jswordy
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2012
- Messages
- 11,078
- Reaction score
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IMP, that is the best PC OS ever made. I was so sad then they quit support, and kept mine going for years afterward. Then I sold out to the Dark Side, lol...
When on site was warranted, I used an Compaq Luggable back in the MCI days, tote that scope prior to that, good times...When I bought the Gateway 2000 mentioned above in '93, I was gung-ho to get that modem screaming, Spent a lot of time the first month on aol.com. Then the $440 phone bill came. BellSouth company even called me to be sure it was correct. I honestly said yes and paid up for my mistake. Back then, dialing in and forgetting about time spent online was expensive where I lived!
In my profession, journalism, I went through college using a typewriter, then at my first job we had a proprietary system where the machines did their functions by using a 7" floppy. They were not interfaced; you had to move the floppy from machine to machine in the publishing process. Then the next job went backwards – back to a typewriter and typesetters entering that copy on computers. Then the next job, which I took in '93, was networked. But I still filed remote stories by modem through an 800 number and a Tandy laptop. Very limited but I doubt a more rugged computer has ever been built. I still have one that the company surplussed and let me keep.
Ahh, ventilation, always a good thing.
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It's not just companies. On a tech forum, someone complained about the system requirements for Win11, and that MS blocked older computers from installing it. One response was, "Why don't you buy a computer that can run Win11?"It's an industry trend, saw it at Cisco. Feature velocity over performance. Concerns regarding System/Hardware requirements were minimized "Customers will just need to upgrade to X.Y.Z to run this release".