[dba-Tech] What got you interested in technology? IT's rich and famous share their memories

Hans-Christian Andersen hans.andersen at phulse.com
Fri Nov 18 19:11:33 CST 2011


I envy you all. :) I was just a wee sprog in those days. My first exposure to programming was Logo and then the ball got rolling once I got my Amiga 500. But I still missed out on a lot before that.

- Hans

Sent from my iPhone

On 2011-11-18, at 8:33 AM, "Gustav Brock" <gustav at cactus.dk> wrote:

> Hi Arthur
> 
> In the early 90s I had the "pleasure" of writing for the local PR agency that was responsible for the Danish version of the IBM Helpware Magazine. As such I had to run OS/2 on my 486 pc with 16 MB of RAM to test different things. I liked OS/2 except that no applications were at hand and it had some corners. First at the later Warp version it became polished. 
> The task was a nightmare as the British PR agency responsible for Europe supplied the articles and these were loaded with errors I just couldn't ignore should the magazine be of any help for the common user. Thus, I often faced a rewrite rather than a translation.
> 
> I have never touched OS/2 since then except for one client who ran an OS/2 server - which basically was the Lan Manager server OS. The server was later replaced with an NT Server when version 3.5 came out.
> 
> Did you write about OS/2?
> 
> /gustav
> 
> 
>>>> fuller.artful at gmail.com 18-11-2011 15:33 >>>
> My first box was purchased on March 15, 1983. It was a Unitron, a clone of
> the Apple II. It came with Apple SOS and a CP/M card containing 48K of RAM.
> First thing I bought was a 16K expansion card. I used to run WordStar,
> Supercalc and dBASE II on it. It took about a month to become skilled at
> dBASE II and from then on I've been hooked on databases.
> 
> Speaking of OS/2, at that time I was a freelance journalist working for
> several magazines, writing mostly software reviews etc. IBM flew a bunch of
> journalists to Bletchley Park to unveil OS/2. Bletchley park initially
> became famous as the place where they cracked the Enigma machine.
> 
> A.
> 
> On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 8:43 AM, Gustav Brock <Gustav at cactus.dk> wrote:
> 
>> Hi Arthur
>> 
>> I'll share a part of my memory that for some unknown reason popped forward
>> the other day:
>> 
>> Do you remember the time when OS/2 was moving ahead, that a major issue to
>> discuss was if it would be able to launch in a machine equipped with 4 MB
>> of RAM?
>> I don't recall what made 4 MB a magic number but today, where 4 GB is
>> standard in main-level machines, it is hard to imagine that this parameter
>> could get any attention at all.
>> Perhaps it was cost - I guess 1 MB of RAM at those days equals 4 GB today.
>> Didn't Compaq manufacture a full-length(!) add-in board with 3 MB extended
>> RAM? At a fortune.
>> 
>> /gustav
> 
> 
> 
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