You have to be old enough to remember Abbott and Costello, and too old to REALLY understand computers, to fully appreciate this. For those of us who sometimes get flustered by our computers, please read on... If Bud Abbott and Lou Costello were alive today, their infamous sketch, 'Who's on First?' might have turned out something like this:
COSTELLO CALLS TO BUY A COMPUTER FROM ABBOTT ABBOTT: Super Duper computer store. Can I help you? COSTELLO: Thanks I'm setting up an office in my den and I'm thinking about buying a computer. ABBOTT: Mac? COSTELLO: No, the name's Lou. ABBOTT: Your computer? COSTELLO: I don't own a computer. I want to buy one. ABBOTT: Mac? COSTELLO: I told you, my name's Lou. ABBOTT: What about Windows? COSTELLO: Why? Will it get stuffy in here? ABBOTT: Do you want a computer with Windows? COSTELLO: I don't know. What will I see when I look at the windows? ABBOTT: Wallpaper. COSTELLO: Never mind the windows. I need a computer and software. ABBOTT: Software for Windows? COSTELLO: No. On the computer! I need something I can use to write proposals, track expenses and run my business. What do you have? ABBOTT: Office. COSTELLO: Yeah, for my office. Can you recommend anything? ABBOTT: I just did. COSTELLO: You just did what? ABBOTT: Recommend something. COSTELLO: You recommended something? ABBOTT: Yes. COSTELLO: For my office? ABBOTT: Yes. COSTELLO: OK, what did you recommend for my office? ABBOTT: Office. COSTELLO: Yes, for my office! ABBOTT: I recommend Office with Windows. COSTELLO: I already have an office with windows! OK, let's just say I'm sitting at my computer and I want to type a proposal. What do I need? ABBOTT: Word. COSTELLO: What word? ABBOTT: Word in Office. COSTELLO: The only word in office is office. ABBOTT: The Word in Office for Windows. COSTELLO: Which word in office for windows? ABBOTT: The Word you get when you click the blue 'W'. COSTELLO: I'm going to click your blue 'w' if you don't start with some straight answers. What about financial bookkeeping? You have anything I can track my money with? ABBOTT: Money. COSTELLO: That's right. What do you have? ABBOTT: Money. COSTELLO: I need money to track my money? ABBOTT: It comes bundled with your computer. COSTELLO: What's bundled with my computer? ABBOTT: Money. COSTELLO: Money comes with my computer? ABBOTT: Yes. No extra charge. COSTELLO: I get a bundle of money with my computer? How much? ABBOTT: One copy. COSTELLO: Isn't it illegal to copy money? ABBOTT: Microsoft gave us a license to copy Money. COSTELLO: They can give you a license to copy money? ABBOTT: Why not? THEY OWN IT! (A few days later) ABBOTT: Super Duper computer store. Can I help you? COSTELLO: How do I turn my computer off? ABBOTT: Click on 'START'.............
I remember several of their shows, I think one was bud and lou meet frankenstein, or was it the werewolf? supposed to be a funny horror flick back then. remember the one about the mummy also
Jerry Tallman 69 455/4sp Windward Blue, deluxe parchment bench seat, under major restoration je_tallman@yahoo.com
Geez, I do feel old. The Mrs. and I have the VHS tape of Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein, Dracula and the Werewolf. We watched it right around Halloween. Reading that skit about buying pcs, thats what its like when I talk to my parents who are pushing 80 and just dont get it!
yep, I got the "what's an LP" a while back from my kid.
I used to be indecisive. Now I'm not sure. I feel like I am diagonally parked in a parallel universe. 1968 400 convertible (Scarlet) 1976 T/A - 455 LE (No Burt) 1976 T/A New baby, starting full restoration. 1968 350 - 4 speed 'vert - 400 clone (the Beast!) 1968 350 convertible - Wife's car now- 400 clone (Aleutian Blue) (Blue Angel) 2008 Durango - DD 2008 GXP - New one from NH is AWESOME! 2017 Durango Citadel - Modern is nice! HEMI is amazing! 1998 Silverado Z71 - Father-daughter project 1968 400 coupe - R/A clone (Blue Pearl) (sold) 1967 326 convertible - Sold 1980 T/A SE Bandit - Sold
Our son Jeffrey (12) asked me the other day "what is a land line"? LOL Then we got to thinking about it and realized that we have not had a "land line/home phone" since he would remember. How crazy is that! LOL
Been around 15 years w/o the land line for me. I remember the rotary phone hanging on the wall growing up. It was a share line to. I remember picking it up and another person was talking. good ol' days.
still have a turn table (even though not using it much lately) and lots of 45s , 33s.....LOL...the biggest problemmtoday is when a turntable breaks , who can fix it, where to get parts...etc. but via the internet even thats easier now.
We now have server back ups of our engineering jobs that were done on computer, but when they were done we'd also back them up on disc to have a file copy. A couple of months ago a new engineer (30's) pulled an old reference job, he came to me with a 5" floppy and asked me what the heck is this and how do you get info off it. He said it wouldn't fit in his Disc drive...
After I stopped laughing, (so old almost pee'd myself though)I told him he was SOL since we no longer have a computer capable of running that style disc. He still had this baffled look on his face, like a kid seeing a 78 record for the first time.
Told him to check the server though as we'd backed everything up many years ago.
Wanting a Custom fit in an off the rack world.
I don't have time for a job, I just need the money.
A couple of months ago a new engineer (30's) pulled an old reference job, he came to me with a 5" floppy and asked me what the heck is this and how do you get info off it. He said it wouldn't fit in his Disc drive...
I still have many cases of these 5.25" discs around here from 20 years ago. Hope I never need them. I remember my old firm saying they supposedly were only good for 10 years though...
I used to be indecisive. Now I'm not sure. I feel like I am diagonally parked in a parallel universe. 1968 400 convertible (Scarlet) 1976 T/A - 455 LE (No Burt) 1976 T/A New baby, starting full restoration. 1968 350 - 4 speed 'vert - 400 clone (the Beast!) 1968 350 convertible - Wife's car now- 400 clone (Aleutian Blue) (Blue Angel) 2008 Durango - DD 2008 GXP - New one from NH is AWESOME! 2017 Durango Citadel - Modern is nice! HEMI is amazing! 1998 Silverado Z71 - Father-daughter project 1968 400 coupe - R/A clone (Blue Pearl) (sold) 1967 326 convertible - Sold 1980 T/A SE Bandit - Sold
You laugh, I have this theory that in 50 years the only media we have today that we will be able to read then is a phonograph. Just look at the floppy discs, the cassette and the 8 track. They are only 10 to 20 years out of date and it is next to impossible to read anything of them. Yet phonographs that are 70 years old are still readable.
I saw a tech show where they stored and played a movie clip back from a roughly 2" crystal cube by injecting light beams in and out of it. No moving parts at all. Pretty grainy replay, but the fact they did it means we're heading that way.
Molecular data storage or something like that.
Wanting a Custom fit in an off the rack world.
I don't have time for a job, I just need the money.
a 5" floppy ,, crap, I remember playing games( choplifter ) on a monochrome 10" screen on a apple IIc 32meg 16k cash 5"floppy 40meg hard drive. and was told the computer would never get much faster then that. that was lightspeed fast in the 80's
I still have a couple Atari 2600 consoles with working controllers and about 40 games and drag them out for the kids every so often. Still fun to play despite the Lego look.
My son asked me what the response would be if we could somehow take a PS3 and Assassin's Creed (a game with some rather good graphics) back to those days. I told him the computer would be confiscated and shipped to NASA and we'd be locked up as a national security risk for having way too much computing power.
Here's my first two, a Sinclair and then a "massively powerful" Columbia Data with twin 5" floppies, Hercules monochrome graphics (I upgraded the 128k mem board to 640k (built the board myself), thinking, I will never need another ounce of memory....LOL. Actually ran a primitive form of MS Flight Sim and some graphics software and autocad on it!!
I'll have to find my cellphone from about 1983-4. It is a fairly large metal box (about the size of a VCR) that fit in the trunk of the car. It is several components including a whole lot of big cables to connect between the tranceiver, antenna, power and the floor-mounted phone.
That one was compact compared to the ones we had in the company test cars during the trial of the first cellular system in the nation here in Chicago.
Wish I had my Dad's old calculator. My brother and I would play with it at the office. It was as big as a typewriter and took many secs to do a square root. Cost the co $25k back in the 60's.
I still have my 1st PC, IBM XT clone 8086 /w dual floppies and RGB monitor.
Got all my old cell phones as well!
Got quite the tech dump here!
Engine Test Stand Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwoxyUwptUcdqEb-o2ArqyiUaHW0G_C88 restoring my 1968 Firebird 400 HO convertible (Firedawg) 1965 Pontiac Catalina Safari Wagon 389 TriPower (Catwagon) 1999 JD AWS LX Lawn tractor 17hp (my daily driver) 2006 Sequoia 2017 Murano (wife's car) 202? Electric car 203? 68 Firebird /w electric engine 2007 Bayliner 175 runabout /w 3.0L Mercuiser__________________________________________________________
I still have my "old Calculator", I bought in the early 60s (slide rule), here at the office! many of the younger guys have no clue to what it is, or how it works...!
its the one you use to get 2 x 6 = approximately 11.9999999 on! LOL
Not sure if I still have it but we used to have a Beta "portable" video camera. Took it to Disneyland when my kids were young. Gave up after about an hour or two. It was too much trouble getting through turnstiles with the briefcase size recorder and power pack. Bedides that the camera looked like something ESPN would use today.
I still have my "old Calculator", I bought in the early 60s (slide rule), here at the office! many of the younger guys have no clue to what it is, or how it works...!
its the one you use to get 2 x 6 = approximately 11.9999999 on! LOL
Dad and my older sister used a slide rule at University. Brutal!
Engine Test Stand Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwoxyUwptUcdqEb-o2ArqyiUaHW0G_C88 restoring my 1968 Firebird 400 HO convertible (Firedawg) 1965 Pontiac Catalina Safari Wagon 389 TriPower (Catwagon) 1999 JD AWS LX Lawn tractor 17hp (my daily driver) 2006 Sequoia 2017 Murano (wife's car) 202? Electric car 203? 68 Firebird /w electric engine 2007 Bayliner 175 runabout /w 3.0L Mercuiser__________________________________________________________
Not sure if I still have it but we used to have a Beta "portable" video camera. Took it to Disneyland when my kids were young. Gave up after about an hour or two. It was too much trouble getting through turnstiles with the briefcase size recorder and power pack. Bedides that the camera looked like something ESPN would use today.
My Dad had a super8 camera. Pretty cool silent films. He filmed some old planes at an air show in slow motion. Came out great. He had a light system that when on top of the camera for poor light conditions. Must have been 2 feet long! lol
Engine Test Stand Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwoxyUwptUcdqEb-o2ArqyiUaHW0G_C88 restoring my 1968 Firebird 400 HO convertible (Firedawg) 1965 Pontiac Catalina Safari Wagon 389 TriPower (Catwagon) 1999 JD AWS LX Lawn tractor 17hp (my daily driver) 2006 Sequoia 2017 Murano (wife's car) 202? Electric car 203? 68 Firebird /w electric engine 2007 Bayliner 175 runabout /w 3.0L Mercuiser__________________________________________________________
I still have my "old Calculator", I bought in the early 60s (slide rule), here at the office! many of the younger guys have no clue to what it is, or how it works...!
WTH is a slide rule? Lp, 8 track, and VHS are things I've heard of or used. But a slide rule? I could google it, but I figured I'd ask here.
I still have my "old Calculator", I bought in the early 60s (slide rule), here at the office! many of the younger guys have no clue to what it is, or how it works...!
WTH is a slide rule? Lp, 8 track, and VHS are things I've heard of or used. But a slide rule? I could google it, but I figured I'd ask here.
LOL, well, its easier for me to show the Wiki, than explaining it...its an 'older calculator ' not using batteries...very handy, mostly came in two sizes a, 14" or a 7" version..the shorter for pocket use...it was mandatory equipment in HS an college up into the 60`s ,70s... the older versions were bamboo covered with ivory, later they were all plastic, mine are...my step dads older one was bamboo w ivory, kind of like piano keys...the bamboo was used because it was a 'stable' wood, didnt expand or contract much.
see even here I find people not knowing what it is....I still have mine at the office, but dont use it much anymore as the calculators are pretty sophisticated now
from the wiki abv:
Quote:
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s the slide rule was the symbol of the engineer's profession (in the same way that the stethoscope symbolizes the medical profession).[citation needed] German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun brought two 1930s vintage Nestler slide rules with him when he moved to the U.S. after World War II to work on the American space program. Throughout his life he never used any other pocket calculating devices; slide rules served him perfectly well for making quick estimates of rocket design parameters and other figures
Some engineering students and engineers carried ten-inch slide rules in belt holsters, and even into the mid 1970s this was a common sight on campuses. Students also might keep a ten- or twenty-inch rule for precision work at home or the office[14] while carrying a five-inch pocket slide rule around with them.
the ten and 5 inch sizes they refer to are the actual scales , I`m referring to the actual size of the entire instrument
heres a picture of my 7", the pocket size, normally you would carry in the breast pocket of shirt of coat..this is the front side, the make is a German Faber/Castell
For example, to calculate 3 x 2, the 1 on the top scale is moved to the 2 on the bottom scale. The answer, 6, is read off the bottom scale where 3 is on the top scale. In general, the 1 on the top is moved to a factor on the bottom, and the answer is read off the bottom where the other factor is on the top.
this is where I referred to the , in "them olden days", common joke about 2 x 6 = Approximately 11.9999999 or 12.0000001 lol