Computer Interests
Many people whom I know have often asked me where I learned
so much about computers. Well, it’s a
long story, but I’ll try to shorten it for you.
I’ve had an interest in computers for many years now. In fact my first experience with computers
dates back to when I was only 18 years old.
Working in the military I met a man who worked with computers and
eventually bought his own. He taught me
a lot about computers in those days; taught me the basics of how they worked,
and taught me how they could be used to make a persons life easier in general.
This man and I became very good friends, and when he
eventually bought his own “home computer” (as they were called in those days),
the two of us would sit in front of it for hours on end. We would write programs together in BASIC
and save them to the state of the art cassette recorder/player that was built
in to his home computer. We would often
come up with program ideas of our own and jot them down on paper. Then, the first chance either on of us would
get, we would type our program in to his computer, save it on a tape, and then
run it. Of course, nothing ever ran
correctly the first time, and we would have to “debug” the program. It was intriguing, and always held my
interest as it still does today.
I had found computers so interesting that I wanted to buy my
own. Of course, they were very
expensive.  We’re talking about the 70’s
here, and even then a decent home computer ran you $800.00. For your hard earned money you got the
computer, a monitor, a cassette player to record your programs on, and anywhere
from 4K to 8K of memory. Yes I said “K”
for Kilobytes. For those who are not so
computer literate, the computer’s memory would hold from 4000 to 8000
characters of information.  Less
expensive computers gave you everything except a monitor, and were designed to
hook up to your television like a video game.  Popular computers at this time were Apple, Atari, Adam, Commodore,
and Tandy Radio Shack's Model I and Model II.
As time when on, my friend and I had gone separate
ways. With both of us being in the
military it was only a matter of time before we were sent different places. And although we have been separated, my
interest in computers has remained dominant in my life.
After about a year or so I had finished my obligation with
the military and became a civilian once again. Still having a major interest in computers and not enough money to buy
one, I simply by chance came across someone who was looking for help programming
his home computer. He had a Tandy Radio
Shack Model III with two 5 1/4 inch
disk drives, and an old Centronics dot matrix printer. He explained to me what he wanted his
computer to do, and I began writing programs for it. Of course this wasn’t easy for me at first, since I had learned
to program BASIC on a Commodore computer. The language was slightly different from what I was a custom to. In addition to this, he had floppy disk
drives, and I had only worked with cassette recorders for storing programs and
information.
With a little help from a local computer club we managed to
successfully write and retrieve data from the disks and I was on my way to writing
some good programs for him. I even
managed to purchase myself a small Radio Shack pocket computer with 4K of
memory. I wrote programs for it that
helped me write larger programs. Programs that would allow me to enter a list of string variables and then
allow me to add them together in to one record, and then give me the BASIC
program instruction to extract the information.
Over the years I
eventually got my own computer. In fact
I’ve had several. Everything from my
pocket computer, a Tandy 600 (one of the first portable computers), and Tandy
1000 HX computer, all the way to the Pentium class computer I have today.
My interests in computers have continued to expand. Today, although I no longer write programs,
I enjoy writing HTML and JAVA. I like
working with graphic software, productivity software and much more. I also enjoy repairing and building
computers, and have become a valuable source of help for many of my
friends. I even do volunteer work for
the Lenni Lenape Historical Society/Museum of Indian Culture. I currently author their web site, and I am
working on a new database for them. If
you would like to visit their web site go to www.lenape.org.
Well, that’s about it in a nutshell. I could go on for hours here, but this is
the just of it. After 25 years of
working with computers, I have a lot I could talk about.
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