On Fri November 10 2006 11:51, Per Jessen wrote:
Carlos E. R. wrote:
But I remember buying the old pcmagazine and typing rows of hexadecimal as "data" lines for a basic program that would then create a tiny .com program like "ted.com".
Back in highschool we had a 16bit minicomputer with a grand 32K of core-memory. Boot-strapping it meant entering instructions directly on to the databus using 16 toggle-switches on the frontpanel. Now that's real programming :-)
/Per Jessen, Zürich Now your talking about the days when programmers were programmers. I remember some of my first systems which were PDP5, 7 or 8's (8 bit systems) with 16K core and 256K head per track disk. we controller complet chemical plants, steel mills and electric plants. -- Russ
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