[THIN] Re: OT: Microsoft Certified Architect Program

  • From: "Steve Greenberg" <steveg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 16:14:14 -0700

.and requires no power source!

 

Steve Greenberg

Thin Client Computing

34522 N. Scottsdale Rd D8453

Scottsdale, AZ 85262

(602) 432-8649

www.thinclient.net

steveg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx

 

  _____  

From: thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:thin-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Jim Kenzig http://ThinHelp.com
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2006 3:17 PM
To: thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [THIN] Re: OT: Microsoft Certified Architect Program

 

I remember this one crystal radio I built.. you had to run the antenna which
was a length of thin wire for about 50 feet I had the thing strung out the
window and half way around our back yard. LOL. And then you had this little
earphone to  hear it and it was barely audible, yet so cool cause you built
something that was picking up a signal from half way around the world. 
Jim



George Yobst <george.> wrote:

How many Heathkit projects did you build?

Me, about 20 as a youngster.  They were all over the house.
-George


 

On 6/23/06, Jim Kenzig http://ThinHelp.com <http://thinhelp.com/>  <wrote: 

I was blowing up resistors  by plugging them into electrical outlets long
before that! 

(don't try this one at home)
<http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/mesg/tsmileys2/03.gif>  Heck I learned
electronics on radios and TV's with Tubes in them. I remember the hum when I
fired those babies up. I used to take those giant speakers out of the radios
and hook them together and rock the house. (yeah I was a mobile Disk Jockey
for abut 10 years also). I still have all the old records. 

 

I started working on computers on Digital PDP11's. The drives in those
things were wack.  If they went bad the springs and mechanisms would explode
out every direction. I also was manager of a Radio Shack store when the
first PC's came out. Model 1, 2, 3's, and Color Computer and finally the
Tandy 1000 PC. Right in the thick of things...I could tell some stories. 


Jim

Nick Smith <> wrote:



Pah!

 

Just remembered that my first computer (As opposed to Mum's) was one we
built as a science project. Soldered the switches on, had little metal
copper plates running as circuits, and small laboratory light-bulbs to give
feedback to the user. 

 

The switches were binary ones and we had two rows of four I think.

 

This enabled us to flick switches to 0 or 1 and then the logic of the
circuits was such that the lights lit up to show the addition of the two
rows.

 

I presume we could only add to 30 altogether.

 

So in terms of the Yorkshireman competition;

 

No RAM

No  External Storage

No Machine code 

No silicon whatsoever

And a CPU (OK bundle of badly-wired switches) that was about 2 feet by 6
inches.

 

Beat tha', you Southern p*nsies.

 

Probably 78 or 79.

 

Nick

 

 

 

 

From: David Finch [mailto: <mailto:david.finch@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
david.finch@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: 23 June 2006 12:15
To: thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [THIN] Re: OT: Microsoft Certified Architect Program

 

OK, with my pedantic hat on, the certification is only given "Unlike other
IT certifications, this credential was built and is granted by industry
architects, as candidates must pass a rigorous review board with previously
certified architects." 

 

So how did the FIRST architect get certified? 

 

:-)

 

And to enter the "Four Yorkshiremen" competition

 

Lookshury!

 

My first system was a Microbee (Australian) Z80 with 32K RAM and a cassette
tape..that was about 1983 I think..It had BASIC, but I used it to teach
myself Assembler programming 

 

The first system I actually worked on with a Hard Drive had a 5Meg Disk
Platter that was nearly 2 foot across, and used tapes for long term storage.
That was in about 1986. 

 

And my mum and dad used to dance on our graves and sing Hallelujah!

 

But tell that to the kids of today and they won't believe you

 




-- 
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
George Yobst, Library Technology Analyst        phone: 503.723.4890
Library Information Network of Clackamas County   fax: 503.794.8238
16239 SE McLoughlin Blvd, Suite 208         web: http://www.lincc.lib.or.us
<http://www.lincc.lib.or.us/> 
Oak Grove, OR 97267-4654                  email: george.yobst@xxxxxxxxx
"...it is impossible for anyone to begin to learn
what he thinks he already knows."  - Epictetus 

 

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