214 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
214 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 691
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Title: HPR0691: pre-IBM PC computer history 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0691/hpr0691.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:00:05
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---
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Got to do it.
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Good morning, good afternoon. Good evening. This is Mr. Gadgets. Once again, calling in.
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And I thought of something else, and I thought I'd do a little segment that is we're on this
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history of computing BPC before PCs, before IBM PCs came in and really changed the landscape,
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because really that was two different kind of areas, and unless you lived through it, I'm not sure
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you really have quite an understanding of what it was like. I mentioned before in the previous
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little episode that I submitted, that there was a S100 bus that was around. It was a 100-pin bus.
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Real similar to the kind of thing you're used to now except the pins were a lot bigger,
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and the bus was a lot bigger. And these S100 bus cards, the physical connectors are way larger
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than what you used to today, and it was a kind of a standard for things that came in,
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and that was for CPM computers. The CPM operating system was pretty much the only quote-unquote
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real operating system that was around in these days, and mostly that would be run on an S100
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bus computer. So there was kind of a standard. It kind of worked between different manufacturers
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and all those kinds of things, but not so much. There was electrical standard, at least,
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that kind of worked. So most of the time, if you had an S100 bus board, you could plug it in,
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you could work electrically, but of course there were no drivers for it, so you probably would have
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to rewrite the drivers for the board. So it was still a catch-it-catch-can kind of thing,
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but it did allow expansion kinds of boards to exist, and all those types of things.
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Those are a little bit more expensive, but we're really more kind of business computers,
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and I never had enough scratch for that. But what I did, as I mentioned before,
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is that Ohio Scientific Computer. Now I mentioned that I got a job working full-time in computers,
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and working for the local Ohio Scientific dealer, and he solved these larger-scale kind of Ohio
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Scientific machines into several businesses as far away as the Ames Iowa, which is quite far
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from the Cam City area. I'm not sure how that deal ever got in, where he got connected up with
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a guy from Ames, but various places around the Cam City area, and it ran a version of Microsoft
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Basic, and pretty much everything. It ran a version of Microsoft Basic, and in these days,
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Microsoft's only product, so it was like a basic machine, and it was a little bit different
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on every single machine you found it on. There were slight differences, kind of how many to do
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with input output and things like that. Those machines, of course, had come up in the world,
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and you actually had disks. So we saw the beginning of floppy disks, and we had five or
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a quarter of floppy disks. We're pretty common on home machines and things like that. There were
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also eight-inch floppy disks machines that were out there, and so the big Ohio Scientific had floppy
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disks, and they had eight-inch floppy disks, in fact, on the larger scale one, and these were
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rack-mount kind of systems. So you'd have a full, four and a half foot tall rack-mount box that would
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come with the car almost just ran up front of me. They would have a dual eight-inch floppy disk,
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because that was a default, and that was a larger capacity disk. We were not talking much of a
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capacity here in the old floppy disk days, and the five and a quarters. We had one customer that
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he had sold the precursor to, before he got this Ohio Scientific dealership, he had sold some kind
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of, I can't remember the name of these machines, but they had their own little kind of bus and five
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and a quarter-inch drives and things like that, and I can't even remember what the name of those were,
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but he had sold those to a local lawyer. It was actually the guy who did his legal work, and for a
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while we shared offices in a little office, we took this lawyer-owned, and that was an interesting
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one because those were hard sector five and a quarter-inch floppy disks. So there was actually a
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hole in the floppy disk for every single sector. Now the way floppy disks worked was there was a
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hole there, and usually they were soft sector floppy disks, which meant that there was one hole,
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and it would, of course, spin around. It was towards the center, the spindle side, and there was
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a little optical reader that would see the hole go by, and then it could soft sector from that point
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on because it knew how fast the disk was a spin. Well, the hard sector disk had a hole for each
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and every sector, and this had the extra advantage of you could actually flip that disk over,
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and use both sides of the disk. You didn't have to do anything to it. You just flip the disk over,
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you could write to both sides of the disk. And in fact, I remember that this lawyer, he
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was a little small-scale kind of a lawyer who wasn't any big gigantic firm, and one of his things
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was he did a newsletter for one of the larger-scale, upper, you know, cross-kind of executive
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developments here in town, had a newsletter for their Homes Association, and he actually had
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gotten the, he would publish the newsletter for the Homes Association, and in the process then
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here, he would spend about two or three days a month just sitting there with that two disk floppy
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system putting out this newsletter, and he had, of course, the mailing list, but it was on a
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series of floppy disks. So one floppy disk, right, has whatever the operating system was that,
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you know, whatever you can call the operating system, this was on, it wasn't on CPM, it was on some
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other kind of a little thing, and so it was running the basic program that was basically, you know,
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the operating system was bring up basic, right, and he had this, hey, it was generating,
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and had a nice little, you know, word processor to it, and he could mail merge and put in these
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addresses, so that's how he put out the newsletter, and he had to spend, as I say, at least a couple
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of days, pretty about solid eight hours a day, just sitting there, taking that floppy disk,
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putting it in, it had read everything on the first side, and then he'd take it out, flip it over,
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and read all the addresses off the second side, and he had it hooked up to a big, like one of
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these typewriter style printers, it was literally had a typewriter ball on it, it wasn't a selector,
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but it was kind of like a selector mechanism, so it was like typing out these things, and it looked
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just like a type, you know, letter, that would go out to the, I mean, he flipped those disks,
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and he just constantly flipped the disks, he was a constant problem because he smoked all the time,
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and that went very good for the machine, so we had to go in and clean up the stuff, you know,
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from the smoke residue, keep its operation going, the big eight-inch floppy disk I was talking about
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on the Ohio Scientific's, my boss found out that they came free with double-sided disks, because
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you could do double-sided disks on the saw sectors, but you had to have a disk drive that could be
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able to flip it over and use both sides, and he found out that he had done that, he waited the one
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customer and said, well, how much did you pay me if you could use both sides, you just could just
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just the single side, and like I said, oh man, I paid like 100 dollars for that upgrade, so they
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didn't even went over and said some magic words and waited his hands over, he didn't take the money,
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of course, but anyway, this system also with the big rack mount on the Ohio Scientific was a great
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built-in system because it had an eight-inch high rack mountable hard drive, now hard drives
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were really hard to come by at this time, I mean hard drives were really, really expensive,
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and hard drives on these micro computers were almost unheard of, and this hard drive, like I said,
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is that eight inches in the rack mount, and it fit in the rack mount right underneath the CPU,
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was a 20-meg hard drive, which was, oh my lord, that was amazing, that's capacity, 20 megs,
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and it's a full rack mount size, and eight inches tall, okay, and that's what it took for a 20-meg hard
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drive, and the other thing about this machine was it was multi-user, now it didn't have a multi-user
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operating system like Udix or anything like that, and keep in mind, there's still an eight-bit
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processor, now these computers are also interesting because the processor wars were happening
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back then, and nobody knew who was going to win, the 80, who was competing on the 100-boss kind of
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side, and some other machines, and 6502, which was what the apples used, right, and things like that,
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and so that was the other camp, kind of, there were several things like the TM that I mentioned
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before, and it was a 6500 processor, and the 6502 in the apple, and then there was, and by then
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it was early apple twos, I guess we were talking about, and then there was a 6800, like this 6809,
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that eventually I had with my color computer, well these machines had a 6800 operating, 6800
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based system, Ohio Scientific had 6800 based processors, and their Microsoft basic random 6800
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you know processor mode, eight-bit processors, all three of them, right, so this board had all three
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processors, because theoretically see your computer would not be, would not be extinct when some
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of you won the processor wars, they never did do anything with the 80 or the 6502 that was on
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there, but they were technically there, and so we could have switched out, I think a dip switch or
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something, could have switched it to use the other processor, and it was an eight-bit processor,
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but it had multi-user, and it actually had three memory boards, you could run three terminals,
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also one of these machines, okay, so it was all terminals, it was all RST32, input output to a
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regular TTY terminal, green screen, actually these were gray, so it was a little easier on the
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eyes, and so you could have three users, all of that to this machine, all using the one hard drive,
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and the way they got this multi-user to work in this, you've only got 64k of memory, right,
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you got 65,000, whatever, 232, 300, whatever, bytes, because it's an eight-bit machine,
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it could only address that much memory, so the way they did multi-user is, as I said, there is a
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memory card for each terminal, so there are three memory cards in there, and the highest eight
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kilobits was where the operating system essentially resided, so that's where it loaded into the high
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a K, that's where the Microsoft basic was running, and the switching between these, and then it
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multiplexed between the three boards for the lower 48k for each user, so each user had their own
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individual 48k memory to run their program in, and then the highest 8k was essentially the
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Microsoft basic running, because there was a operating system here, and I wrote programs for this
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for several different people, and they were input output statements, and there was no database,
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so I had to do my own linked lists, to do databases, and all that kind of stuff, and
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all this was based on this bus that was used on these, and this particular bus on the
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high outside depicts used a Molex connector. Now, you're familiar with a Molex connector, I know
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you are, if you ever unplugged the power from any kind of a drive, you know, the power for a
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a floppy drive, or a hard drive, the old style hard drives, before the newer, the latest hard drives
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are like this, but older, older shell, ATA hard drives, the power connector, that's a Molex
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connector, a little plasticky kind of thing, and it's got pins, and the pins go into holes, right,
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that are there on the connector, so that's a Molex connector. Now, imagine a bus, which is a bunch
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of those pins, like a hundred of them, about, oh, a foot long, a hundred pins spaced out, and that's
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your bus, and then you've got Molex connectors that are on the board that you plug into that bus,
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and nothing was gold-plated, so occasionally you would get a call, and your system wasn't running,
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and my service call consisted of going into the customer's side, and I didn't even have to
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completely unplug the board, I just had to loosen the board and kind of shake it around, and force
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whatever little oxidation or something that's happening with these cheap tin Molex connectors,
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and I just kind of, just, you know, move the board up and down, and a little bit away to make
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sure all the electrocon contacts were good again, and then the system would come up. God never intended
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a computer to use a Molex connector as a bus, I can tell you that from experience, and so this
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was the kind of world we were in, everybody inventing their own systems, using different processors,
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I still to this day own a Model 100, which was really the first laptop, pretty much. There was
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an episode out at about the same time, but the Model 100 was probably the most popular of these,
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and it has a eight line by 40 character display, LCD, runs off of four double A batteries,
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has built in Microsoft Basic, had an expansion slot that you can plug in things like a spreadsheet
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on the e-prom or word processor dictionary kind of program on the e-prom, and I had one of those
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brand new, and I also still own the second one that I bought used a few years back. I still own both
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of those, and it's kind of because if the world really, if there's really the end of the world,
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as we know it, those are the two computers that I can use to rebuild the stuff, because I can
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program in Microsoft Basic, and I can just get a book with, you know, engineering, you know,
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calculations that need to be made, and I can write a program still to do those calculations,
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do whatever it is, we need to rebuild the world, so there you go. There are also really good
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terminals, you know, so I can use them as terminals when I was an amateur radio operator doing,
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doing things that needed the RS-232 terminal, have a 300-bottom built-in to them, advanced technology
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here, folks advanced, and that had MS-TOS in it. I swear I read, I can never find any references to it,
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but this is all pre-internet, so it's probably lost somewhere, but I swear I read in an article
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somewhere that Bill Gates, this is back when Bill Gates used to just still program, right? He was
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writing all these Microsoft Basic's or adapting them anyway, and he, he in this kind of planning
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session that they had for the model 100, he got together and the model 100, and he, I swear to
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God, he made a comment in this that it'll run some kind of a ROM-based version of Unix, and this
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is what he had in mind now, that's not what it ended up with, right? It ended up with a very good
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Microsoft Basic on it, but, you know, this was the way he was thinking back in that time frame,
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before IBM came along, and, you know, we'll maybe have another discussion about how BOSS got to be
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DOS, but, you know, specialized machines, you know, the whole Trash 80s, the TRS 80s,
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were a whole series of those, and I'll talk some more about some of the things that go beyond
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just the Model 1 and the Model 2 and the Model 3 of the TRS 80 computers, but, you know,
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there was those, there was another group, I mentioned my friend who built his synthesizer,
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you know, from a kit, the PAIA synthesizer, well, there was another company that was real popular
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here, this was a land, this was an era of kit building, right? Heath Kit, the big kit company,
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had its own computers, and there was another company called Southwest Technical Products out of
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Oklahoma, and Southwest Technical Products had a computer of its own, that was an 8-bit computer,
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I think it was 6,800-based if I remember, and, anyway, they had a bunch of different projects,
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some of them were computer-based like this computer, and some other few things about that,
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they also had some audio kinds of products and things like that, so there were all these different
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things out there, and, you know, there were kits that you could build the computer yourself,
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and program it yourself, there were people who were taking drives and adapting them,
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so that you could have a disk drive, and it's going to have them to use a computer, you know,
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I mean, a tape drive, you know, an audio cassette deck to save your program, and load it in,
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which took forever, as those of you who know about the Commodores, and started on those,
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you know those, I have a little bit of a connection there, I'm not sure about your Commodores 64,
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but if you owned a Commodore Vick computer, and you owned a, you see the Commodore Vick didn't come
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with a built-in modem, and you had a modem to do the BDS, right? And so to do any kind of telecommunications
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with it, you needed a modem, and the Commodore Vicks in the early 80s did not come with a modem built-in,
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the way that the Model 100 did, or some other computers of that ilk, of that time frame,
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a lot of them came with built-in modems, modems were expensive, you know, there's another 100
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some odd dollars might be adding to it to get a U.S. robotics modem, so having one built in
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as a machine was a big plus. Well, the Commodore Vick, the guy who used to run the recording studio
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in Kansas City, when he quit the university and needed something to do, he started a company
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here in Kansas City that made a cartridge you could plug into the back of the Commodore Vick,
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and I don't know if they ever developed one for the 64, but there was a cartridge you could plug
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into the back of the Commodore Vick that was a 300 modem, and a lot you just start doing things
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online with your Commodore Vick, and I know the guy who started that company, and they were making
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quite a bit of money there, making those things about as fast as they could here in Kansas City during
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the heyday of the Commodore Vick, and this was a landscape, it was a lot of different companies
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all doing different things, and it wasn't really until the IBM PC cable on, so that's why I called it
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BPC before PCs, right? It was a Wild West, it was a strange kind of world out here, and if you had
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enough money you had an Apple, an Apple 2, right? That was kind of, you know, you had to have
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some scratch to be able to afford an Apple 2, and all of us who didn't have that much money,
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well we were going to run them to your S80s, color computers, things like that, and everything had
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its own individual operating system, or Microsoft basic, but knowing it on one didn't do any good
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on the other, you kind of had to relearn the specifics of it, and it was a kind of crazy world,
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it's almost amazing that we came out of that as cohesive as we did, but really the IBM PC is
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part of what did that, and I'll probably be ready to talk about that sometime next time in my
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history of computing series here, but until then, this is Mr. Geddes, I'm going to sign off for
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this time around, you can go out there to Mr. Geddes.com and see everything that I'm doing on Mr. Geddes
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on Twitter, or Identica, and send me an email if you're enjoying these little walk-down memory
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lane, or want me to talk about anything else, because I've been around for all this, so if you've
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got any questions on anything, if I remember about it, I'll tell you what I remember about it,
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and I experienced it all the way from that very beginning there, and I've been a little
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minute constantly full-time ever since, and so send me a note to hacker public radio at
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Mr. Geddes.com, or just HPR, at Mr. Geddes.com. We look forward to hearing from you, and talking
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to you next time, this is Mr. Geddes, and you be careful out here on this technological
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friend here, and I'll be out here till blazing the head of you. Bye now.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio. HPR is sponsored by Pharaoh.net,
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so head on over to C-A-R-O dot-E-T for all of us in here.
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