Subject | Re: spreadsheet ergonomics |
From | Marek Novotny |
Date | 04/13/2017 00:23 (04/12/2017 17:23) |
Message-ID | <Do2dnW6eHJx8NXPFnZ2dnUU7-R_NnZ2d@giganews.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | comp.os.linux.advocacy |
Follows | Silver-Tongued Heel |
Followups | Steve Carroll (6m) Snit (15m) Chris Ahlstrom (11h & 19m) > Marek Novotny |
Silver-Tongued HeelYou could learn to program in basic back then. On the Commodore 64 basic was the command line.
On 2017-04-12 1:42 PM, Steve Carroll wrote:Steve CarrollSilver-Tongued Heel
On Wednesday, April 12, 2017 at 10:24:46 AM UTC-6, DFS wrote:DFSSteve Carroll
On 4/12/2017 10:10 AM, Melzzzzz wrote:MelzzzzzDFS
On 2017-04-12, DFS <nospam@dfs.com>wrote:DFSMelzzzzz
On 4/12/2017 8:33 AM, Melzzzzz wrote:MelzzzzzDFS
then again, not until 1994 I really start to enjoy computers...
Why not? I enjoyed DOS programs from '85 to '91 or so: Norton Commander, Javelin, Lotus 1-2-3, dBase, Paradox, Norton Utilities...
And then a little later came Doom and Heretic and Hexen.
I couldn't afford PC in that time...
Yeah, they were expensive back then. I think my Dad gave me my first PC (an 8086).
Today USD 1500 will get you a nice PC. That's 174758 RSD. Will that buy you a good system over there? Is that expensive relative to rent and food and gasoline?
I worked with PCs but I wanted an Apple. They were initially too expensive so I waited until the IIe came down to around $1500.00, which was still a bit of $$ back then.
What year was this? I still have trouble accepting that people actually got work done on those 8-bit machines. They seemed fairly useless.