When I was your age, we had eight inch floppies.
The thing is, I remember eight inch floppy disks. One of the first real jobs that I had was a part time job at a white shoe law firm, and the then state-of-the-art IBM computer that I used had two eight inch drives - and no hard drive. The word processing program lived on one floppy and that data lived on the other.
The first computer I owned was a second generation Macintosh - not the one so famously introduced in 1984, but the Fat Mac that arrived soon thereafter. It also had two floppy drives. A hard drive was available as an accessory - but I was a graduate student and a hard drive was an unthinkable luxury. That Fat Mac, with its printer, cost about $2500 - in the mid 1980s. In today's dollars, that's about $4900. For $4900 today, you can get a whole lot more computer power than I had in 1985, with enough left over for a cup of coffee.
Where am I going with this? If my spam correspondent was my current age in 1985, he's 69 now. You think he even has a floppy?
I'm pretty sure he is floppy.....
ReplyDeletehe he
ReplyDeletei bet there's a LOT MORE that's floppy now.
Har! I was just remembering Word Perfect the other day. Some things do improve over time and computers fall into that category. I remember when the internet was simply strings of commands - no images to speak of. I couldn't understand the allure.
ReplyDeleteWhat PM said.
ReplyDeleteHeh.
I remember those disks, too.
In 1986, my mother bought me my first computer -- a Macintosh. As I recall, it had a capacity of 586 KB.
Is that even possible?
Ha ha ha! I remember my first computer, it was a Comodore 64/128 and if you wanted to double space something for example, you had to enter a special code. You had to enter a code to do anything in the word processing program. I have to say though, my favorite thing about it was the Legend of Zelda video game - which was all text, no graphics. That game rocked.
ReplyDeleteOh my...
ReplyDelete:)
I HOPE 69 year olds still get un-floppy, because at this rate the next time we have energy to, um, you know, we'll be around that age.
ReplyDeleteheh. i still have a couple of those old floppies, although the equipment to use them has been gone for a long time.
ReplyDeletewhen i was in college in the latter part of the '70's, it was possible to take a computer class -- but the computers were industrial-freezer sized, and used huge reels of magnetic tape. my cool young professor, with the recently minted Ph.D., had his thesis on punch cards. my kids think i make these stories up.
fresh hell -- i still like wordperfect! i have a grudge against word because of all those years when it had the animated paper-clip guy, and i hate it now because it wants to make choices for you, but am working past that.
ReplyDeletethe really ancient word-processing program i remember was wordstar. what a pita.
Floppy indeed!
ReplyDeleteI wrote my dissertation on those floppy disks. Hard to imagine now.
I have the same MAC, sitting upstairs in the attic because having paid that crazy price for it back in the mid-80's, I just can't throw it away. What's amazing (and a little sad) is that it still powers on with it's little "happy mac" face when plugged in, even though nothing runs on it.
ReplyDeleteHa! Maybe you should've written back to inquire. It might be the only correspondence the poor guy has.
ReplyDeletehope you are feeling better by now.
Am I crazy? If we just had floppies and no applications and no internet I swear I would have written two books by now.
ReplyDeleteWell, maybe.
I miss those things.
Wow...that's a trip.
ReplyDeleteAnd the "floppies" reminds me of a typo I saw on the Walgreens sign not too long ago:
Viagara Spray Starch
4.99
i forgot all about the floppy disks!
ReplyDeletenow i feel a little nostalgia....
That's a lot more amusing than most of the spam I get - apparently people want to know "Why you happy with small sausage penis?"
ReplyDeleteI only remember 5-and-something-inch floppies. But I've found that guys can't be trusted to accurately report size.
ReplyDeleteYou didn't actually open the spam, did you?
I'm positive it's a floppy.
ReplyDelete