PDA

View Full Version : Sasha late one hour today


diesel911
2007-01-27, 07:29 PM
peace peace peace

Max
2007-01-27, 08:14 PM
peace peace peace

Ukrainian minutes must be same as Russian minutes. 60 of them does not make a hour :D

Richard
2007-01-27, 08:16 PM
Da!

But!

Sasha finishes when she wants! Not ond scheduled time! claphands

diesel911
2007-01-27, 09:01 PM
Server is under restart at this moment . May take 10 mins more .. sorry for that ..

Richard
2007-01-27, 09:04 PM
Server is under restart at this moment . May take 10 mins more .. sorry for that ..

Yes, understand, had a 486 computer also once ;)

:D

Max
2007-01-27, 10:59 PM
And as usual Sasha kindly stayed way past her scheduled end time for the benefit of the few of us that were there. littleange claphands :fire

diesel911
2007-01-27, 11:06 PM
Yes, understand, had a 486 computer also once ;)

:D

Don't get me mad lol

BFofAKournikova
2007-01-28, 09:16 AM
Yes, understand, had a 486 computer also once ;)

:D


lol Rich.....I actually had a 386 once :p

diesel911
2007-01-28, 01:54 PM
lol Rich.....I actually had a 386 once :p

I started from Mac then 286 .. Was abit late lol... I remember my mum bought 386DX. Was neat machine lol.

Joe.
2007-01-28, 02:30 PM
I started from 386 .. lol... present day I am very highTech in my small town I used 133 Mhz. Ram 512.05 mb. under extra poor XP hammersmas

I very proud in my comp too much lol http://i147.photobucket.com/albums/r282/E-4Smile/biggrin9.gif

Max
2007-01-28, 02:46 PM
You are all new to computing lol

My first computer was 8 bit and predated PCs, Bill Gates, MSDOS and even CP/M! :D

By the time I bought my first PC I had already been through several Dragons(TSR80s in USA), Sinclair Spectrums, Atari STs, BBC Micros and Commodore 64s and Amigas. ;)

When I first read e-mail on the Internet it was before html and needed the use of UNIX commands. I shudder thinking of the speed it worked at. shootself
But worse memories were the cost of using Compuserve from the UK! :eek:

Long live old farts. :)

Malkav
2007-01-28, 05:38 PM
Max, Compuserve, I remember, it had great forums for techies I seem to recall... until it got AOL'd to heck..

if we're getting nostalgic, what about the voyage from 14.4, thru 28.8, 33.6 and 56.. (think I skipped the 9.6...)

OMG too long ago... Sir Clive has a lot to answer for.. RSI or one thing (XZ80/81) ;)

M.

Max
2007-01-28, 06:42 PM
if we're getting nostalgic, what about the voyage from 14.4, thru 28.8, 33.6 and 56.. (think I skipped the 9.6...)





Or even 1200/75 hammersmas

BFofAKournikova
2007-01-28, 07:10 PM
You are all new to computing lol

My first computer was 8 bit and predated PCs, Bill Gates, MSDOS and even CP/M! :D

By the time I bought my first PC I had already been through several Dragons(TSR80s in USA), Sinclair Spectrums, Atari STs, BBC Micros and Commodore 64s and Amigas. ;)

When I first read e-mail on the Internet it was before html and needed the use of UNIX commands. I shudder thinking of the speed it worked at. shootself
But worse memories were the cost of using Compuserve from the UK! :eek:

Long live old farts. :)

actually my best friend growing up had the Commodore 64....he still has it to this day (and yes it still works).
I remember having TSR80s in school. workingcom

Geode
2007-01-29, 01:14 PM
Max, Compuserve, I remember, it had great forums for techies I seem to recall... until it got AOL'd to heck..

if we're getting nostalgic, what about the voyage from 14.4, thru 28.8, 33.6 and 56.. (think I skipped the 9.6...)

OMG too long ago... Sir Clive has a lot to answer for.. RSI or one thing (XZ80/81) ;)

M.

When I started in computers, there were no personal computers. I learned on a Sperry teletype terminal that used paper tape at 150 baud.

True personal computers started Jan 1975 with a kit from a company in Arizona, USA called MITS an offshoot of Sandia National Labs. The kit called the Altair 8800 was $360 US and came with 100 words of memory. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altair_8800

I bought my first personal computer in Sept 1975, an IMSAI 8800, which included a keyboard, monitor and a 5-1/4 inch floppy drive. It was the first real usable PC. http://www.pc-history.org/imsai.htm

TevF
2007-01-29, 06:37 PM
Or even 1200/75 hammersmas

I had one of them modems so I don't need to go through my history of computer use. Do I?

Malkav
2007-01-29, 08:03 PM
No, you can if you want but I concede, my computing history just doesn't go back far enough...

Not sure what the prize is, but one of you chaps gets it.. Congrats ;)

well back to the show, Sasha is ON!!!

Max
2007-01-29, 09:57 PM
I had one of them modems so I don't need to go through my history of computer use. Do I?


Glad to learn that I am not the only old Prestel/Micronet 800 user here ;)