to his house, showed me a PET and asked me "Is this thing any good?", my reply "dude, its not even color!", this must have been atleast 15 years ago....
--- iCEBaLM
Re:Sigh... (Score:2)
History, that's the point! Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
This is an important part of the history of our culture, and a very fleeting one. Those early machines were in use for only half-a-dozen years between the emergence of the first micro-processors in the mid seventies and the arrival of IBM's horrible Intel based kludge in 1982; within that time there was incredibly rapid evolution, and many interesting designs were tried. The 8K PET deserves an honourable mention in this process because it was one of the first machines to come all in one box, ready to buy off the shelf; most of it's contemporary competition was kits, often without provision for a keyboard or a video display.
It is also the direct and very obvious ancestor of the Commodore 64K and the VIC20, both of which were common home/games machines in the early eighties.
wow..... (Score:2)
Bypassing Firewalls (Score:2)
http://fr0.idzap.com/
http://www.proxymate.com/
http://www.anonymizer.com/3.0/index.shtml
First Time, Ever I... (Score:2)
High school in New Zealand around 1980 - a whole 13 years old and I meet my first computer in maths class. We had a lab which featured a couple of PET's hooked up to a shared disk drive (or something like this). I had been typing for a few years on an old type-writer so I got selected to enter the commands (LOAD xxx,8 - or something
When I asked what the commands meant, I heard the most important words of my life for the first time. The words that would shape my future:
"Read the F Manual"
:)
After this, we wound up in Australia where I picked up a VIC-20, then on to an Apple II clone (with Z80 chip - hello CP/M
All down hill from there, I'm afraid...
Damn but I love those memories. Back when 5k of RAM in a VIC-20 was cool (before you turned it on - 1.5k after start-up thanks to BASIC & the screen display
Re:Bypassing Firewalls (Score:2)
Right now I have to have my modem dialed in to another ISP, with the addresses I need to go to (for some reason the Surf Nazis are blocking The Onion!) listed in the "do not use proxy for addresses beginning with..." section. They load more slowly but I can get to them.
My 8K Pet still runs... (Score:2)
I still have the dot-matrix printer that came with, a weird electrostatic thing: when you turn off the lights, you can see the sparks fly as the imager fries the special silver-gray wax-paper. We even did the funky parallel-port modification that adds an RCA plug.
Like my Amigas, it's nothing but preventative maintenance, now. I use a pencil eraser and isopropyl alcohol to keep the chiclet keyboard contacts fresh. I've still only been through a fraction of the hundreds of programs my uncle handed over to me a year ago.
Man, I'd love to get NetBSD on this thing...
Commodore Pets Rule (Score:2)
Then the next year we got some machines with 16K of RAM and found ourselves saying things like, "You'll NEVER need more than 16K of RAM." (Where have I heard something like that before?).
And then later in that year I went to a computer programming contest (cough!) at a local high school and I was treated to a 32K PET with a REAL keyboard and a larger screen. We came in 2nd to some guys with an Apple ][.
Somewhere in a box in my cellar I still have some cassette tapes with some of my early programs on them... I also have an old Byte magazine with Bill Shatner doing an add for the PET. I'll have to scan it and put in on my web site.
Ah the memories! :-)
Overclock??? (Score:2)
Yeah, but can you overclock it to 2 MHz? How bout a 1200 baud modem? It had, what, a whopping 4K memory? Woohoo! Screw my AMD K6/2-350, I gotta get me one of THESE!!!
Let's look at what it can do:
* Play MP3s at a stunning 1Hz sample rate. *click* *click* *click*
* Play full motion streaming video, if that streaming video is ASCII characters.
* Full fledged Internet Access. Using Telnet. Dialed in. In a terminal window.
* one of the most secure platforms in existence. About as secure as a doorstop - and about as useful.
On the bright side, I doubt MS could have ever written anything small enough to work on it (yeah yeah yeah don't remind me of the Altair...)
If you can't figure out how to mail me, don't.
William Shatner (Score:2)
dum da dum, da dum dum da dummmmm. da dummmmmmm...
PET. The final frontier. These are the voyages of the computer Commodore. Its 5 year mission. To seek out new geeks, and new nerds. To boldly go where no hunk of silicon has gone before.
"Captain's log, stardate 1978.0. We... have.... slappedtogetherabunchofchips. We... come... inpeace. If... only... Jacktramielwouldleaveusalone."SPOCK: "Captain, I can't understand a word you're saying."
"Never..... mind, Spock. You're outofyourvulcanmind. Stick ... that... cassette... intothelittleslotoverthere. See... how... wellitworks? It... has.... a... whopping.... *long pause* 4kofmemory, and... is... a... dreamtouse."
MCCOY: "Damnit, Jim, I'm a doctor, not a pencilneck!"
*grin* *screws a random woman* *episode over*
If you can't figure out how to mail me, don't.
Re:grrr...smartfilter [OT] (Score:2)
Copyright (C) Playboy!!
If you think man's best friend is his pet dog, then you haven't seen the portable Model 2001 PET home computer that Commodore, an international electronics company, has just introduced at the mind-boggling price of only $595. The PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) features a TV screen, a keyboard that's as simple to use as a typewriter, a self-contained cassette recorder that is the source for programs and for storing data and a memory system. What's it do? Just about everything from maintaining personal records to answering the telephone.
Pictured here is just a sampling of PET's capabilities, beginning with a doodle of Starship Enterprise that's been drawn on the screen via one's punching keyboard keys that activate various graphic symbols, such as squares, line segments, etc.
If you don't recognize this electronic sketch, Charley, you've got no business buying a computer.
PET will also maintain your personal checkbook records on a program that logs a cumulative record of your deposits and expenses. Furthermore, it can also be programmed to give monthly balances and records of how the money was spent.
Re:Specs and such (Score:2)
What's the point? (Score:2)
-- Qirien, Academy of Defenestration
Static RAM? (Score:3)
Also, the slow clock rate and smaller RAM size may have meant that the RAM chips used more current per bit, and thus taken longer to drain.
You never forget your first time :) (Score:3)
I was twelve. I was in the school library. And I was in love. We had only an hour together each day after school let out, and I didn't want to waste a minute. My friends had all headed home to leaf through their teen magazines, gaze at their music posters, and gossip about boys. They had their dreams...I had the real thing.
Sure, our relationship was a bit one-sided. He didn't say much; I told him what to do and he did it. Animated stick figures? Sure. "Guess a number from 1 to 100" games? No problem. I was clumsy at first, and he would often complain, uttering "?SYNTAX ERROR" when I did something that displeased him. Fortunately, as we got to know each other better, these little outbursts became less frequent.
I must confess that for a while, I was obsessed with killing him. I had heard that if I POKEd him in a particular place, he'd explode. On several occasions, I'd start running a program that POKEd values increasing from 0, hoping to get to the magic number. Alas, my plans were always thwarted by the school librarian. She'd come around and turn him off at closing time.
Eventually, we grew apart. I still visited him from time to time, but meanwhile, I was spending more and more time with a friend's VIC-20. The menage a trois satisfied me for a few months, but came to an abrupt end when my parents introduced me to a C64.
Since that time, I've gone through numerous relationships with other computers. The 8088, the 486, all kinds of Pentiums, and my latest fling, the Sparc. It's been fun, but my fondest memories will always be of heavy PETting in the library after school.
Sigh... (Score:3)
I was forteen years old, and my uncle, a Hewlett-Packard engineer, lent us one for a few months.
Ironic that playboy brings up where I lost my technical virginity.
I still remember the first program I ever wrote:
10 A=1
20 print A
30 LET A = A + 1
40 GOTO 20
It also had the first bug I ever found, as it printed something like:
1.00000
2.00000
3.00000
3.99999
5.00000
6.00000
(Floating point was still problematic back then.)
Re:What's the point? (Score:3)
Specs and such (Score:3)
Nostalgia just aint what it used to be.
Re:nice...but what were the specs? (Score:3)
My parents bought a Commodore CBM-8032 in 1983, and it's what hooked me on computers. I still have a huge number of the cryptic SYS and POKE commands programmed into my fingers -- I sat down at an emulator recently, wondered out loud what was the system command to hard-reboot the machine, and my fingers typed SYS 64790 without the slightest hesitation. Eerie!
The best PET/CBM/C64/VIC/etc emulator is the VICE emulator. [cmu.edu] I recommend it to anyone running Unix, MS-DOS, Win95/NT, OS/2 or RiscOS who wants to remember the good old Commodore beasts. I've used it in the DOS and Windows versions, but not since I migrated (graduated?) to Linux. I might just check it out tho...
: Fruitbat :
Re:What's the point? (Score:3)
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You're mistaken (Score:3)
I've got to learn to post this kind of thing anonymously.
Re:What's the point? (Score:5)
But maybe you should care a little bit more about your history.
The point is, if you don't know where you come from, you don't know where you're going. Do you know when and where computer-based video-conferencing was first demonstrated? (Try 30 years ago [stanford.edu], Stanford and SF.) How about what the first personal computer was? (Guess again [blinkenlights.com].) Can you identify the first clamshell-style laptop [sinasohn.com]? (Or the second [sinasohn.com]?)
Those who do not study history are doomed to repeat it. If you want to learn more, check out the Vintage Computer Festival [vintage.org]. (You can also check out my collection [sinasohn.com].)