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|    CLASSIC_COMPUTER    |    Classic Computers    |    1,530 messages    |
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|    Message 141 of 1,530    |
|    Damon A. Getsman to Chris Patti    |
|    Re: Atari 8-bit hardware    |
|    02 Nov 13 19:12:34    |
       Re: Atari 8-bit hardware        By: Chris Patti to Damon A. Getsman on Fri Oct 25 2013 10:27:23               > Saved up paper route money FOREVER to buy the thing. Then had to save up fo        > the BASIC cartridge.               Muah. I skipped the 400, which is a good thing, because I've        tried working on membrane or rubber-clad keyboards before and OMG I cannot        stand it. The tactile feedback is very important for me, I guess. I like        the ancient old clicky XT & 8086 keyboards, too... Heh.        Sounds like you got that at about the same age that I had my 600XL        donated to me, though, which was my first machine. Never had to load an        external BASIC cart, although I did toy around with the 6502 assembler and        BASIC XE carts a little bit, as I learned to write more of my own        programs.               > With *cassette* for storage! And Atari's Cassette drive was dumb, you couldn        > just say "cload foo.bas" and have the drive search for it, you had to positi        > the tape JUST RIGHT to laod the program, and it took forever :)               Yep. I had the standard audio cassette storage drive for my first        storage, too. It took me FOREVER to get the 1050 floppy drive. I still        remember keeping a notebook full of all the cassette tracker numbers in        order to be able to position that damn tape just right. Heh. I still        remember, too, trying to work with a program that would dynamically load        portions of the code after the initial 'cload' and running of the main        program... It would've been sweet, if it wasn't for the fact that you had        to manually cue the tape, hit the play button, and then press enter on the        console again to let it start trying to pull the code in from the storage        with the 'ENTER C:' statement. heh.               > Those were the days :)        >         > Typing huge programs in from COMPUTE! magazine :)               Oh I remember that very well... The part I hated the worst was        the programs that had to be edited a bit in order to fit in the 16K of        RAM... Then I'd spend all day typing them in, forgetting to save every        15-60 minutes, because I was still new at the computing at that point. It        never failed; sometime right before the last few lines of code went in the        power would go out, somebody would knock the outlet out of the wall, or        else a power supply would overheat and glitch out wiping out all of my        work. God the RAGE. heh. I would sometimes skip a whole day at school        in order to sit and type that crap in, too, because it was utterly        impossible to get any software in Bismarck, ND, for the Atari. ;)        Finally I got a 300bps modem and racked up huge long distance bills        downloading things from an Atari BBS list that I'd found somewhere.        *grin*        I'm glad I'm not the only one that remembers the glory days.                     -The opinions expressed are not necessarily an advocation of any of the       aforementioned ideologies, concepts, or actions. We still have the freedom of       speech, for now, and I enjoy using it in a satirical or ficticious manner to       amuse myself-              "In times of universal deceit, telling the truth will be a       revolutionary act." -- George Orwell              --- SBBSecho 2.20-OpenBSD        * Origin: telnet://bismaninfo.hopto.org:8023/ (1:282/1057)    |
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