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Re: Reading older disks
John Nemeth wrote in <201808241936.w7OJa3Oa008396@server.cornerstoneserv\
ice.ca>:
|On Aug 24, 8:40am, Steve Blinkhorn wrote:
|} You [D'Arcy J.M. Cain] wrote:
|}> On 2018-08-23 09:03 PM, John Nemeth wrote:
|}>> On Aug 23, 5:36pm, steve%prd.co.uk@localhost wrote:
|}>>} I cheated - I found a memory medule that fitted and got the system to
|}>>} boot. Did we really once find 356MBytes adequate?
|}>>
|}>> 365MB?!? My first hard drive was 40MB and that was considered
|}>> fairly large for the day.
|}>
|}> My first HD was 5MB. Later the systems came with 11MB. Then one day I
|}> scored a brand new 20MB drive. I had to patch the CP/M binary in order
|}> to access it.
|}
|} This could rapidly become the "Four Yorkshiremen" sketch from Monty
|} Python. I had an early IBM PC with *two* floppy drives, but the
|} first Unix box I ran rather than just used was an NCR Tower which
|} started off with 512KBytes of RAM, later upgraded to a whole MByte,
|} with a 40MByte drive. Eventually I ran twelve dumb terminals off it,
|} and it worked, but that was 35 years ago. But then I go back to the
|} time when dropping your deck of punch cards was tantamonnt to a "short
|} sharp shock" jail sentence.
|
| When I was in Grade 10, I did a "work experience" thing (only
|a week or two). One of the places, I "worked" at was ComputerLand.
|At that time, the IBM PC was brand new. One of my tasks was to
|unbox IBM PCs and install floppy drives. For those that have never
|seen an original IBM PC, or forgotten the details of them, there
|were two five-pin DIN plugs on the back. One was for the keyboard
|(not something you wanted to drop on your toes -- it was heavy)
|and the other was for connecting to an ordinary portable audio
|cassette recorder (not exactly the most reliable storage medium).
|Yes, IBM actually put out a business computer with the idea that
|people would store data on audio cassettes. It was a rather absurd
|idea. Even most people using the Apple ][+ (at home or work),
|which was four years old at the time, used floppy drives.
I had a Datasette for C64 for backups and such. Sometimes it was
fun to listen to the sounds. (But only sometimes.) I do not
remember any problems beside speed! But that was 36 years ago,
and i can prowdly state that my floppies for the 1541 worked on
both sides, which saved a lot of real hard money. Of course these
where good German tapes from BASF; not too far in the south of
where i life, and when you have to deal with the stink, you wanna
get something out of it. (Though Merck is right in town and stank
very very much.)
|}-- End of excerpt from Steve Blinkhorn
--End of <201808241936.w7OJa3Oa008396%server.cornerstoneservice.ca@localhost>
--steffen
|
|Der Kragenbaer, The moon bear,
|der holt sich munter he cheerfully and one by one
|einen nach dem anderen runter wa.ks himself off
|(By Robert Gernhardt)
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