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#1
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... OK, so I'm a little behind the times with some goodies. One of my clients got rid of all its PCs with floppy drives with floppy drives, which created a minor problem for me because for years I've been delivering the stuff I write for it on floppies and sometimes via email. The client's preferred medium was a floppy. Not that I am a fan of floppies. I ain't. They're too fragile for my taste. CDs were sometimes problematical, too. Anyway, I know they've been out for a while, but I never bought one. I did last week...a half a gig PNY USB "flashdrive" card. All the client's new machines have USB 2.0 ports, and damn if these little keychain "hard drives" aren't fast. Cheap, too. A $10 rebate from PNY made my final cost about a double sawbuck. Great for swapping files among the computers at home and the office, too. FAST. Did I mention...FAST? Yep, and cheap as you said. I have been using a 1 gig ScanDisk CruzerMini for some time now. A very useful tool when indeed. |
#2
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Harry Krause wrote:
I actually bought the cheapest one I found. And that can be called the Harry Krause method. IMO, you are a bit too quick in dismissing quality and best value, but then, you have been doing that in all things... -- Skipper |
#3
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. Yup.... I recall our first in 82. Sprang for the extra floppy; also sprang for additional memory (512K), a color monitor (extra $300, iirc) so my little girl might be more interested. All that and a wide-carriage d/m printer, and the tab topped out just under $5K. A couple of years later, a guy I was building houses with bought an XT ........ with a built-in hard drive of -- ready? -- 5 megabytes!!!! Brave New World!!! Overwhelming technology run rampant!!! |
#4
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On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 08:56:57 -0500, Harry Krause wrote:
*JimH* wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message Yep, and cheap as you said. I have been using a 1 gig ScanDisk CruzerMini for some time now. A very useful tool when indeed. I actually bought the cheapest one I found at BestBuy. It was $30 for a half a gig and when I got to checkout, the clerk gave me a $10 rebate receipt. Floppies were useful when you could boot a computer off them if your HD failed. Nowadays, it takes a CD to boot up a ocmputer. I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. (Ever thought of snipping your posts, guys??) I gotcha on the "old-geezer-geek contest": My first computer had a 241K drive: 8 inch! You could start your car whith the 120VAC drive motor. Then again: from turning on the "on-switch" to editing a document (in WordStar) was 20 seconds. Lloyd |
#5
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![]() "John Gaquin" wrote in message ... "Harry Krause" wrote in message I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. Yup.... I recall our first in 82. Sprang for the extra floppy; also sprang for additional memory (512K), a color monitor (extra $300, iirc) so my little girl might be more interested. All that and a wide-carriage d/m printer, and the tab topped out just under $5K. A couple of years later, a guy I was building houses with bought an XT ........ with a built-in hard drive of -- ready? -- 5 megabytes!!!! Brave New World!!! Overwhelming technology run rampant!!! First system I bought for the company I worked for at the time (we designed disk subsystems for the DEC and Data General market). $4400. 512k memory, could not get the full 640K in the early 80's. 8" floppy. Hard drive was separate from the controller card. My boss at the time went to Quantum and designed the first fully integrated disk drive. The "Hard Card". Internal disk controller to the drive. Latest system was an on sale Compaq with 80GB drive, 256mb memory, memory card reader built in and 8 USB ports, 2.5ghz. $450. No monitor. |
#6
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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... John Gaquin wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. Yup.... I recall our first in 82. Sprang for the extra floppy; also sprang for additional memory (512K), a color monitor (extra $300, iirc) so my little girl might be more interested. All that and a wide-carriage d/m printer, and the tab topped out just under $5K. A couple of years later, a guy I was building houses with bought an XT ........ with a built-in hard drive of -- ready? -- 5 megabytes!!!! Brave New World!!! Overwhelming technology run rampant!!! My next PC was an 8086-based unit from "Eagle," and it had a 10-meg hard drive. Wow! And how about memory and this quote: "640k ought to be enough for anyone" - Bill Gates, 1981 |
#7
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Harry Krause wrote:
I would have bought a Bayliner, like the one you once claimed to own but, of course, never did. That's quite a statement, Krause. Never thought I'd see those words emanating from your keyboard. But then, it would have given you a way to accept The Challenge, of course, in your much younger days. -- Skipper |
#8
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Harry Krause wrote:
John Gaquin wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. Yup.... I recall our first in 82. Sprang for the extra floppy; also sprang for additional memory (512K), a color monitor (extra $300, iirc) so my little girl might be more interested. All that and a wide-carriage d/m printer, and the tab topped out just under $5K. A couple of years later, a guy I was building houses with bought an XT ........ with a built-in hard drive of -- ready? -- 5 megabytes!!!! Brave New World!!! Overwhelming technology run rampant!!! My next PC was an 8086-based unit from "Eagle," and it had a 10-meg hard drive. Wow! My first home computer was an 8086 IBM that work sold off as surplus. It didn't even have a harddrive. |
#9
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![]() "Don White" wrote in message ... Harry Krause wrote: John Gaquin wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. Yup.... I recall our first in 82. Sprang for the extra floppy; also sprang for additional memory (512K), a color monitor (extra $300, iirc) so my little girl might be more interested. All that and a wide-carriage d/m printer, and the tab topped out just under $5K. A couple of years later, a guy I was building houses with bought an XT ........ with a built-in hard drive of -- ready? -- 5 megabytes!!!! Brave New World!!! Overwhelming technology run rampant!!! My next PC was an 8086-based unit from "Eagle," and it had a 10-meg hard drive. Wow! My first home computer was an 8086 IBM that work sold off as surplus. It didn't even have a harddrive. How about this *handy* device from 1973........the original cell phone: Name: Motorola Dyna-Tac Size: 9 x 5 x 1.75 inches Weight: 2.5 pounds Display: None Number of Circuit Boards: 30 Talk time: 35 minutes Recharge Time: 10 hours Features: Talk, listen, dial http://www.3g.co.uk/PR/April2003/Brick.jpg |
#10
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![]() "Bill McKee" wrote in message ink.net... "John Gaquin" wrote in message ... "Harry Krause" wrote in message I remember when I bought my first IBM PC, in 83 or 84. It came with one floppy drive, and a second floppy was $300. Sheesh. No hard drive in that first unit, but you could get a TAPE drive. Yup.... I recall our first in 82. Sprang for the extra floppy; also sprang for additional memory (512K), a color monitor (extra $300, iirc) so my little girl might be more interested. All that and a wide-carriage d/m printer, and the tab topped out just under $5K. A couple of years later, a guy I was building houses with bought an XT ........ with a built-in hard drive of -- ready? -- 5 megabytes!!!! Brave New World!!! Overwhelming technology run rampant!!! First system I bought for the company I worked for at the time (we designed disk subsystems for the DEC and Data General market). $4400. 512k memory, could not get the full 640K in the early 80's. 8" floppy. Hard drive was separate from the controller card. My boss at the time went to Quantum and designed the first fully integrated disk drive. The "Hard Card". Internal disk controller to the drive. Latest system was an on sale Compaq with 80GB drive, 256mb memory, memory card reader built in and 8 USB ports, 2.5ghz. $450. No monitor. I worked on Mainframes for NCR Corp while going through university. 20k of memory and $200k with tape drives and random mag card readers, with punch card / tape I/O and an all uppercase printer. When I went to work for a company making an IBM Mainframe clone 303x model 8 meg of memory was enormous. |
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