If It Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It: Ancient Computers In Use Today
#1
Posted 19 February 2012 - 06:01 PM
#2
Posted 19 February 2012 - 08:14 PM
#4
Posted 19 February 2012 - 08:40 PM
#5
Posted 19 February 2012 - 08:41 PM
Lenovo W520 CTO Intel i7-2620m, 8GB Patriot ram @ 1333Mhz, Nvidia Quadro 1000m with 2GB GDRR3, Plextor M3 256GB SSD, 1080P wide color display, Windows 8 Pro
Media Center: Intel Core i5 760 @ 3.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3, Corsair GS600PSU, EVGA Geforce 550ti, EVGA P55 SLI, 3x 1TB raid 5, 1x 1TB boot drive, Windows 8 Pro, Win TV 950(USB), Pioneer BR.
Server: AMD Phenom X4 945 @ 3.0Ghz, MSI 790FX-GD70, 16gb ddr3 RAM @ 1333mhz, 2TB Seagate HDD, 64GB Patriot SSD, Asus Silent Gefore 210
The Green machine: AMD Sempron 145EE Unlocked and OC'd to 4.1Ghz, Gigabyte GD970A-DS3, 8GB ram @ 1600mhz, Nvidia 550Ti, Thermaltake BlueOrb, Antec EW385
Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Paranoid Android 4.2 Rom http://www.speedtest...d/315465831.png
#6
Posted 19 February 2012 - 08:54 PM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#7
Posted 19 February 2012 - 10:37 PM
In 1986, I upgraded to the 128K CoCo3 and monitor. Wow... having a computer monitor back then was so cool... no longer having to hookup my computer to a tv set!! I also graduated from a cassette drive to a floppy drive.
#8
Posted 20 February 2012 - 01:53 AM
Besides, a good number of small businesses around the entire country still keep records by pen on paper. If they didn't the forms wouldn't still be in the office supply catalogs.
#9
Posted 20 February 2012 - 02:21 AM
PercivalMerriwether, on 19 February 2012 - 08:14 PM, said:
Where did you visit? One place? Two? Did you go to Dallas, Fort Worth, or Austin? Houston? You've made a judgment as simple-minded as those you have chosen to belittle and make fun of.
#10
Posted 20 February 2012 - 02:54 AM
#11
Posted 20 February 2012 - 04:48 AM
Some people just don't understand when something is broken.
#12
Posted 20 February 2012 - 05:06 AM
#13
Posted 20 February 2012 - 05:58 AM
#14
Posted 20 February 2012 - 05:59 AM
#15
Posted 20 February 2012 - 06:34 AM
VanceVEP72, on 19 February 2012 - 10:37 PM, said:
In 1986, I upgraded to the 128K CoCo3 and monitor. Wow... having a computer monitor back then was so cool... no longer having to hookup my computer to a tv set!! I also graduated from a cassette drive to a floppy drive.
Color! You were lucky. I remember learning BASIC and Fortran on a black and white TRS-80 in high school.
I thought I could control the world!
#17
Posted 20 February 2012 - 07:12 AM
I've often felt that certain applications are still better handled using cards through batch applications (though the example in this article ISN'T one of them).
I controlled 3 plants of over 1,000 people using a punch card application on an early computer (System/3 M10). Did Material Requirements Planning, Expediting, and a bunch of other stuff - and the computer was finished with its work by 10AM.
#18
Posted 20 February 2012 - 07:17 AM
#19
Posted 20 February 2012 - 07:23 AM
#20
Posted 20 February 2012 - 07:47 AM
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