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After thinking about this a bit, it was actually the fifth college I attended...Mark44 said:The first computer I worked with was in '71 for a programming class I took at my first college.
I eventually got my degree from that one.
After thinking about this a bit, it was actually the fifth college I attended...Mark44 said:The first computer I worked with was in '71 for a programming class I took at my first college.
It was the controller for a GenRad (1795?) functional tester. We also used DataGeneral Nova and PDP11/23 computers for system test.dlgoff said:Summary:: The first computer that I played with
When I worked for Kantronics, Inc back in the '70s, this was the first computer, the DEC PDP 8, I used to do IC testing after hot & cold temperature soaking, the engineer that could program it with his eyes closed, now works for NASA:
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That's nothingdlgoff said:I really loved Fortran. When I used it, we had to turn in decks of cards for a program and wait for hours to get the output printout in order to trouble shoot the errors.
; I had to wait at least 3 days per run! Part of my communications pathway was literally a bus. I have posted the following story before.bold by me (thought this was fun stuff).George Jones said:Fortran was my first programming language, which I learned in two high school computer science courses in grades 11 and 12 from 1976 - 78. My high school teacher was a CS grad from the University of Waterloo, so we did some good stuff, e.g., introductory numerical methods.

YES. I remember one evening (probably 1971) being at the computer center trying to get my FORTRAN program to run when I had an epiphany. Looking around me at the disheveled and forlorn souls hopelessly and repeatedly feeding decks of cards to the holy computer operator, I realized that these machines worked only by sucking the mental energy from all sentient beings nearby, and I treated them accordingly from that point forward .jedishrfu said:When i did one pgm at college in 1970 and saw the battle for the keypunch and the interminable wait. I decided to forego computers and just focus on my physics and math.
The Commodore 64 and its contemporaries were the last generation of (general purpose) computers that anyone knew everything about. The complexity of every level of a modern system, from pipelined, branch predicting CPU cores, through multi-level caches to optimising compilers and language runtimes with automatic garbage collection it is simply not feasible to comprehend the state of any non-trivial system at any given moment.hutchphd said:Truth be told it was the last computer I really knew everything about and I enjoyed that very much.
In a recent thread another member asked these questions (https://www.physicsforums.com/threa...-software-from-the-hardware-activity.1008862/):pbuk said:The Commodore 64 and its contemporaries were the last generation of (general purpose) computers that anyone knew everything about. The complexity of every level of a modern system, from pipelined, branch predicting CPU cores, through multi-level caches to optimising compilers and language runtimes with automatic garbage collection it is simply not feasible to comprehend the state of any non-trivial system at any given moment.
For the reasons listed by @pbuk, my thought was that these tasks would be difficult at best, and maybe impossible.Suppose one knows well the laws of physics but knows nothing about computers and IT. Would one be able to deduce how a computer works only by studying its hardware? Could one rebuild the software code and understand its meaning only by looking at the internal flow of bits in its CPU?
I think that's too discouraging. It depends on what you mean by "a computer". Many young people today could follow those Ben Eater videos to make a functioning computer on their desk, program it, and watch the results. The impossible part comes when you say "a computer" means a modern PC or equivalent.Mark44 said:For the reasons listed by @pbuk, my thought was that these tasks would be difficult at best, and maybe impossible.
The context for @pbuk and me was computers after C64 and presumably to include computers after 8086/8 to 80286 PCs.anorlunda said:I think that's too discouraging. It depends on what you mean by "a computer".
Sure, but as I recall he was using a 6502 processor, which is similar to the CPU in the Commodores (Vic 20 and C64). In the thread I quoted, the premise was someone who knew nothing about computers, but did know the laws of physics. With the stipulation that "a computer" means something produced in this century, I stand by my remarks.anorlunda said:Many young people today could follow those Ben Eater videos to make a functioning computer on their desk
Mark44's assessment is reasonable, and I agree. Even with a good knowledge of physics, it would be difficult to know how a computer chip actually works without some specialized education.anorlunda said:I think that's too discouraging. It depends on what you mean by "a computer". Many young people today could follow those Ben Eater videos to make a functioning computer on their desk, program it, and watch the results. The impossible part comes when you say "a computer" means a modern PC or equivalent.
I still have both of these. At one time I posted photos of these (must have been many years ago though)Astronuc said:a K+E slide rule, SR-51 calculator
A classmate in 11th grade had an SR-10, and then upgraded to an SR-11 in 12th grade. He used to do physics and chemistry problems to 6 or more decimal places, while the rest of us used slide rules. Between 11th and 12th grade, I encountered my first HP-35. At some point, I purchased an SR-51. After I received my bachelor's degree, I received a TI-58C. Then later I purchased an HP-41CX, which I still have and use almost every day. Someone dumped an HP-41CX at work, so I snagged that one, too. So I have two.dlgoff said:I still have both of these. At one time I posted photos of these (must have been many years ago though)
I bought one of those in Topeka, Kansas when they first came out. Don't know what ever happened to it though.DaveE said:IMSAI 8080 was my first hands-on computer.
The wife won't allow me to date other people...jedishrfu said:We aren't dating ourselves, we're dating other people
@jedishrfu said:Dreams of a simpler time, sitting under an apple tree and pondering the existence of all things.
If I remember correctly, he was staying at home because of a pandemic when he was pondering these things.sysprog said:
bob012345 said:If I remember correctly, he was staying at home because of a pandemic when he was pondering these things.