Human are so easy to control. "Home, James, and don't spare the horses!"
Human are so easy to control. "Home, James, and don't spare the horses!"
Human are so easy to control. "Home, James, and don't spare the horses!"
Back when I started, the only large storage option was several boxes of IBM punched cards!Old days? still the cheaper way to go for large storage needs today. Still good today I guess.
kv
There used to be kiosks in the shopping centers that could take your picture (or you and your girlfriend), print it as ASCII art on transfer paper and make a T-shirt from it.Not as fine art a s ascii, but baudot did produce some decent pictures.
Do you remember what language was used? I can't remember but, I think those were Fortran or Unix. I've spoken to a few IBM programmers I can't remember what it was.Back when I started, the only large storage option was several boxes of IBM punched cards!
It was Fortran. I had written an artificial intelligence program to differentiate and identify between 3D shapes. The program was about 2/3 box of cards (a box of cards was a standard measure as all boxes were the same size). The only way to input the program was via keypunched cards . I "manually" scanned the data and keypunched them on even more cards, which took up another box.Do you remember what language was used? I can't remember but, I think those were Fortran or Unix. I've spoken to a few IBM programmers I can't remember what it was.
I'm getting old
kv
We used punch card decks for all sorts of things, machine language boot loaders for communications devices (autodin) or even cryptographic key cards for devices.Do you remember what language was used? I can't remember but, I think those were Fortran or Unix. I've spoken to a few IBM programmers I can't remember what it was.
I'm getting old
kv
No wonder H1B Visa programmers are so popular! Those guys don't dare to pull funny crap like that.The IBM 1130 had two system punch cards. One was a cold boot loader, the other was used for a warm start. They usually were punched on pink and green cards and kept in a bin on the side of the card reader. There were often several cards in case one didn't work.
At one site, a clever programmer (?) had programmed several cards with a different program and replaced most of the cards in the bin with his version, on pink and green cards of course.
When something happened that required a boot, the operator would grab a card and run it through the reader. Most of the time, it was one of the faux cards.
Instead of booting the 1130, the bogus program initialized the modified IBM Selectric typewriter which was used as a console. Then it went into a tight, infinite loop and printed on the console, "Ha! That was not a boot card."
The operator had to feed the remaining cards, one by one, through the reader until he found the boot card. He would attempt to discard the bad cards, but some remained in the stack. And new ones would be added by the Masked Programmer!
That is very sad. Also, that no one else was willing to trade places with that poor man.Why I never fly United or want to come near Chicago.
http://www.courier-journal.com/stor...d-united-flight-chicago-louisville/100274374/
Why I never fly United or want to come near Chicago.
http://www.courier-journal.com/stor...d-united-flight-chicago-louisville/100274374/
Sure it is. Or will be.Really not worth getting a broken face over.
Maybe no. The pilot has the right to eject a passenger for any reason. Assuming the plane is on the ground that is.Sure it is. Or will be.
And a passenger has a right not to get his face bashed in by the hired help.Maybe no. The pilot has the right to eject a passenger for any reason. Assuming the plane is on the ground that is.![]()
And a passenger has a right not to get his face bashed in by the hired help.
Besides, they put him back on the plane... his offense could not have been that grievous.
I'm hearing two stories now. The second story is he somehow got back on by himself and they tossed him off again.Besides, they put him back on the plane... his offense could not have been that grievous.
Yeap, that's the correct oneI'm hearing two stories now. The second story is he somehow got back on by himself and they tossed him off again.