I'm so old I remember when the internet didn't have commercials.
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I'm so old I remember when the internet didn't have commercials.
@kibcol1049
Can I be the 94th person to say I remember the Internet without the World Wide Web -
@kibcol1049
Can I be the 94th person to say I remember the Internet without the World Wide Web@robpumphrey @kibcol1049 Me too. And with every passing day, I think I preferred it a little more...
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I'm so old I remember when the internet didn't have commercials.
@kibcol1049 Me too! I go back to the days of Usenet.
Sometimes I wonder if we could somehow use Usenet to organize against the oligarchy. It was designed to resist atomic attack, after all...
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@kibcol1049 Me too! I go back to the days of Usenet.
Sometimes I wonder if we could somehow use Usenet to organize against the oligarchy. It was designed to resist atomic attack, after all...
@Quasit @kibcol1049 just because something can survive nuclear war doesn't mean it can survive unmoderated spam, porn and nazis.
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@Quasit @kibcol1049 just because something can survive nuclear war doesn't mean it can survive unmoderated spam, porn and nazis.
True, but that might actually help. Protective camouflage. With all that crap out there, how will they find cunningly-disguised encrypted communications?
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True, but that might actually help. Protective camouflage. With all that crap out there, how will they find cunningly-disguised encrypted communications?
@Quasit @kibcol1049 "I'm not looking at porn, it's this quarter's KPI results hidden using steganography"
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@tantramar @NormanDunbar @kibcol1049
I'll just leave this here ...
https://sattlers.org/mickey/culture/humor/items/Geekish/montyPythonDeadServers.html@TheLancashireman @tantramar @NormanDunbar @kibcol1049
Ooh, yeah. I remember typing
nntp kickover and over again until Demon's news server delivered messages. For a long time, it didn't keep up with the huge influx of new customers. (They eventually fixed it.) -
@kelvin0mql @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz
I wouldn't be surprised if banks still used punchcards for their COBOL
I'm sure they don't. Mainframes are really up-to-date these days:
https://www.ibm.com/products/z17
And they offer at least 50 years of backwards-compatibility.
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I'm so old I remember when the internet didn't have commercials.
@kibcol1049 I remember accessing the Internet (it was capitalized, like the name of a place) using Netscape and Altavista search.
Sigh! Good times!
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I'm so old I remember when the internet didn't have commercials.
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@doctorwhom @kibcol1049 It was nice to watch Olympic hockey without those ads.
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@kibcol1049 I remember accessing the Internet (it was capitalized, like the name of a place) using Netscape and Altavista search.
Sigh! Good times!
@Karen5Lund @kibcol1049 I remember Veronica and Jughead.
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@nlarson830 @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz
I signed up for a community college sort of computer programming class, 'cuz I was certain computers would be a huge part of my career (correct).Looked at the shopping list for the syllabus of the COBOL class, & saw I needed to buy a box of punch cards.
Immediately dropped the class. I would've been cool with learning COBOL, but if they were still doing punchcards when I already had an XT with dual floppy drives, they were too backward.
@kelvin0mql @nlarson830 @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz I know what you mean! As a kid in school though, punch cards helped me understand how data is stored on other media. I think they could still be a good teaching resource.
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@kibcol1049 I remember accessing the Internet (it was capitalized, like the name of a place) using Netscape and Altavista search.
Sigh! Good times!
@Karen5Lund @kibcol1049 Mosaic as the browser
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@TheLancashireman @tantramar @NormanDunbar @kibcol1049
Ooh, yeah. I remember typing
nntp kickover and over again until Demon's news server delivered messages. For a long time, it didn't keep up with the huge influx of new customers. (They eventually fixed it.)@CppGuy@infosec.space @TheLancashireman@hostux.social @tantramar@zeroes.ca @NormanDunbar@mastodon.scot @kibcol1049@mstdn.social Was that in the KA9Q days?
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@kelvin0mql @nlarson830 @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz I know what you mean! As a kid in school though, punch cards helped me understand how data is stored on other media. I think they could still be a good teaching resource.
@revivalrecords @kelvin0mql @nlarson830 @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz before punch cards --> I remember my local newspaper used to use spools of paper ribbon with holes punched in them. the original tape so to speak. lol
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@CppGuy@infosec.space @TheLancashireman@hostux.social @tantramar@zeroes.ca @NormanDunbar@mastodon.scot @kibcol1049@mstdn.social Was that in the KA9Q days?
@nowster @CppGuy @tantramar @NormanDunbar @kibcol1049
Probably - the name rings a bell. The company I worked for used NT at first but switched to Linux shortly afterwards. Both of them have tcp/ip networking built in.
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@revivalrecords @kelvin0mql @nlarson830 @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz before punch cards --> I remember my local newspaper used to use spools of paper ribbon with holes punched in them. the original tape so to speak. lol
@mistergibson @revivalrecords @nlarson830 @kibcol1049 @harrymuzz
Yah, imagine my dismay, just a few years later, when I discovered that the Linotype 202 (the manual called it "Paul") needed to read a paper tape to start up.
Yeah, the printing/publishing biz tended to be technology backward in places.
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@kibcol1049
I am so old I used gopher and bang paths@salyavin
Using Telnet to log into an online CD store in the US to get them shipped to The Netherlands. I think I got a credit card especially for that cause...
@kibcol1049 -
@harrymuzz At my first job, the computer room temperature was controlled with double door air lock to enter. The computer was huge with punch card operators typing and huge floor to ceiling reel to reel tapes. The print outs were on large sheets of paper and took several runs for all the errors to be corrected. With programmers, inputters and clerks, there were about 8 staff. Nowadays a kid of 8 or 9 could do it all and more on a smartphone and 30 times quicker! Hard to believe but true.
@kibcol1049 @harrymuzz and if you went into the computer room (normally only to show a visitor round and impress them) you had to put a drawing pin into a cork board at the door, one for each person. So that in the event of a fire and the room being flooded with halon gas, they would know that there were unconscious people inside needing rescued quickly.