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Computing terms not heard any more

Dig deep into those memory banks...

         

Essex_boy

1:19 pm on Dec 13, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Micro computer- when talking about a home computer, I used to find his one very annoying for some reason.

HarryM

10:38 am on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Wang

That really is a blast from the past. I used to work for them in the City of London. There was an advert at the time - "Go Well with Shell". It didn't take long before one of our customers came up with "Go Bang with Wang".

incywincy

11:18 am on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Filling in Data Processing sheets for the punch typists and waiting 2 days before your program crashed due to an input error whereby you correct it and wait another 2 days to see if the correction worked.

Oric

GOTO

Assembler

Mag Tapes

Paper Tapes, Scissors and Sellotape

Debbie_King

11:45 am on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



In reply to TrillianJedi who mentioned the punch cards, what about the word "chad"?

This referred to the bit of card that was removed to create the hole - they used to fall into a bin and were great for chucking around at football matches :-)

lawman

12:10 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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>>what about the word "chad"?

Welcome to Webmaster World, Debbie. Hope you like us and will stay around (especially Foo).

lawman's observation:

Your mention of the word "chad" was the third time it appeared on this very page. :)

dcheney

1:02 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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WordStar (control "kill the dog")
WordPerfect (f6)
vi (:q!)

Abort, Retry, Fail?

Milamber

1:40 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Windows 3.1 ;)

Webwork

2:09 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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were great for chucking around at football matches

Now that brings back memories.

Omigosh! There is such a thing as a fond memory relating to computers.

benevolent001

2:14 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Just wondering
How many of you use floppy or forgot it?

TheDoctor

2:44 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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I use the word floppy, when I mention the beasts at all. What other word would you use?

And, as for chad: it was great for throwing around. It became singular after the 2000 US presidential election. (As I noted above). We only have chads in the twenty-first century.

Timotheos

4:33 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Man you guys are taking me back.

Someone mentioned dot matrix printers which made me think of the little thermal printer I had for my Apple IIe. It sure was quiet but don't leave your print out near a heating vent.

jim_w

4:43 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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treeline
>L-I-M Standard

EMS - Expanded Memory Specification (EMS 4.0 or LIM 4.0 or LIM-EMS)
EEMS - Extended Expanded Memory Specification

HarryM
>>LQ800
I had an FX80 until 3 years ago. Was rebuilt by Epson due to extended warranty I had on it, so it lasted a really long time. Paid $384 for it in '85.

DIP - dual inline package memory chips (64Kx1 or 256Kx1- 1 bit wide. takes 8 x 256kx1 to equal 256k. I had 2 meg in 2 boards of the 64kx1 till it started over heating)

Desktop Plotters
Mouse Systems Mouse - Optical Mouse with metal mouse pad
Kola Pads
Stringy Floppies
Pong
Sprites?
High Speed Impact Drum Printers
PDP-11
Univac®
Sperry Rand
ENIAC
vacuum tube computers

lorax

5:18 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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>> DIP

OMG I'd forgotten about alot of those quirks in PCdom. Dip Switches were a particular PITA because half the time I didn't have benefit of the manual.

jim_w

5:34 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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lorax

On top of the, one of the TaiBM EMS memory boards I had, the drivers said when loading…
‘Please working – wait’

So even having the book didn't help much. It wasn't much better than the s/w messages ;-))

TheVisitor

5:57 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



All your talk reminded me of Monty Python's 'Four Yorkshiremen' sketch, which I quoted earlier.

After Mivox suggested a correction, I went looking for the text of the sketch out of curiosity, only to find this:

[c2.com...]

What a small world!

Essex_boy

7:14 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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LQ800 - Dam fine printers I used to sell them back in '88 from a computer shop in Cambridge.

Sprites - Software and hardware version.

I Colchester castle theres an Apple IIe on show as a museum piece, now I know im getting old.

jim_w

7:37 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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GENIE - General Electric Network and Information Exchange

Compuserve's Competitor.

olwen

7:58 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Filling in Data Processing sheets for the punch typists and waiting 2 days before your program crashed due to an input error whereby you correct it and wait another 2 days to see if the correction worked.

I stopped work at one stage because I hadn't had a compile or test done for a week.

g1smd

9:05 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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>> >> Wang

>> That really is a blast from the past. I used to work for them in the City of London. There was an advert at the time - "Go Well with Shell". It didn't take long before one of our customers came up with "Go Bang with Wang". <<

Hmm, a decade ago, I remember a computer magazine reminiscing about Wang. They recalled how, yet another decade earlier, Wang had attended a major computer exhibition and had huge banners everywhere that said:

"Wang Cares"

Essex_boy

9:49 pm on Dec 15, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Very funny

john_k

5:45 am on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Teletype and Timeshare

My first hands on computer use was on a teletype (no monitor, everything on paper) terminal in the hallway of our highschool. It was hooked to a University timesharing computer located 45 miles from our town.

And I don't know if there was a specific term for this other than "computer art," but in the days of fixed-font computer printouts and before graphical monitors were common-place, people used to print fairly elaborate pictures using nothing but standard ASCII characters.

And I always loved it when Batman would search for someone by shoving an entire Gotham City phone book into a slot on the Bat Computer :)

VisiCalc

Harvard Graphics

PFS:Write

Beta testing

Commodore

HeathKit

"why use more than two digits for the year?" - oh wait, people still say that.

Essex_boy

10:56 am on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Timeshare? Isnt that a holiday thingy?

ska_demon

11:36 am on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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My zx81 had a 16k RAM Pack!

Ska

Debbie_King

11:45 am on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



How about "sprockets" ?

As in having to line up the sprocket holes along the edges of the music-ruled printer paper with the sprockets in the printer? One misaligned sprocket and that was your print job b**gered :-)

EBear

12:17 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Some from my life:

WIMP

Integrated Packages

IV (as in video)

Videodisc
CED (Capacitance Electronic Disc)

PLATO

HarryM

1:39 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Chuckie Egg

TheDoctor

2:50 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Chuckie egg?

HarryM

5:42 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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OK, it's not exactly a computer term, and I may have mispelled it, but it was probably the most popular early PC game. Still available if you run a virtual BBC (Acorn) on a modern PC.

john_k

6:08 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Timeshare? Isnt that a holiday thingy?

But first it was a computer term. Same idea as virtual multi-tasking. The CPU split cycles among the connected terminals.

bcolflesh

7:47 pm on Dec 17, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Chuckie Egg will never die:

[google.com...]

oldskool79

5:35 am on Dec 18, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I remember running "MEMMAKER" trying to get DOS games to run.
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