LOL, literally, LOL! That was AWESOME! Thanks for posting it. Def gona share.
Yeah, I remember DOS… but I'm so old, hell, I remember CRANK type telephones! :eek:
I wan't a geek but living here in Berkeley I was surrounded by computer science nerds (first modem I saw was in an apartment in 1973, you put the hand set of the phone on a box and it dialed out with tones to a main-frame on campus). So, I wasn't at all "impressed" with computers for rather a long time. 20+ years to be exact. I was into the visual arts and, as the one girl said, that green and black was *ugly*!
It wasn't until the 1980s that a friend (whose dad was an IBM exec.) and I began to become interested in them. He had a desktop computer with a 'thousands of colors' monitor. We were both artists and began playing around with a program called "lumina." Problem was, there was no way to directly out-put any 'art' created on the monitor. You had to save the image file to a floppy disk, mail the floppy disk to a lab in San Jose, where they would boot up the image and photograph the monitor with a 35mm camera. Thus now you had a slide transparency of the image which could be printed. yay. :redface:
It wasn't till about 10 years later when image sharing on the internet became available that I began to take an interest in computers at all. Suddenly two things happened: 1) it was possible to interact remotely with other people you would likely never meet; and 2) it was possible to share art made on the computer in the medium in which it had been created. YAY!
Now, just try and imagine what things are going to be like when in another, oh, I don't know, 30 or 40 years, and children react as underwhelmed with a current laptop or iPad! I have to say, with very few exceptions, most of those of us who were trying to make sense of DOS had *no idea* how computer technology coupled with the internet were about to change our lives.