MikeKardec
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,157
- Location
- Los Angeles
I get the same reaction when I explain to the kids I work with that I was born into a world of manual typewriters, manual telephones, vacuum tube electronics, Brownie cameras, and refrigerators you had to defrost. So give me a damn break when I don't understand how to take a picture with your iphone.
Great photo. It still amazes me how quickly (from the viewpoint of consumers) the "IT Age" arrived. Thinking back on it, it seems like personal computers, cell phones and the internet tumbled upon us in a great rush and the world changed almost over night. I know it didn't happen quite that quickly. But in hindsight it seems like it did. I'm not sure my teenaged daughter completely believes me when I tell her that, when I first started at university, term-papers and reports were still done on a typewriter. Every once in a while I try to imagine what technology will be like 60 years from now.
I get the same reaction when I explain to the kids I work with that I was born into a world of manual typewriters, manual telephones, vacuum tube electronics, Brownie cameras, and refrigerators you had to defrost. So give me a damn break when I don't understand how to take a picture with your iphone.
Uploading, literally, the first five megabyte hard disk, 1956.
I remember voting for the Baseball All-Star teams in 1970, and it was a very big deal that year -- the balloting was COMPUTERIZED. You'd pick up a punch-card ballot at your favorite store selling Gillette products, poke out the hole next to the players you liked, and drop the postpaid cards into any mailbox where they'd be counted by COMPUTER.
I also remember thinking how dumb the whole COMPUTER thing was, because the way the cards were set up made stuffing the ballot incredibly easy. A bunch of us got handfuls of ballots from the drug store and sat around the table punching out votes for Red Sox players. You could take a stack of a dozen cards at a time and line them up and using a sharp pencil poke out all the holes next to Rico Petrocelli's name all at once.
I'm pretty sure a few election wardens in Florida started out that way.
I remember that too - both the cards and the multiple voting (we did that as kids too). In the end, it's a popularity contest, so maybe the stuffing the ballot box thing still reflects the most popular or the players with the most passionate fans. Not such a big deal for an All-Star game; definitely a big deal for a Presidential election.
Funny, she doesn't look wicked....Margaret Hamilton standing next to listings of the actual Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) source code...
When I first started out in computer programming in 1970 it was all punched cards and green bar paper. We still had some wired board equipment - sorters, 407 accounting machines, etc. Mainframe memory was under 256 Kb. State of the art disk drives were IBM 2314's at 29 Mb per removable disk pack and the whole 8-pack unit came to a whopping 233 Mb. I still remember the first time we had a whole gigabye of disk storage (IBM 3330 drives) and it filled up a room the size of a large auditorium. Computer rooms took up whole building floors - or more likely basements.
Today I have 6 terrabytes of disk storage sitting behind one of my monitors here at home in less than 1 cubic foot of space. My cell phone has more actual computing power than the largest mainframe I ever worked on as little as 10 years ago.
What do most people do with all that raw power? Answer - Facebook.