The carrying angle of that system is hilarious "Oh nevermind, it's just me carrying my huge-ass and heavy-ass desktop computer around on some straps. My uncle bought it back in the day because everyone was doing computers now, but he had no idea what to do with it, so it's basically unused. I have one of these as desktop version in the plastic shell, even the two carrying hooks are still intact, with the keyboard that'd snap into the underside. I've lately really gotten into some things again and put some things into operation again. I like to take tours to nostalgia country when I sift through my boxes in storage and look at all the old hardware I have lying around.
#Caprine boomer full
I fell a tiny little bit for the alien craze, I didn't go full tinfoil-hat but it really fascinated me. That was the time of the early web which was full of weird websites full of conspiracy theories. I stuck a long-ass time with an early P3 Coppermine I also did with.
#Caprine boomer Pc
What I didn't like was having to get a new PC every half year for thousands to remain on the edge. There was something comfortable about them. I still have some fond memories of the late single-chip Socket 7 chipsets where even the RTC was on the chipset chip which is a strange random memory of me going "whoa" for the first time at the high integration of these things for some reason. Things only got better around the PCI age (because fucking up with a bus that fast won't still work "somewhat" - nothing will work) and then things started to get really complicated really fast. Remember lots of ISA- and VLB-based boards that were just inherently unstable. Usually it was the computer itself that was unstable as fuck. I've also got some really un-fond memories of some of the 90s IBM clones' really poor layout and cost-cutting measures from the companies that churned them out led to lots of problems people blamed on the software. I'd say flash drives did make it finally useful. I also avoided USB for a long, long time and it also took a while to become anything useful. This sounds silly with your tiny, sub $1 USB-chips that throw mbits of bandwith no sweat but that was some serious, serious tech back then. (what I don't have anymore is the bunch of modems, they had to die for hardware projects, sad) It had a small 65CE20 CPU on it with 16 kb of RAM that did the I/O.
#Caprine boomer serial
I still have that computer and the *massive* 7-port serial card by Commodore. I ran a low-frequented BBS on an Amiga 2000 that nobody will remember and I still remember the hassle it was to get the additional phone lines. I also have very fond memories of the early internet, pre-web. Funnily I had zero interest in Linux when i first heard about it (and that was very early, basically the time where Torvalds first talked about it on newsgroups) and stuck a long-ass time to DOS or AmigaDOS for simple tasks. That's what I miss most from that era and have the fondest memories of. At least I made a tidy client-server setup in C that works via piping and communicates in easily to digest (and manipulate, record, whatever) text streams. Back in the day you literally could cat the keyboard input from one machine to the next, no fooling. About 30 years later and I wrote a small program that forwards keyboard input from one of my ARM computers to another, by basically listening to the event interface in the kernel for the physically connected keyboard and creating a fake keyboard via uinput kernel module on the client machine and while this was still easier, simpler and worked better than the "hundreds of mb of python required" solutions I could find online, all I could think was how needlessly complicated it all is.
Well I thought the same thing about Transputers so probably don't listen to me. Really liked the everything-is-a-file-dogma (but not really, but I didn't know better then) and thought that is the future of computers. I remember my first confrontation with Unix in the late 80s.