28 February 2008

Ah, the good old days

The other day, as I was aggressively deleting spam to my office email account, one made me laugh out loud. The subject referred to increasing the size of my, ahem, well, something that I don't have. But the text inside is what got me:
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?

18 comments:

  1. I'm pretty sure he is floppy.....

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  2. he he

    i bet there's a LOT MORE that's floppy now.

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  3. Anonymous2:25 PM

    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.

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  4. What PM said.

    Heh.

    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?

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  5. 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.

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  6. Anonymous3:28 PM

    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.

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  7. heh. i still have a couple of those old floppies, although the equipment to use them has been gone for a long time.

    when 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.

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  8. 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.

    the really ancient word-processing program i remember was wordstar. what a pita.

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  9. Floppy indeed!

    I wrote my dissertation on those floppy disks. Hard to imagine now.

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  10. 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.

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  11. Ha! Maybe you should've written back to inquire. It might be the only correspondence the poor guy has.
    hope you are feeling better by now.

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  12. Anonymous11:43 PM

    Am I crazy? If we just had floppies and no applications and no internet I swear I would have written two books by now.

    Well, maybe.

    I miss those things.

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  13. Wow...that's a trip.

    And the "floppies" reminds me of a typo I saw on the Walgreens sign not too long ago:

    Viagara Spray Starch
    4.99

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  14. i forgot all about the floppy disks!

    now i feel a little nostalgia....

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  15. 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?"

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  16. I only remember 5-and-something-inch floppies. But I've found that guys can't be trusted to accurately report size.

    You didn't actually open the spam, did you?

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  17. I'm positive it's a floppy.

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