Aslak3 wrote:
This is a bit of a random question. Hopefully it will lead to some interesting discussions.
In short, why do you have this interest that we all seem to share? The details aren’t important. What I’m assuming we all share is an interest in what might be considered non-mainstream computing. Weather it is reproducing the computers of the past, improving them with modern components, or using 6502s in FPGAs, the common ground is there.
I remember seeing a room of Commodore Pets in elementary school but even though I begged and begged to be able to use one for five minutes, the answer was always "no" because they were for the gifted program or you had to be an "A" student.
I remember being in the doctor's office and someone left a Computer magazine on the seat while he was visiting the doctor so guess who was reading it.
I met a young programmer at school whom I knew and I saw one of his programming books. I told him, "Why didn't you tell me before?" I found out I could get a copy at the bookstore so I saved up a few dollars and bought a programming book so that I could dream what it was about. It had those curious Petscii graphics and it just opened up another world that wasn't possible before. It opens up a world of imagination.
My sister was in the gifted program and she got to use a Wang. Her class was making long printout calendars with ASCII graphics. I took one to school and they were the rage and all the teachers wanted one for their classroom door to show off to parents to make themselves look important. My sister brought home punch cards and I was like "What is that?" Ask some kids today what punch cards are today and they will have no clues. My sister's teacher brought a Wang to school for show and tell and anyone who answered what Fortran stands for got to play with the computer so I got to play with the computer for five minutes but I didn't know what I was doing so I didn't do much.
My High school had a teletype machine hooked up to college courses so I played with that in High School. I knew I wanted one but I knew that my parents would complain that it costs money.
I got a Commodore 64 for Christmas with a tape drive and the only programs I had were in the manual and I had at least three other books with programs in it. I wanted to do more with it so I visited the computer store at the mall and the manager said that Atari joysticks worked with it and I bought an Atari joystick with a lot of skepticism and with the view that it wouldn't work and I would be returning it but the joystick worked.
I was trying to figure out what to do with it so I practiced programming examples every day until I learned BASIC and then I learned it again in High School on the Apple IIe, Apple II, and Apple II+ computers because I took a class on computer math and I had to do a lot to get into that class and that class was one of my best grades.
I eventually got the Commodore Reference Manual and subscribed to Compute's Gazette and Compute as well as the other magazines.
I didn't know Assembly and I tried learning from Jim Butterfield's books but machines are a little harder than the bootloader like Basic and then you realize that these computers are only possible because different people made things happen.
Then Commodore went bankrupt and then everyone started selling their machines and went to IBM or a few bought MAC. The cult was dead or at least I thought and reality set in. No one did anything with the I.P. but I miss those days.
So then I got involved in Microcontrollers and chips and I hope to learn how to use them. I have six or more different microcontrollers and have been wanting to learn how to use them but maybe someday I will have the time and maybe someone will help me get started but I bought all the equipment and books to get started on ARM, AT Tiny, PIC, etc.. We will see what happens.
If you haven't seen Kickstarter, there is a $9 computer and I might get one. I would like to do more computer related development but I want to be more of a producer than a consumer.