• TS 1000

    From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to All on Saturday, March 02, 2019 11:06:18
    Hey there..am a fan of many classic computers. My current phone that
    I am using to write this.. the Galaxy Emerge J3 is by definition a
    classic computer now. :)
    Well no longer manufactured.

    Anyway,m what is a TS 1000?
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  • From Kurt Weiske@1:218/700 to GREG GOODWIN on Saturday, March 02, 2019 11:10:52
    Re: TS 1000
    By: GREG GOODWIN to All on Sat Mar 02 2019 11:06 am

    Anyway,m what is a TS 1000?

    Timex/Sinclair 1000.

    It was a computer that ran BASIC, hooked into a TV, and cost $99. I had one with the whopping 16 kilobyte expansion pack.
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  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Kurt Weiske on Sunday, March 03, 2019 13:31:00
    On 03-02-19 11:10, Kurt Weiske wrote to GREG GOODWIN <=-

    Re: TS 1000
    By: GREG GOODWIN to All on Sat Mar 02 2019 11:06 am

    Anyway,m what is a TS 1000?

    Timex/Sinclair 1000.

    It was a computer that ran BASIC, hooked into a TV, and cost $99. I had one with the whopping 16 kilobyte expansion pack.

    Sounds a bit like a Dick Smith VZ-200, which was sold in Australia in the 1980s. This was a Z80 based system, if I recall.
    ... Brecht's Hierarchy of Needs: Grub first, then ethics.
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Kurt Weiske on Saturday, April 13, 2019 23:14:58
    Hello Kurt,

    02 Mar 19 11:10 at you wrote to GREG GOODWIN:

    Timex/Sinclair 1000.

    It was a computer that ran BASIC, hooked into a TV, and cost $99. I
    had one with the whopping 16 kilobyte expansion pack.

    Late reply but I have two T/S 1000s both with the 16K expansion pack. One of the packs I have held on to for 35 years now. :) Both computers work also.

    Later,
    Sean

    ... Without fools there would be no wisdom.
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    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Kurt Weiske on Sunday, April 14, 2019 08:17:28
    16 K ? Wow, what did you do with all thaat ram?
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to GREG GOODWIN on Sunday, April 14, 2019 19:51:51
    GREG GOODWIN wrote to Kurt Weiske <=-

    16 K ? Wow, what did you do with all thaat ram?

    You would be amazed at what one could do with that 16K. Programmers these
    days would crap their pants because of the inhernet laziness in programming now. I have a friend who worked for Microsoft on Visual C and told me that only 10% of Microsoft's APIs are used in any given program.

    Later,
    Sean


    ... My other computer is a Timex/Sinclair 1000.
    --- MultiMail/Win
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From KrUpTiOn@1:226/16 to GREG GOODWIN on Tuesday, April 16, 2019 07:41:51

    On Apr 15th 12:07 am GREG GOODWIN said...
    16 K ? Wow, what did you do with all thaat ram?



    *Fell out of chair laughing!!*

    Those were some GREAT days!



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  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Sean Dennis on Monday, May 13, 2019 04:46:12
    I love what you said about programming on 16k. Not to pull out the
    beards and false teeth but my Dad's first computer was the Sol Terminal
    20 which had... 2... K of ram. :D So the first 1K was used for
    system operations and the 2nd K was used for programs and what not that
    you wanted to run.

    In time Dad got the Sol up to 48K and all was amazing. But even
    without all that the computer had functionality and purpose.
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  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to KrUpTiOn on Monday, May 13, 2019 04:48:26
    *Fell out of chair laughing!!*

    Those were some GREAT days!

    Heh, yeh those were great days. :D For me I spent them on a Atari
    400 that was upgraded from 16k to 48k. But even at 16k with cassette
    drive the Atari 400 could do some cool things. Luckily thanks to my
    Dad (as I was 12) I didn't have to stay in the 16K world long.
    And got a floppy drive.

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  • From Kurt Weiske@1:218/700 to GREG GOODWIN on Monday, May 13, 2019 07:06:00
    GREG GOODWIN wrote to Sean Dennis <=-

    I love what you said about programming on 16k. Not to pull out the
    beards and false teeth but my Dad's first computer was the Sol Terminal
    20 which had... 2... K of ram. :D

    Yep, I used a Timex Sinclair 1000 with 1K of RAM, before buying the
    16k expansion. When you have to think about every character, every
    variable you use, programing takes on a whole different light.

    Later on, I programmed on 32K and 48K Commodores and felt like I could
    write anything.



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  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/17 to GREG GOODWIN on Wednesday, April 17, 2019 00:42:14
    Re: TS 1000
    By: GREG GOODWIN to Kurt Weiske on Sun Apr 14 2019 08:17 am

    16 K ? Wow, what did you do with all thaat ram?

    haha!! MASSIVE!
    Regards,
    KrUpTiOn
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  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Kurt Weiske on Friday, May 24, 2019 10:51:08
    The Timex, I think I remember that computer.

    Probably first computer I saw with a chiclet keyboard, and even with my
    Atari 400 membrane keyboard I was unimpressed. :P

    So what was your favorite game and other programs on it?
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  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Charles Stephenson on Friday, May 24, 2019 10:51:50
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!
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  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/17 to GREG GOODWIN on Friday, May 24, 2019 20:50:31
    Re: TS 1000
    By: GREG GOODWIN to Charles Stephenson on Fri May 24 2019 10:51 am

    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!

    LMAO! GREAT point Sherlock! ;)
    Regards,
    KrUpTiOn
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  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to GREG GOODWIN on Friday, May 24, 2019 16:19:16
    GREG GOODWIN spoke thus to Charles Stephenson <=-

    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!

    especially with the cost of ram back then. :)



    Live long and prosper!
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    `-------'

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  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to GREG GOODWIN on Monday, May 27, 2019 21:51:08

    On May 24th 8:32 pm GREG GOODWIN said...
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!




    hahaha!!! You made me spit out my drink from laughing!!

    16k back then... cost like a kidney!!



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  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Gaylen Hintz on Monday, May 27, 2019 21:58:33

    On May 25th 12:30 am Gaylen Hintz said...
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!

    especially with the cost of ram back then. :)





    RIGHT! I just wrote a post saying the same thing! first Computer/Desktop I actually BOUGHT was a Tandy 1000 SL, I was in High School. I had a summer job and I saved as much as I could so I could buy my own PC instead of sharing my Dad's! This guy in a rich area, who used to call my BBS, gave me a GREAT "deal' on a used Tandy! He was upgrading and let me have his old one for 1500! It was only like 3 years old, and I forgot, but I knew it was worth way more than that! I felt like I hit the lottory! I went to his house to pick it up, and I saw the NEW PC he just bought, If I remember, he paid a little over 3000 for it! Wish I could remember the name, but it wasn't Tandy and it was all black and SOOO pretty! He let me play around with it for a bit, Man...I wanted to move in, and I wanted him to adopt me!! <G> It was the first time I saw Windows in action!

    When I finally left (It was over hr later!) I got to setting up my new PC, and my 'new' PC was faster than my dad's, but slower than the guy I bought it from,
    That's when I got into upgrading/overclocking!

    ...man... PC'ing back then was so great....



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  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Charles Stephenson on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 16:40:15
    Charles Stephenson spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-



    especially with the cost of ram back then. :)

    RIGHT! I just wrote a post saying the same thing! first
    Computer/Desktop I actually BOUGHT was a Tandy 1000 SL, I was in High

    Hmmm, started out with a mighty MC10 from Radio Shak, worked my way up to a Color computer 1 and then finally 3. Ran a unix clone OS on that and even had a dialup
    board on that one. Great fun those days... multi user multi tasking environment on an 8 bit machine. :)


    felt like I hit the lottory! I went to his house to pick it up, and I
    saw the NEW PC he just bought, If I remember, he paid a little over
    3000 for it! Wish I could remember the name, but it wasn't Tandy and it was all black and SOOO pretty! He let me play around with it for a bit, Man...I wanted to move in, and I wanted him to adopt me!! <G> It was
    the first time I saw Windows in action!

    heheheh, was pretty amazing way back in the day when you didn't have to use the command prompt for everything.

    When I finally left (It was over hr later!) I got to setting up my new
    PC, and my 'new' PC was faster than my dad's, but slower than the guy I bought it from, That's when I got into upgrading/overclocking!

    Yep.. those were the days when you had to pretty much know what you were doing no plug and play with those puters. :)

    ...man... PC'ing back then was so great....

    No argument there.. did your own programming too?


    ... RAM = Rarely Adequate Memory
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Gaylen Hintz on Tuesday, May 28, 2019 20:33:21

    On May 28th 5:21 pm Gaylen Hintz said...
    Computer/Desktop I actually BOUGHT was a Tandy 1000 SL, I was in High

    Hmmm, started out with a mighty MC10 from Radio Shak, worked my way up to a Color computer 1 and then finally 3. Ran a unix clone OS on that and even had a dialup board on that one. Great fun those days... multi user multi tasking environment on an 8 bit machine. :)


    MC10?? My old age is setting in! :( I can't remember what those were...


    On May 28th 5:21 pm Gaylen Hintz said...
    the first time I saw Windows in action!

    heheheh, was pretty amazing way back in the day when you didn't have to use the command prompt for everything.



    Right! I did like using the command prompt, made computing a little more personal! When I saw Linux for the first time, it made it easier to migrate to it YEARS ago, just because of the command prompt! Before that I fell in love with OS/2!


    On May 28th 5:21 pm Gaylen Hintz said...
    doing no plug and play with those puters. :)



    Yeah, and when 'plug n play' did come around, it was a *ITCH in OS/2! :\


    On May 28th 5:21 pm Gaylen Hintz said...

    No argument there.. did your own programming too?



    I dilly dallied in BASIC/QB, when I got into BBSing, I got into seeing how big and smart I could make my batch file! hehe....

    The good ole days!



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  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Charles Stephenson on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 01:23:40
    Charles Stephenson spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    CS> MC10?? My old age is setting in! :( I can't remember what those were...

    It was a Radio Shak computer rughly about the size of a timex sinclair computer with a chicklet keyboard and did run color basic programs. Cassette based load and save for
    your programs but was a great little puter. :)

    Right! I did like using the command prompt, made computing a little
    more personal! When I saw Linux for the first time, it made it easier
    to migrate to it YEARS ago, just because of the command prompt! Before that I fell in love with OS/2!

    Unhunh, I do miss some of those old 8 bit utilities that ran from the command proompt. Had a nice little program to display a directory. DDir.exe was the name
    but having upped to windows 10 64 bit mode.... don't work no more. :(

    Yeah, and when 'plug n play' did come around, it was a *ITCH in OS/2!
    :\

    hahahah, I'll bet and of course there was little documentation on how to get some
    of that stuff to play nice with os/2

    I dilly dallied in BASIC/QB, when I got into BBSing, I got into seeing
    how big and smart I could make my batch file! hehe....

    The good ole days!

    yep, setting up batch files to automate front door with bunches of games, mail tossers tic processors and having 10 downlinks was a bit of a challenge so I do know where
    you're comming from. :)

    ... When two Englishmen meet their first talk is of the weather.
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Charles Stephenson on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 19:39:00
    On 05-28-19 20:33, Charles Stephenson wrote to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    Right! I did like using the command prompt, made computing a little
    more personal! When I saw Linux for the first time, it made it easier
    to migrate to it YEARS ago, just because of the command prompt! Before that I fell in love with OS/2!

    I +still_ use the command prompt for a lot of things. Sometimes, it's simply the best tool for the job. :)


    ... Can you hear me?
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  • From Dave Drum@1:18/200 to Gaylen Hintz on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 08:31:23
    Gaylen Hintz wrote to Charles Stephenson <=-

    Charles Stephenson spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    especially with the cost of ram back then. :)

    RIGHT! I just wrote a post saying the same thing! first
    Computer/Desktop I actually BOUGHT was a Tandy 1000 SL, I was in High

    Hmmm, started out with a mighty MC10 from Radio Shak, worked my way up
    to a Color computer 1 and then finally 3. Ran a unix clone OS on that
    and even had a dialup board on that one. Great fun those days...
    multi user multi tasking environment on an 8 bit machine. :)

    I built my first confuser from a sandwich baggie of parts and mimeographed instructions that were sold as a "kit" in the back pages of Mechanix Illustrated magazine. There was no storage and input was via dip switches.

    First "store bought" item was a TRaSh-80 Model 1 (level 2 dos) with the
    16K memory expansion already installed. At the time if one owned stock
    in Tandy there was a spiffy discount. So, I went to Shearson-Lehman and
    bought 10 shares. Saved the cost of those shares off the price of the
    'puter. I remember pounding in the basic programs from the back of BYTE, Creative Computing and .info. And logging on to my first local BBS (home
    brewed on a Burroughs Mini-Frame) a multi-line affair which would get
    me connected to (gasp) usenet. And trying to view 80 column porn on a
    40 column screen. Bv)=

    Which prompted my next computer purchase - a PET 8032 ... still a
    monochrome, cassette storage machine with a lordly 32K of ram and an
    80 column display. It also had a real ieee printer port and supported
    a disc drive (only $395).

    Ahhhhh .... the best thing about the good old days is that they're in
    the rear view mirror.

    ... Amiga made it possible. Commodore made it dead.
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Charles Stephenson on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 16:01:21
    Charles Stephenson wrote to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    MC10?? My old age is setting in! :( I can't remember what those were...

    It was a minature version of the TRS-80 Color Computer.

    Later,
    Sean

    --- MultiMail/Win
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Dave Drum on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 17:34:28
    Dave Drum spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    I built my first confuser from a sandwich baggie of parts and
    mimeographed instructions that were sold as a "kit" in the back pages
    of Mechanix Illustrated magazine. There was no storage and input was
    via dip switches.

    You really were a hearty soul :) With no storage did you have to leave
    it run to maintain whatever program you were running or did you have to reprogram it evry time?

    First "store bought" item was a TRaSh-80 Model 1 (level 2 dos) with the 16K memory expansion already installed. At the time if one owned stock

    Hmmm those seem popular to some nostalgic collectors these days. :)

    DD> 'puter. I remember pounding in the basic programs from the back of
    BYTE, Creative Computing and .info. And logging on to my first local

    hehehe never tried those but as a proud Coco computer owner and a subscription
    to Rainbow magazine.... spent hours pounding in those programs myself. I even created a few programs of my own and sold a couple of them to Tom Mix software.

    BBS (home brewed on a Burroughs Mini-Frame) a multi-line affair which
    would get me connected to (gasp) usenet. And trying to view 80 column
    porn on a 40 column screen. Bv)=

    hehehehehe, that must have been quite a trick. <g>

    Which prompted my next computer purchase - a PET 8032 ... still a monochrome, cassette storage machine with a lordly 32K of ram and an
    80 column display. It also had a real ieee printer port and supported
    a disc drive (only $395).

    wow, that was a bargain back in those days. :)

    Ahhhhh .... the best thing about the good old days is that they're in
    the rear view mirror.

    ah come on now, just think how much fun you had learning all this stuff and it
    carries on to today. Imagine growing up and getting into computing with only the point and click interface. :)

    ... All warranties expire upon payment of invoice.
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Sean Dennis on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 23:36:27


    On May 29th 7:33 pm Sean Dennis said...

    It was a minature version of the TRS-80 Color Computer.



    I remember when I first laid eyes on a TRS-80, I thought that thing was magic! But I was in grade/middle school at the time! :)



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    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Gaylen Hintz on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 23:31:28

    On May 29th 8:20 am Gaylen Hintz said...
    were...

    It was a Radio Shak computer rughly about the size of a timex sinclair computer with a chicklet keyboard and did run color basic programs. Cassette based load and save for your programs but was a great little puter. :)


    Ahh yeah I remember those! My father had one! I thought those were so cool. Didn't it have a built-in modem too?


    On May 29th 8:20 am Gaylen Hintz said...
    DDir.exe was the name but having upped to windows 10 64 bit mode.... don't work no more. :(


    Yeah, there were alot of cool command line functions I miss. I loved reading the monthy PC Mag (there was a DOS mag too we got montly) showing 'new' useful commands. Giving you stuff to your config.sys and autexec.bat was awesome!

    *sigh*



    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Tony Langdon on Wednesday, May 29, 2019 23:33:39

    On May 29th 8:20 am Tony Langdon said...

    I +still_ use the command prompt for a lot of things. Sometimes, it's simply the best tool for the job. :)


    That was why I LOVE Linux. I've been using it for over 15 years and I'm still learning stuff that it can do! I haven't had a need to use Windows in quite awhile, thank the heavens! :)



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    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Dave Drum@1:229/452 to Gaylen Hintz on Thursday, May 30, 2019 12:01:02
    Gaylen Hintz wrote to Dave Drum <=-

    BBS (home brewed on a Burroughs Mini-Frame) a multi-line affair which would get me connected to (gasp) usenet. And trying to view 80 column
    porn on a 40 column screen. Bv)=

    hehehehehe, that must have been quite a trick. <g>

    Which prompted my next computer purchase - a PET 8032 ... still a monochrome, cassette storage machine with a lordly 32K of ram and an
    80 column display. It also had a real ieee printer port and supported
    a disc drive (only $395).

    wow, that was a bargain back in those days. :)

    Actually it was about standard (in my area). For $100 more you could get
    a dual floppy drive and have both a:/ and b:/ drives. And you had a
    choice of 8" or 5.25" drives. Thannk providence I didn't go with the 8"
    guys. They were fading fast, even thsn.

    Ahhhhh .... the best thing about the good old days is that they're in
    the rear view mirror.

    ah come on now, just think how much fun you had learning all this
    stuff and it carries on to today. Imagine growing up and getting
    into computing with only the point and click interface. :)

    Or thinking you *HAVE* tobe tethered to your $mart-a$$ phone. Bv(=

    Helping my brother clean out a basement storage space the other day I
    came across a Coleco Adam I had bought his daughters in an attempt to
    wean them away from Q*Bert and Donkey Kong to more productive pursuits.

    HAH! As if. Bv)=
    ... MS-DOS=suit & tie, Macintosh=cool shades, Amiga=high heels & leather

    --- EzyBlueWave V3.00 01FB001F
    * Origin: Tiny's BBS - telnet://tinysbbs.com:3023 (1:229/452)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Charles Stephenson on Friday, May 31, 2019 13:15:00
    On 05-29-19 23:33, Charles Stephenson wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    That was why I LOVE Linux. I've been using it for over 15 years and I'm still learning stuff that it can do! I haven't had a need to use
    Windows in quite awhile, thank the heavens! :)

    You're not going to get any argument from me. I like that the command line is so accessible and powerful in Linux. That's one part of the OS I make heavy use of, especially for scripting automated tasks.


    ... Too many people have the government confused with their parents.
    === MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    --- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux
    * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:19/33 to Sean Dennis on Thursday, May 30, 2019 17:15:00
    Sean Dennis spoke thus to Charles Stephenson <=-

    Charles Stephenson wrote to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    MC10?? My old age is setting in! :( I can't remember what those were...

    It was a minature version of the TRS-80 Color Computer.

    You sir, are absolutely correct. I even upgraded with the 16k memory expansion ,
    nice little foot print but I hated the chicklet keyboard. :)


    ... An unbiased opinion is always absolutely valueless.
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  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Charles Stephenson on Thursday, May 30, 2019 23:55:01
    Charles Stephenson spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    It was a Radio Shak computer roughly about the size of a timex sinclair computer with a chicklet keyboard and did run color basic programs.

    Ahh yeah I remember those! My father had one! I thought those were so cool. Didn't it have a built-in modem too?

    No, that particular model didn't nor did any of the color computer from
    radio shak. It wasn't until I had a coco3 with what was called a multipak interface was an rs32 port available to hook into a Hayes combatable modem.

    Yeah, there were alot of cool command line functions I miss. I loved

    ditto

    reading the monthy PC Mag (there was a DOS mag too we got montly)
    showing 'new' useful commands. Giving you stuff to your config.sys and autexec.bat was awesome!

    Ah yes, the batch programming.. you really could automate a bunch of stuff with those batch scripts. Of course , one little glitch in the syntax and you could mess a bunch of stuff up as well. :)

    ... 24 hours in a day, 24 beers in a case...HMMMM
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Dave Drum on Friday, May 31, 2019 00:02:19
    Dave Drum spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-


    wow, that was a bargain back in those days. :)

    Actually it was about standard (in my area). For $100 more you could
    get a dual floppy drive and have both a:/ and b:/ drives. And you had a choice of 8" or 5.25" drives. Thannk providence I didn't go with the 8" guys. They were fading fast, even thsn.

    hehehehe, yep... my color computer took the 5 1/5 inch floppies <thank goodness>
    though single sided double density. Added the os/9 operating system, compiled device
    drivers for the 3 1/2 floppies and I was in hog heaven.

    ah come on now, just think how much fun you had learning all this
    stuff and it carries on to today. Imagine growing up and getting
    into computing with only the point and click interface. :)

    Or thinking you *HAVE* tobe tethered to your $mart-a$$ phone. Bv(=

    bwahahahahah yeah... that too. :)

    Helping my brother clean out a basement storage space the other day I
    came across a Coleco Adam I had bought his daughters in an attempt to
    wean them away from Q*Bert and Donkey Kong to more productive pursuits.

    hehehehe, with the Ziglog Z80 chip? Initial price back in 1983 at $600 was quite an investment wasn't it. :)

    ... All government is theft, some just steal less
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Dave Drum@1:229/452 to Gaylen Hintz on Friday, May 31, 2019 11:44:58
    Gaylen Hintz wrote to Dave Drum <=-

    wow, that was a bargain back in those days. :)

    Actually it was about standard (in my area). For $100 more you could
    get a dual floppy drive and have both a:/ and b:/ drives. And you had a choice of 8" or 5.25" drives. Thannk providence I didn't go with the 8" guys. They were fading fast, even then.

    hehehehe, yep... my color computer took the 5 1/5 inch floppies <thank goodness>
    though single sided double density. Added the os/9 operating system, compiled device
    drivers for the 3 1/2 floppies and I was in hog heaven.

    I didn't get into 3.5" floppies until I got my Amiga. I just got one of
    those notcher deals and made "flippies" out of my 5.25" floppies.

    Now the only 3.5" floppy I have left is the promo Amiga calculator that
    Commode Door put out back when I owned my computer store. They sold like hotcakes as stocking stuffers (it was around Xmas). Thank providence I
    kept one for myself. Still works, too. Here's a link to an IBM version
    of the item .... https://tinyurl.com/I-FLOPPY-BM

    ah come on now, just think how much fun you had learning all this
    stuff and it carries on to today. Imagine growing up and getting
    into computing with only the point and click interface. :)

    Or thinking you *HAVE* to be tethered to your $mart-a$$ phone. Bv(=

    bwahahahahah yeah... that too. :)

    Helping my brother clean out a basement storage space the other day I
    came across a Coleco Adam I had bought his daughters in an attempt to
    wean them away from Q*Bert and Donkey Kong to more productive pursuits.

    hehehehe, with the Ziglog Z80 chip? Initial price back in 1983 at
    $600 was quite an investment wasn't it. :)

    Didn't pay near that. I am not an "early adopter" and when the Adam
    didn't "fly off the shelves" dealers - most of whom were toy/game stores
    who didn't understand computers - cut prices dramatically to make room
    for game consoles. Bv)=

    ... California is a fine place to live - if you happen to be an orange.

    --- EzyBlueWave V3.00 01FB001F
    * Origin: Tiny's BBS - telnet://tinysbbs.com:3023 (1:229/452)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Dave Drum on Friday, May 31, 2019 16:32:47
    Dave Drum spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-


    hehehehe, yep... my color computer took the 5 1/5 inch floppies <thank goodness>
    though single sided double density. Added the os/9 operating system, compiled device
    drivers for the 3 1/2 floppies and I was in hog heaven.

    I didn't get into 3.5" floppies until I got my Amiga. I just got one of those notcher deals and made "flippies" out of my 5.25" floppies.

    heheheh, yeah I forgot about that. Instantly doubled your drive space. :)


    Now the only 3.5" floppy I have left is the promo Amiga calculator that Commode Door put out back when I owned my computer store. They sold

    Ok, you lost me... Amiga calulator? Exactly what was that?

    GH> hehehehe, with the Ziglog Z80 chip? Initial price back in 1983 at
    $600 was quite an investment wasn't it. :)

    Didn't pay near that. I am not an "early adopter" and when the Adam
    didn't "fly off the shelves" dealers - most of whom were toy/game
    stores who didn't understand computers - cut prices dramatically to
    make room for game consoles. Bv)=

    Ah I see. Personal computing was in it's infancy. Well I guess we all have some not so favorite memories of that time when IBM was the "premier" system. :)

    ... Confucius say: He who pass gas in church must sit in own pew

    Greeting from
    The Curmudgeon
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Charles Stephenson on Sunday, June 02, 2019 21:30:28
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!

    LMAO! GREAT point Sherlock! ;)

    Indeed my dear Watson!! The Game is a foot... and even better, can now
    load where we did not have the ram before....
    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to GAYLEN HINTZ on Sunday, June 02, 2019 21:32:04
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!

    especially with the cost of ram back then. :)



    Live long and prosper!
    _____..---======+*+=======---.._____
    ___________________ __,-='=====____ ============== _____=====`=
    (.__________________I__) - _-=_/ `------=+=-------'
    / /__...---==='---+---_' --==< The Curmudgeon >==--
    '----'---.___ - _ = _.-'
    `-------'

    ... Always proofread carefully to see if you any words out.

    Oh that is pretty. Enterprise D design really grew on me. :)
    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Charles Stephenson on Sunday, June 02, 2019 21:33:52
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!!




    hahaha!!! You made me spit out my drink from laughing!!

    16k back then... cost like a kidney!!

    Hahaha... you laughing got me laughing. Haven't enjoyed a good BBS
    chat like this in a long time.

    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Gaylen Hintz on Sunday, June 02, 2019 19:29:49
    On May 31st 12:52 am Gaylen Hintz said...

    No, that particular model didn't nor did any of the color computer from radio shak. It wasn't until I had a coco3 with what was called a multipak interface was an rs32 port available to hook into a Hayes combatable modem.


    My Dad kept up with all the 'new' stuff that came out due to his business/employment. I got to look and play with a few, albiet for a short time, but that groomed me to my love of Tech!


    On May 31st 12:52 am Gaylen Hintz said...
    autexec.bat was awesome!

    Ah yes, the batch programming.. you really could automate a bunch of stuff with those batch scripts. Of course , one little glitch in the syntax and you could mess a bunch of stuff up as well. :)


    Right! a 'cough' while typing into a batch file could cause ALOT of issues in a
    large batch! Been there done that



    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Tony Langdon on Sunday, June 02, 2019 19:26:31
    On May 31st 12:52 am Tony Langdon said...
    still learning stuff that it can do! I haven't had a need to use
    Windows in quite awhile, thank the heavens! :)


    I haven't either! I used windows when I wanted to cast Comcast/Spectrum (within
    Google Chrome) to my Chromcast. Spectrum Cable doesn't like ANYthing to do with
    linux. I've made a few posts about it to them. Kinda messed up.


    You're not going to get any argument from me. I like that the command
    line is so accessible and powerful in Linux. That's one part of the OS I make heavy use of, especially for scripting automated tasks.



    It's even better because it's always evolving...





    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Charles Stephenson on Tuesday, June 04, 2019 18:48:00
    On 06-02-19 19:26, Charles Stephenson wrote to Tony Langdon <=-


    On May 31st 12:52 am Tony Langdon said...
    still learning stuff that it can do! I haven't had a need to use
    Windows in quite awhile, thank the heavens! :)


    I haven't either! I used windows when I wanted to cast Comcast/Spectrum (within Google Chrome) to my Chromcast. Spectrum Cable doesn't like ANYthing to do with linux. I've made a few posts about it to them.
    Kinda messed up.

    I think that was misquoted. :) I still do use dome Windows, alongside Linux.
    )


    You're not going to get any argument from me. I like that the command line is so accessible and powerful in Linux. That's one part of the OS I make heavy use of, especially for scripting automated tasks.



    It's even better because it's always evolving...

    That can be good or bad, sometimes they tool around with things for no good reason. :)


    ... The first rule of air combat is to see the other guy first.
    === MultiMail/Win32 v0.49
    --- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux
    * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to GREG GOODWIN on Tuesday, June 04, 2019 17:46:23
    GREG GOODWIN spoke thus to GAYLEN HINTZ <=-



    Live long and prosper!
    _____..---======+*+=======---.._____
    ___________________ __,-='=====____ ============== _____=====`=
    (.__________________I__) - _-=_/ `------=+=-------'
    / /__...---==='---+---_' --==< The Curmudgeon >==--
    '----'---.___ - _ = _.-'
    `-------'

    ... Always proofread carefully to see if you any words out.

    Oh that is pretty. Enterprise D design really grew on me. :)

    I tend to agree.. she was a pretty ship and that's for sure. Did you by any chance happen to catch the Strar Trek Discovery show?

    ... We've sent many expiditions into Vorlon space. None have returned.

    Greeting from
    The Curmudgeon
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Charles Stephenson on Tuesday, June 04, 2019 18:09:38
    Charles Stephenson spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    My Dad kept up with all the 'new' stuff that came out due to his business/employment. I got to look and play with a few, albiet for a short time, but that groomed me to my love of Tech!

    Oh I"m sure, I know there were some real advancements for the times , probably
    primitive compared to the stuff these days but back then... the wow factor was something else. :) Computer and processor speeds doubled every other year :)


    Ah yes, the batch programming.. you really could automate a bunch of stuff with those batch scripts. Of course , one little glitch in the syntax and you could mess a bunch of stuff up as well. :)


    Right! a 'cough' while typing into a batch file could cause ALOT of
    issues in a large batch! Been there done that

    hahahaha, voice of experience I can tell. Yeah but when you run a board and you've set up a batch file to delete certain log files every night and you make
    a typo and delete a whole database.... good think I had a recent backup. :)

    SYNTAX ERROR: "Hi, I'd like to buy a computer, and money is no object."

    Greeting from
    The Curmudgeon
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to GREG GOODWIN on Friday, June 14, 2019 17:13:38
    On Jun 2nd 11:31 pm GREG GOODWIN said...
    16K is 16 times the ram if you had 1K of ram. MADNESS!!! ->
    LMAO! GREAT point Sherlock! ;) Indeed my dear Watson!! The Game is a foot... and even better, can now load where we did not have the ram before....


    I've been having a blast with my 1st and still favorite Flight Sim - Battle of Britain! I was in HS when I first played it, and now that I play it again, I remember imagining being in that plan and actually dogfighting!


    ....the mind of a teen!



    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to GREG GOODWIN on Friday, June 14, 2019 17:14:51
    On Jun 2nd 11:32 pm GREG GOODWIN said...
    -> GG> -> hahaha!!! You made me spit out my drink from
    laughing!! -> 16k back then... cost like a kidney!! Hahaha... you laughing got me laughing. Haven't enjoyed a good BBS chat like this in a long time.


    If you saw the kinda hair I had back in those day's you'd CONTINUE to laugh! ;)



    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Gaylen Hintz on Friday, June 14, 2019 17:22:29
    On Jun 4th 7:02 pm Gaylen Hintz said...
    short time, but that groomed me to my love of Tech!

    Oh I"m sure, I know there were some real advancements for the times , probably primitive compared to the stuff these days but back then... the wow factor was something else. :) Computer and processor speeds doubled every other year :)

    Yeah, and we had Intel, AMD, Motorola making CPU's! (Can't remember, was there fourth? Can't remember) There was faster CPU upgrades than hard drive sizes for a short time! That was a fun era!



    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to Tony Langdon on Friday, June 14, 2019 17:18:17
    On Jun 4th 5:23 pm Tony Langdon said...

    I think that was misquoted. :) I still do use dome Windows, alongside Linux. )


    Ewww... you lost some cool points there bro! :D


    On Jun 4th 5:23 pm Tony Langdon said...

    That can be good or bad, sometimes they tool around with things for no good reason. :)


    Yeah true, lol... too much tooling, Sounds like some of us Sysops!



    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Charles Stephenson on Saturday, June 15, 2019 12:16:00
    On 06-14-19 17:18, Charles Stephenson wrote to Tony Langdon <=-


    On Jun 4th 5:23 pm Tony Langdon said...

    I think that was misquoted. :) I still do use dome Windows, alongside Linux. )


    Ewww... you lost some cool points there bro! :D

    And what you gonna do about it? *prod* *SLAP* *sprints away* :P


    On Jun 4th 5:23 pm Tony Langdon said...

    That can be good or bad, sometimes they tool around with things for no good reason. :)


    Yeah true, lol... too much tooling, Sounds like some of us Sysops!

    Hahaha, but we don't poist our creations on thousands or millions of users, just those fool^H^H^H^Hgame^H^H^H^Hkeen enough to log into our BBSs. :D


    ... Disk Failure: (W)arm Boot, (C)old Boot, (S)teel Toe Boot?
    === MultiMail/Win v0.51
    --- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux
    * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From mark lewis@1:3634/12.73 to Charles Stephenson on Saturday, June 15, 2019 08:02:32

    On 2019 Jun 14 17:22:28, you wrote to Gaylen Hintz:

    Yeah, and we had Intel, AMD, Motorola making CPU's! (Can't remember,
    was there fourth? Can't remember) There was faster CPU upgrades than
    hard drive sizes for a short time! That was a fun era!

    Zilog, Olivetti and NEC were three more...

    we changed the CPU chip (8mhz 8086) out in one machine (AT&T 6300 IIRC) for a NEC one (NEC V30) and the processing capability increased (2x?) for the same clock speed... i think we also added a math coprocessor (8087) as well as eventually upgrading the BIOS... too bad it wasn't Y1992 compliant... something
    about ""cheating"" with the clock chip and not using enough bits to represent the year so 1992 was the highest year it could count to...

    )\/(ark

    Always Mount a Scratch Monkey
    Do you manage your own servers? If you are not running an IDS/IPS yer doin' it wrong...
    ... I'll have some 8-methyl-N-vanillyl-6-nonenamide on mine please.
    ---
    * Origin: (1:3634/12.73)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/17 to Tony Langdon on Friday, June 14, 2019 23:32:30
    Re: Re: TS 1000
    By: Tony Langdon to Charles Stephenson on Sat Jun 15 2019 12:16 pm

    Ewww... you lost some cool points there bro! :D

    And what you gonna do about it? *prod* *SLAP* *sprints away* :P


    Damnit! That just GAINED you those cool points back!...curses! :D

    Yeah true, lol... too much tooling, Sounds like some of us Sysops!

    Hahaha, but we don't poist our creations on thousands or millions of users, just those fool^H^H^H^Hgame^H^H^H^Hkeen enough to log into our BBSs. :D

    lol! although it would be nice to have Thousands calling our BBSes again! Regards,
    KrUpTiOn
    --- SBBSecho 3.07-Linux
    * Origin: The New Frontier ][ BBS(frontierbbs.net) - [Ohio] (1:226/17)
  • From Tony Langdon@3:633/410 to Charles Stephenson on Sunday, June 16, 2019 14:42:00
    On 06-14-19 23:32, Charles Stephenson wrote to Tony Langdon <=-

    Ewww... you lost some cool points there bro! :D

    And what you gonna do about it? *prod* *SLAP* *sprints away* :P

    Damnit! That just GAINED you those cool points back!...curses! :D

    Hahaha, yeah, just _try_ catching me to get them off me! :D :P

    Yeah true, lol... too much tooling, Sounds like some of us Sysops!

    Hahaha, but we don't poist our creations on thousands or millions of users, just those fool^H^H^H^Hgame^H^H^H^Hkeen enough to log into our BBSs. :D

    lol! although it would be nice to have Thousands calling our BBSes
    again! Regards,

    That would be nice, it was cool having users back in the day. Met so many interesting people as a sysop back in the day. :)


    ... If at first you don't succeed - so much for skydiving.
    === MultiMail/Win v0.51
    --- SBBSecho 3.03-Linux
    * Origin: Freeway BBS Bendigo,Australia freeway.apana.org.au (3:633/410)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to GAYLEN HINTZ on Sunday, June 16, 2019 11:03:00
    Oh that is pretty. Enterprise D design really grew on me. :)

    It is a cool design. Thought it was very front heavy, but when split
    the engine section looks very swift. Yeh it was a cool ship. A
    diplomatic ship with some power.

    I tend to agree.. she was a pretty ship and that's for sure. Did you by an

    chance happen to catch the Strar Trek Discovery show?

    I was really put off by 1) the cost to watch the show 2) the changes to
    the Klingons. But I've been told by episode 5 it gets better. So...
    I guess I'll have to watch it.

    You like it?
    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to Charles Stephenson on Monday, June 17, 2019 18:03:22
    Charles Stephenson spoke thus to Gaylen Hintz <=-

    wow factor was something else. :) Computer and processor speeds doubled every other year :)

    Yeah, and we had Intel, AMD, Motorola making CPU's! (Can't remember,
    was there fourth? Can't remember) There was faster CPU upgrades than
    hard drive sizes for a short time! That was a fun era!

    Indeed it was. I don't remember if there was another cpu manufacturer and I'm
    sure Ziglog had quit making chips quite awhile before that time.

    ... At Intel, Quality is Job .99998366401

    Greeting from
    The Curmudgeon
    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to mark lewis on Wednesday, June 19, 2019 16:26:29
    On Jun 15th 6:35 pm mark lewis said...
    Zilog, Olivetti and NEC were three more...

    we changed the CPU chip (8mhz 8086) out in one machine (AT&T 6300 IIRC) for a NEC one (NEC V30) and the processing capability increased (2x?) for the same clock speed... i think we also added a math coprocessor (8087) as well as eventually upgrading the BIOS... too bad it wasn't Y1992 compliant... something about ""cheating"" with the clock chip and not using enough bits to represent the year so 1992 was the highest year it could count to...


    I remember when I first started doing my first upgrades, actually my very first
    TWO upgrades to a computer was adding the MathCo and Memory. It was amazing how
    noticable the speed boost was! That got me started on a UPWARD spiral of wanting to pull as much speed as I could! My next upgrade was the Video Card...
    Man.... it was great!




    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS |frontierbbs.net:8888| OH (1:226/16)
  • From Gaylen Hintz@1:18/200 to GREG GOODWIN on Thursday, June 20, 2019 00:11:25
    GREG GOODWIN spoke thus to GAYLEN HINTZ <=-

    -> chance happen to catch the Star Trek Discovery show?

    I was really put off by 1) the cost to watch the show 2) the changes to the Klingons. But I've been told by episode 5 it gets better. So...
    I guess I'll have to watch it.

    :) well the cost is for the whole network and if I remember right it's about $5.00 a month so not too bad as there is a lot more to choose from including a lot
    of vintage CBS shows as well. :)

    You like it?

    I guess I have to admit I do. It's a little different from previous versions of Star Trek and at time I think a little weird but yes, I do like it and am anxiously awaiting the start of season 3 :)

    ... Chocolate, pizza, redheads, and Star Trek. What a combination!

    Greeting from
    The Curmudgeon

    --- MultiMail/Win32
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Charles Stephenson on Tuesday, July 16, 2019 20:45:14
    I've been having a blast with my 1st and still favorite Flight Sim - Battle

    Britain! I was in HS when I first played it, and now that I play it again, I

    remember imagining being in that plan and actually dogfighting!

    That is so cool!! Was that played on the TS 1000? For me I loved
    that game, might still have it, and had the Atari ST version. When I
    played it on the TT030 the game really smoothed out and zipped along
    great. Played that game for hours.

    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to Charles Stephenson on Tuesday, July 16, 2019 20:47:40
    If you saw the kinda hair I had back in those day's you'd CONTINUE to
    laugh!

    Oh really? Do tell.

    For a brief time I tried to go with the hair ... well I don't know what
    I was trying to do. It was mostly short and I tried to have my hair up
    in the front. Lots of Final Net. Yeh, was a dork then. Not much
    different now, but at least I am not a bean pole and can at least act
    not so awkward.

    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From GREG GOODWIN@1:124/5013 to GAYLEN HINTZ on Tuesday, July 16, 2019 20:48:58
    I guess I have to admit I do. It's a little different from previous versio

    of Star Trek and at time I think a little weird but yes, I do like it and am

    anxiously awaiting the start of season 3 :)

    Yeh need to watch STD, so thanks for the reminder.

    Been watching Stranger Things as of late, great characters. :D

    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v7.0
    * Origin: Prison Board BBS Mesquite Tx www.rdfig.net (1:124/5013)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to GREG GOODWIN on Wednesday, July 17, 2019 21:20:08

    On Jul 17th 7:11 pm GREG GOODWIN said...


    If you saw the kinda hair I had back in those day's you'd CONTINUE to
    laugh! Oh really? Do tell. For a brief time I tried to go with the hair ... well I don't know what I was trying to do. It was mostly short and I tried to have my hair up in the front. Lots of Final Net. Yeh, was a dork then. Not much different now, but at least I am not a bean pole and can at least act not so awkward.



    HAHA!!

    Well... Me being a young hip-hop young black kid, I was one of those kids in Brooklyn break dancing on flat carboard boxes, with the big ole boombox! (I had
    a Afro back then!) when we moved to Ohio (I hated it!) I had a Jheri Curl in middle school! (Yeah...ha!) then in my preppy stage in HS, I had a "S" Curl!....then when in college, and a young father... I went conservative... just faded! NOW, in my late 40s... I wish I had all that hair back! :'(






    --- ENiGMA 1/2 v0.0.10-alpha (linux; x64; 10.15.2)
    * Origin: The Amiga Frontier BBS *frontierbbs.net:8888* OH (1:226/16)
  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/16 to GREG GOODWIN on Wednesday, July 17, 2019 21:15:16

    On Jul 17th 7:11 pm GREG GOODWIN said...


    I've been having a blast with my 1st and still favorite Flight Sim -
    Battle -> Britain! I was in HS when I first played it, and now that I play it again, I -> remember imagining being in that plan and actually dogfighting! That is so cool!! Was that played on the TS 1000? For me I loved that game, might still have it, and had the Atari ST version. When I played it on the TT030 the game really smoothed out and zipped along great. Played that game for hours.


    I saw a post about it in some user group a few months ago, and TOTALLY forgot about that game! I went and searched and searched and found it! I installed it
    had played it here and there in Ubuntu! OHHHH the memories! Yes!! I FIRST played it on my Tandy 1000 EX! shortly after I got my Tandy 1000 SL!! (286/16) I went from CGA right to VGA! Man! I was in HEAVEN!! I felt like I REALLY was
    a Allied Ace flying across the English Channel! hehe!!



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  • From Charles Stephenson@1:226/17 to GREG GOODWIN on Monday, July 29, 2019 21:50:26
    Re: Re: TS 1000
    By: GREG GOODWIN to Charles Stephenson on Tue Jul 16 2019 08:45 pm

    That is so cool!! Was that played on the TS 1000? For me I loved
    that game, might still have it, and had the Atari ST version. When I played it on the TT030 the game really smoothed out and zipped along great. Played that game for hours.


    I FIRST played it on a Tandy 1000 EX, then I got a POWEREHOUSE, Tandy 1000 SL!! I went from CGA to SVGA!! OMG!!! I'm gonna go play it after I read mail! I'm excited just talkinga bout it! hehe
    Regards,
    KrUpTiOn
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