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90 lines
7.2 KiB
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90 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 687
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Title: HPR0687: pre-IBM PC computer history 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0687/hpr0687.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 00:50:46
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---
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Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. This is Mr. Gadget. Once again, calling in to talk
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about a little bit more of the history of computing here, and this is kind of a combo, a transitional
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phase, if you will, between the history of computing BPC before PCs, as well as how did
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I get to Linux. And so I've been using all of these things. I've been talking to them
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some previous episodes that didn't really have operating systems. I didn't really use
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anything that was CPM based to any great extent or do any kind of programming because of
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where I was working at the time and it didn't use CPM. A lot of people were, but not me.
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And there were some things that were related to this that are kind of transitional here.
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I mentioned earlier that being a poor student and then a single guy out here, you know,
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giving along with music degree and the technical skills that I had been teaching myself, I really
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didn't have the money to purchase Apple 2, but I didn't have the money to get together
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for a color computer from Radio Shatch. Now this is different than all the TRS-80s because
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it had a lot more things built into it and it had the cassette input output as well as the
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ability to, you know, hook it up to have it on a screen with a video monitor, but it
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would actually go to a television and could do color graphics. And it also had some joystick
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input. It was really rather clever machine. The joysticks were basically based on voltage
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with pots, right, with variable resistors. So the different axes of the joysticks would
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allow you to have fine graduation. It wasn't like the joysticks that you'd find for instance
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on a Atari 2600, but it's just really a switch that you're pushing. This was actually
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you were running through some gears and moving the X and Y axis was turning a resistor and
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that resistor, that variable resistor then was providing a voltage, you know, difference
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based on the resistance and it had them voltage to digital converters, right, to actually
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have the position of those machines. As with all of these machines, this particular
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time it was kind of arcade device and you can load in this whole command, you know, style
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game and you know, space invader style game and things like that. You can also program
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it in color basic, which was another variation once again of the Microsoft basic that everything
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ran. And the whole thing basically just came up in wrong in that color basic. Well, after
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a while they had various cartridges. So some of these games weren't even things that you
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had to put a tape, because that tape into the tape recorder to load in the game. Oh
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no, they had cartridges. So it really was across over. It was like kind of half video game,
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half computer and you would put a cartridge in the side for some of these games and they
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came up with a cartridge that was a disc controller. So you could put five or two quarters
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disc drives and have real, you know, floppy discs for data entry and data storage. And this
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was so pricey of things like that, but I managed to get a hold of one of those controllers
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without the drives of the body used from somebody, I guess the drives had gone south and
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they still had the controller and got a hold of that. Maybe it's through the color computer
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club here in town. I don't know. And I found some drives cheap used. In fact, my mother-in-law
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for years, ever since I first got married, has had this thing that they've only done in
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their families since before I got married and married into this family, where she gives
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you money at Christmas time. And instead of her buying you something that you don't like
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that you have to take back, she gives you money around Thanksgiving. You go out, you buy
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something, you wrap it up, you don't tell anybody about it. And on Christmas, you know,
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Eve, when we would open up gifts, you open up your gift, you know where you're getting
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it, everybody else is surprised. You're guaranteed to get something you want. And you can add
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money to the Christmas money to buy something that's a little bit more than what the Christmas
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money would normally buy. And so that year, I bought myself drives that were floppy drives
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that I could use with this. The soft sector drives would work and put together my own
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little drives system with that cartridge that was the disk controller. Now, about this
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time, there was a company called Real Time Operating Systems, I think it was, out of
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Des Moines of all places. And I actually do somebody later on who quit the company we were
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working for, he was a marketing guy and went out to do the head of the marketing department
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for that group up there in Des Moines. Anyway, they had operating systems, and I had been
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hearing about Unix, like I mentioned in that last show about Gates talking about having
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a Unix compatible system on the model 100, which would have been cool, if they could have
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pulled it off. But basically, I've been hearing a lot about Unix. I taught myself basic and
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taught myself a few other rudimentary skills and a few other languages and things. I'd
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heard about C, and I'd heard about Unix, the two are totally interrelated, of course.
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And this company had a bootable disk that would put you into a Linux compatible operating
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system using the color computer. It was called OS 9, because it used a 6809 chip, right?
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So, OS 9. They also had another version of this that ran on a larger scale radio check
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computer that had 8-inch drives. It was kind of like a Model 3 on steroids, if you will.
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I can't remember what that one was called. It might have been a Model 2000 or something
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like that. Anyway, they had an OS 2000 or whatever that model of computer it was. That was
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a 16-bit computer chip in that one. So, it had more addressable space and had 8-inch
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floppy disks. So, it was a more capable machine. But the OS 9 was my first hands-on with
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being able to use a Unix compatible as far as the commands are concerned and all that
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kind of stuff operating system. I can't remember which shell it had. This is back. This
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was the best shell, right? The Born Again shell. It was either a Born Shell or a C-shell.
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And I can't remember which one it was that it had. There was also the Born Shell with a
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K back in them. And usually, at this particular point, you were either a C-shell person or
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you were a Born Shell person, because they had differences of how you had to write the
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shell scripting and all that kind of stuff. It had a C compiler, I could compile C programs
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and all that kind of stuff. So, that was actually my first Unix compatible operating system
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that I could own in my own little hand. And that will do it for this particular segment.
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Next segment along the way, I'll discuss my next for a into, you know, Star X, right?
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This is a Linux operating system and a little bit about computing in the Middle East.
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But until then, if it's Mr. Gadgett out here on the technical frontier, you be careful on
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the technological frontier. Send me some email at, you know, HPR at Mr. Gadgett.com, Mr. Gadgett.com.
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And I'm Mr. Gadgett on Twitter and I identify. And until next time, be careful out here.
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And I'll be blazing material ahead of you on the electronics frontier by now.
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Thank you.
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