Per Jessen wrote:
Michael Nelson wrote:
Heh... memories.
Before the www and Linux was around, I had been running FidoNet BBS systems on DOS and OS/2. I got laid off from my job and decided I wanted to learn something completely new (to me), so I decided to install Unix. A friend had a set of Esix floppies... 54 1.44MB floppies that made up a basic install of Everex's brand of AT&T SystemVR4 Unix.
I installed it. Aside from the fact that it took 18 hours to do from floppies (and I had to do it three times because of random floppy read errors), when it was finished and I logged in, all I saw was "$". X? GUI? You've gotta be kidding, this was a text mode only install.
FWIW you got the easy end of the stick - you should have started with me on IBM, NCR and Burroughs mainframes in 1984. X? GUI? Mouse? Nah, everything was 80x25. We moved up to 80x32 a couple of years later. Now that was progress! (a typical airline reservation system today will still support the IBM 4505 terminal (the manuals went out of print in 1974) which does only 45x15).
The oldest "computer" I worked on didn't even have a display. It was a special purpose machine, made by Teleregister and installed at the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1952. It used vacuum tubes, relays and a memory drum. It was older than me! -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org