Sujet : Re: Which CPM systems are most popular?
De : admin (at) *nospam* 127.0.0.1 (Kerr-Mudd, John)
Groupes : comp.os.cpmDate : 10. Mar 2025, 10:30:47
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Dis
Message-ID : <20250310093047.a9d89b66bac003a1e06327b6@127.0.0.1>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : Sylpheed 3.7.0 (GTK+ 2.24.30; i686-pc-mingw32)
On 08 Mar 2025 02:53:09 -0400
Mike Spencer <
mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
John <john@somewhere> writes:
But when I really started using computers was in college; and my
first was an Osborne 01. That started me down the CPM road. After
reading 'The Soul of CPM' book, I was on fire. Compared to what I
learned with the Osborne, I consider my college courses teaching me
the syntax of Fortran and Pascal to be a waste of time (and money!).
I got my first computer when I was in my mid-40s. In 1987 the O1 was
already obsolete. But I learned BASIC, Z80 assembler, K&R C and some
LISP on it, then used it as a terminal to connect to Unix and VMS
systems.
I'm really happy that I started with the O1. Extensive O1 and CPM
documentation available, system simple enough to understand without
recursive rabbit-hole excursions. All Linux now on hardware that I
don't really understand but I do understand the basic principals it
all works on.
(I check in on c.o.cpm periodically to watch for other O1 fans.)
My first works "PC" (shared) was a "SuperBrain" - you could get a
floppy drive with Classic Adventure (Colossal Cave), IIRC. - Properly
it was used for SuperCalc spreadsheets.
-- Bah, and indeed Humbug.