Enalys, to random
@Enalys@mastodon.zergy.net avatar

Multiplayer on PC back in the days:

  • Null modem direct connection.
  • Modem
  • LAN (IP or IPX)
  • On the interwebz.
  • Personal server, look, you can download the server software there!
  • Shared install, so you can do LAN games with your friends for free.

Now:

  • LAN? Na mate, internet only, and you have to use our own servers, btw they will shutdown next year for the next release. Don't forget to have a fiber optic connection or you will lag.

readbeanicecream, to tech
@readbeanicecream@kbin.social avatar

Chromebook buyers, beware: Amazon is still selling 13 unsupported models: Lack of updates leave these laptops vulnerable to attacks
https://www.techradar.com/computing/chromebooks/chromebook-buyers-beware-amazon-is-still-selling-13-unsupported-models

CIWS-30,

@readbeanicecream Are big box stores better? Like Best Buy, Walmart, Costco, etc.

JustCodeCulture, to histodons
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

CBI Image o' Day. 1962. Large console of Army's BRLESC (Ballistic Research Labs Electronic Scientific Computer), Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD, @ controls mathematical technicians Gail I. Beck Taylor & Lloyd W. Campbell.

The fastest computer 'til Control Data Corp. 6600 in 1964, which was widely regarded as the start of supercomputing

@histodons @commodon

karlauerbach,
@karlauerbach@sfba.social avatar

@JustCodeCulture @histodons @commodon Ah, the 6600 - We had 'em at UC Berkeley. The curse of doom would land on anyone who wrote a program that, down at the machine language level, had a jump to self. That would cause the cores holding that instruction to get red hot and eventually fail.

(I was present at the decommissioning of what I believe was the last 7600 at the Livermore Labs.)

Our computer room at SDC once held consoles that looked sort of like the one in the photo - but long rather than tall - from the SAGE Q7 and Q32 computers.

JustCodeCulture, to histodons
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

CBI Image of the day: Two RESISTORS (Radically Emphatic Students Interested in Science Technology or Research Studies), one of the first computer clubs for science-minded students between the ages of 10 & 17, are shown working in their 'computer barn'
NJ ca. late 1960s.

@histodons @sociology

davefischer,
@davefischer@hachyderm.io avatar

@JustCodeCulture @histodons @sociology The computer in the background on the right is a PB-250, 22-bit delay-line memory minicomputer from 1960 or so. It's a bit buried, but the hardcopy terminal in the foreground is probably a Flexowriter.

appassionato, to bookstodon
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

Zeros + Ones: Digital Women + the New Technoculture

Not since The Female Eunuch has there been a book so radical in its scope, so persuasive in its detail, so exhilarating in its polemical energy. Beginning with Ada Lovelace and her unheralded contributions to Charles Babbage and his development of the Difference Engine, Sadie Plant traces the critical contributions women have made to the progress of computing.

@bookstodon



JustCodeCulture, to sociology
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

From the CBI Archives.
UCLA CS Prof Leonard Kleinrock, successfully transmitted the first message over ARPANET from UCLA to Stanford. The group intended to transmit the word “LOGIN,” but the system crashed just after they had sent the first two letters.

@histodons @sociology

mraharrison, to edutooters
@mraharrison@mstdn.social avatar

120 years ago, a stage illusionist decided to take a famous scientist down a peg or two, and in the process became arguably the first white-hat hacker. This story is taken from my books How to Teach Computer Science (for computing teachers) and How to Learn Computer Science (for computing students)... Click for more...
http://httcs.online/2023/04/30/the-first-white-hat-hacker/
@edutooters

JustCodeCulture, to sociology
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

CBI Image of the Day:

The IBM 5100, one of the first portable computers, combined a typewriter-like electronic keyboard, a 10-keypad for data entry, a 1024-character display, a processing unit with up to 64K positions of main storage, and a tape cartridge for storing data. (1975).

@histodons
@sociology

bibliolater, to science
@bibliolater@qoto.org avatar

Dafydd Owen-Newns Joshua Robertson Matěj Hejda Antonio Hurtado.. Photonic Spiking Neural Networks with Highly Efficient Training Protocols for Ultrafast Neuromorphic Computing Systems. Intell Comput. 2023:2;0031. DOI: https://doi.org/10.34133/icomputing.0031 @science

JustCodeCulture, to anthropology
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

CBI Image of the Day:

Nancy Gradwell, left, and Bradley Johnson, 8th graders at Philadelphia's Wagner Jr High, listen intently as Mrs, Phyllis Eggleston,
mathematics teacher, explains how to use an IBM 1050 terminal to help solve homework problems, 1966.

@histodons
@sociology
@anthropology

JustCodeCulture, to histodons
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

CBI Image of the Day!

CBI Image of the Day: Assembly of the Control Data Corporation series 3000, working with the wiring, and wiring harnesses, at the McGill Building manufacturing building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1962.


@histodons

JustCodeCulture, to histodons
@JustCodeCulture@mastodon.social avatar

CBI Image of the Day.

CBI Image of the Day: A computer technician standing next to a large memory disk, which is so highly polished that her image is prominently reflected, ca. 1971.

@histodons

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