Comment by sizzzzlerz
Comment by sizzzzlerz 13 hours ago
In 1978, I was at my first engineering job after getting my BSEE. The company had set up a small lab that had variety of small computers, including a KIM-1. It also had an Apple II, a CROMEMCO computer, and a Pet, plus one or two others. At that time, I was only familiar with big iron, like an IBM 370, that I could only submit jobs to. As a result, I was in heaven. Here were computers that I could interact with directly, write programs (in Basic) for, and play games. I was in there every day at lunch or after work, sometimes staying until 2 or 3 in the morning. I messed around with the KIM a bit but found it unrefined and clunky to use as compared to the Apple or even the Pet.
Around 1980, while taking a "Saturday Morning Class" in Toronto - I discovered that there was a lab of ~24 Commodore PET 2001 (8K - blue phosphor, chiclet keyboards) at George Brown College. Spent as much time as I could there engaging with the early hacker community who all brought their shoeboxes of 5-1/4" floppies to trade programs. It was there that I had my first OMG moment when a much older kid showed me his floppy disk catalog program that could sort so much faster than mine did (he used quicksort).