jon72vega
Well-known member
Bob,
Congrats to you and Liane on your anniversary!
Congrats to you and Liane on your anniversary!
Drives, thanks for the congrats and for stopping by.Congrats to you and your young bride for staying together for almost as long as i've been here above dirt!!!!
sorry to hear you have PC or Laptop issues and hope you get them resolved or like your bride says just buy a new one cause they at least are not a couple mortgage payments like they once were for 4 or 8 ram (waaaaay less memory than most cell phones now).
cheers
Uncle Willie, I forgot about the teeth. The ones I've kept are hiding under crowns with bridges to hide the ones I sent over the wall. Do you have a good spine removal guy I could use? I think SWMBO softened up most of mine so it would be easy to remove and send to the other side.I read that to Steph, and then said I have sent all my teeth and 3 vertebrae. She said send more. Iove her.
Tomas, it surprises us more than anyone.Wow congrats Bob to the anniversary. Always hats off to those able to have these forever lasting soul mate situations.
Thank you Jon!Bob,
Congrats to you and Liane on your anniversary!
Bugnut, thank you for the well wishes. I try not to take our relationship for granted. A dozen roses from Trader Joe's (for $6) helps, especially when it isn't expected and isn't a Hallmark event.Bob, let me join the chorus wishing you and Liane a happy anniversary.
I really appreciated the reminder of having something recorded on my permanent record. Anecdotally I shared my education transcript with my children who were great students, they were appalled.
Should you find the transcription I would enjoy reading it!
Stay well and enjoy your shot, got my first yesterday!
.......The priest who married us told us "these teen marriages never last" and Liane wanted to piss on his grave.......

During our long marriage (32 years just passed) Irene always said that if we got divorced she'd take the cars and I'd have the kids...... Ain't happening.
Lyndon
No it was completely erased. My dad has a computer repair company in TN. He said it was blank. Fortunately when it told me there was a critical update it said it may cause loss of data so I backed up all my files.
I would like to get a little more detail on this.
I was Compaq certified laptop top repair at one point, been working on PC's and OS's since 1984.
I am just curious and looking to learn.
Amazing how fast a week flies by when you are having no fun. Today was our anniversary (59th) so we vacuumed the patio, and did chores. I'm making curried shrimp for dinner.
Kirk, she was ready, willing and able but all we knew was the location of the cemetery and it was a good day's drive away. That "Ah-$hit" wiped out a bunch of my "Attaboys" when I talked her out of it.So the ornery in me has to ask, did she? If she did, kudos to her for being a woman of her word![]()
Drives, I don't know if it's true but some say couples who are different from each other have a better chance at a long relationship. My patience, which Liane claims is saintly, is a big help because Liane has none as in ZERO. "Why do you bother sanding the stains off that wood? Just cover it with some varnish!"funny you say that about your marriage even after 59 years cause we are at 33 and even though most days are pretty decent we still have more than few bumps in our road and probably a lot more to come by the way it sounds. i waited til 32 to get married to my dream girl that came out of a 13 year marriage divorced and with 2 boys (10 & 12). The following 3 years we had 3 more kids so it was hard to work out stuff most days with all that was going on, but we stuck with it.
best of luck with the new (used) computer and I'm sure you know much more about these things than I. Some friends thought i was rich when I had a 286 PC on both mine and my assistant's desk at my office in 1993. I wish they would have finished Windows 95 or stayed with Windows XP and kept updating them cause the other versions seemed to be more problems than they were good.
yep REBOOT seemed to be the main fix when computers first came out.
enjoy your day!!
Andrew, I know it's not the original meaning but "Wedlock" sounds about right. Not sure what tool is needed to break it open but seems like 50% of us have used one a time or two.I'm late again. But congratulations to Liane and yourself, mostly Liane. Some relationships last in spite of themselves. Mine could be one some days. Other days it's the most precious thing I have.
Up until last month we had spent every day and night together for about 15 months. Bearing in mind our professions this has been a real test. Typically one or other of us is often traveling. But we're both alive, vaccinated and likely to stay that way. Neither one of us wants to start anything new. And we both knew each other's parents and family who are no longer with us. That alone makes for a very special bond.
Sent from my ONEPLUS A6013 using Tapatalk
Lyndon and everyone else, you're still ahead of our daughter. It appears politics is more toxic than ever and I'll leave it at that.Bob
I too am late, but things are only now starting to slow down. Congratulations on the 59th anniversary!
During our long marriage (32 years just passed) Irene always said that if we got divorced she'd take the cars and I'd have the kids...... Ain't happening.
Lyndon
Mat, I suspect it's worse than you think. Lyndon didn't mention the garage comes with the cars and the house comes with the garage. Lyndon would have to hope one of his daughters has a spare room and is willing to put up with his wining (both kinds).What a threat! No wonder you're still together.
Michael, I vaguely remember a damaged root directory causing that kind of failure.I would like to get a little more detail on this.
I was Compaq certified laptop top repair at one point, been working on PC's and OS's since 1984.
I am just curious and looking to learn.
Uncle Willie, I'm with Rian [grizz1963]: "If you can't fix it with a hammer, you've got an electrical problem mate."All I can tell you is there was no operating system. I work with hammers and Sawzall. I don't speak computer.
Michael, my parents married in their late twenties and my uncle married when he was 38. Being settled in their professions helped but both joined the military in WWII. When both my father and his brother died in their mid-50s I was 24 and my cousins were 17, 14, 12 and 10. Had I died at their age, my children would have been 37 and 36.I am late to the party but congratulations on your years together.
I got married late real hard to maintain a relationship when you are away all the time. I dated my wife for ten years before I gave in. So my son just turned 16 so I think we have been married 19 years in July but it feels like 30.
The captains license means I can take 6 paid customers fishing or sunset cruising.
But I could take ten friends on the same boat if I don't charge money.
I have a ten year old laptop that I can't get it to upgrade the version of ubuntu on it.
My solution to many HD drive problems is pull them and put in USB drive housing. View it on other machine. This will often work when OS on drive is getting weird.
Patrik, we've done a fair number of fancier anniversary celebrations, including one that included a whole Club Med.Congratulations! That seems like the perfect way to celebrate the anniversary, some cleaning and chores. And some shrimps after that.
And you don't fool me! You have so much fun that you almost don't have any time to play with the carsAnd a "new" computer with SSD to play with too. It is nice to be able to just copy the files and install some programs and then be up and running. Backups makes me sleep better, both professionally and personally
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Michael, that's what our friend did. Haven't seen him in a couple of decades but I'm guessing he's still on the sunny side of the steel bars. During one of the fuel scares he downsized his boat but upgraded to diesel power.On a Captains license you can get rated for larger boats. Example being the one stuck in Suez Canal is a captain on the hot seat.
But I like small boats that can be handled by a crew of one and have a draft of two feet. Plus I have all the electronics of big boats radar, sonar, forward scanning sonar, AIS press a button on screen and I can call that boat. I have more processing power on the boat than the AT computer.
I understand the root getting corrupted but that is hard to happen on the internet with a browser. As normally the browser session goes to hell.
With a laptop the line voltage is charging the battery so if the line voltage goes wonky it is operating off the battery anyway.
Downloading files should not corrupt root unless file is designed as malicious.
I can't tell you how, I can only tell you what. The whole county lost power, I lost my OS.
If you remember back to the IBM XT, it came first with a 5 MB hard drive, I remember thinking then, what would ever fill that up! I was an IBM VAD and always had the latest new PC, things have come a long way! The best bang for your buck today for an aging PC is to upgrade to an SSD. The desktop machine I have now (Intel core i5) used to take 2 to 3 minutes to boot up and become usable, now it takes maybe 15 seconds. Did the same on my laptop (Intel core i7) that I was ready to toss as it took more than 3 minutes to boot and it was just slow to run almost anything, now it is as fast as my new laptop, well worth the cost to upgrade.
Gil
Back in the 80s my dad had a guy trade him 2 Rolex watches for memory upgrades in his computers. He held on to them til just a few years back and sold them for a lot of money. Hard to believe that computer stuff used to be that expensive.
Some of it still is. Price out Marine electronics.
I used to sell Pi data acquisition systems with all the bells and whistles 50k for club racing systems 100k for Indy car systems
When things get over gas station hot dog money I have problems spending.

When things get over gas station hot dog money I have problems spending.
I don't eat hotdogs....
Bret, the Dell system starts up and runs so much faster than the HP system it replaces. The 32GB of memory helps but mostly it's the SSD that makes it fast. Programs start faster, as does the browser so I'm enjoying the new machine immensely.Bob you won't regret an SDD drive. I have a 2011 IBM pc that has had the motherboard, and power supply replaced. And now recently I maxed out the RAM and a new SDD to put windows on. It is way faster than it ever was new. I can't believe its 10 years old now but really all that is left is the processor.
Bret
Michael, I'm just relating foggy old memories of days gone by.I understand the root getting corrupted but that is hard to happen on the internet with a browser. As normally the browser session goes to hell.
With a laptop the line voltage is charging the battery so if the line voltage goes wonky it is operating off the battery anyway.
Downloading files should not corrupt root unless file is designed as malicious.
I can't tell you how, I can only tell you what. The whole county lost power, I lost my OS.
My comments were not directed at you.

John, I'm with you on the money spent. Back when $499 was a big deal to me, that's what a used 10Mb drive cost me (it was $3,500 new). Getting it running in the PC was a big deal, needing a ST506 adapter card and cables and giving up the second 5.25" floppy drive. Technology came to the rescue with the dual-diskette drive that fit in the single drive bay while housing both 5.25" and 3.5" drives.I also have a shelf of hard drives. Man, seeing that Maxtor drives brings back a lot of memories.... The money I spent on those hard drives in the 80's, wholly ****. To think a 100mb or even a 260mb hard drive was going to be plenty for you to get by in those days.
Gil, my first PC was a surplus machine that IBM made available to employees. The motherboard was limited to 64KB memory but the engineers put out a cheat sheet showing how to solder a jumper on the motherboard to allow 256KB to be plugged in. Once you put a hard drive in the original PC you had no room for the big adapter cards so I got my hands on a scrap Expansion Unit and put my hacked motherboard in it.If you remember back to the IBM XT, it came first with a 5 MB hard drive, I remember thinking then, what would ever fill that up! I was an IBM VAD and always had the latest new PC, things have come a long way! The best bang for your buck today for an aging PC is to upgrade to an SSD. The desktop machine I have now (Intel core i5) used to take 2 to 3 minutes to boot up and become usable, now it takes maybe 15 seconds. Did the same on my laptop (Intel core i7) that I was ready to toss as it took more than 3 minutes to boot and it was just slow to run almost anything, now it is as fast as my new laptop, well worth the cost to upgrade.
Gil
Michael, bad as microsoft's the bloatware is, my systems have gigabytes full of digital photos sucking up tons of space. I think my first digital camera took one-point-something megapixel photos. The little Canon point-and-shoot is 20 megapixels with a 40X digital zoom.It was a double drive bay sized unit.
Now I have memory sticks in 256gb size.
We all wondered how you were going to fill a 5mb hard drive. Then windblows bloat versions took care of any extra space.
I was running a race shop then and I used the PC with 2 360k floppies to do my invoicing, operating system and wordperfect program on one 360 disk.
Gil, there were a bunch of oddball machines back in the day. While IBM and Compaq offered "Portable" PCs, the first IBM "Laptop" was the Convertible, with two of the new 3.5" diskette drives. Gigantic leap from the 1.2MB floppy to the 1.44MB diskette. We even offered a little portable printer to go with it.Yep, had those original PCs with 2 floppy drives, 8" units. I remember the floppy for Word Perfect, seems like forever ago! I also remember when a home PC had 512K ram too. I also had one of the original IBM "Portable" PCs. I remember lugging that beast through airports, your arm would end up 2" longer after going from one end of O'Hare to the other. This could go on for hours!
Gil
Michael, those first portables were also called luggables because you needed a hand truck and bungee cords to get them to your destination. The first time I used a database and spreadsheet was an auto event. A 256K, two 360KB floppies (program on one, data on other) worked fine until the database got bigger than 1,000 entries. I took naps while the sorts ran. My car stayed in the parking paddock and I stayed in the timing tower. Friends threw food and drink into my room.Had a Compaq Portable. In the family we had the first Toshiba laptop since I was the assigned technician I lived with two PHD chemists. Remember Paradox, I made so much money on managing mailing lists for two rock n roll places on St Marks. Many times I asked what did you do often the response was a smokey haze.
Then I moved on to Access bloat central. Played with Oracle for a bit.
I was one of the first in amateur semi-pro racing to have a laptop at pit wall, two 720 floppies 640k a screamer.
Technology has been a lot of fun.
Uncle Willie, by the time you paid for a PC, Monitor, Keyboard, Mouse and some software, you could have bought a brand new 1981 Camaro.Back in the 80s my dad had a guy trade him 2 Rolex watches for memory upgrades in his computers. He held on to them til just a few years back and sold them for a lot of money. Hard to believe that computer stuff used to be that expensive.
Some of it still is. Price out Marine electronics.
I used to sell Pi data acquisition systems with all the bells and whistles 50k for club racing systems 100k for Indy car systems

Yeah, or price out aircraft Avioncs!
Gil


Uncle Willie, I'm with you but some of those gas station hot dogs are expensive -- like $14 in Alaska!When things get over gas station hot dog money I have problems spending.
Dan, I only recently discovered LA's Awesome cleaner/degreaser. Stuff is amazing especially at $1 a bottle.Which reminds me that I went to the Dollar Tree store near our new place and had a good time for only $8.65.
Got:
-1 Plastic gallon bucket
- Roll of shelf liner I will use on the bottom of a wood tool box
- 2 wire racks to hang paint brushes
- A sharpening stone of questionable value
- AND Spray bottles of Windex, Awesome cleaner, & off brand CLR stuff.
I eat everything that fits in my mouth.I don't eat hotdogs....
Mrs. Knowitall says I can't eat hot dogs.Don't worry, I eat enough to cover for you.
Bret,
Michael, I'm just relating foggy old memories of days gone by.
< snip >
Technology came to the rescue with the dual-diskette drive that fit in the single drive bay while housing both 5.25" and 3.5" drives.
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< /snip >
Bob - your pictures of "portable" computers got me thinking about the early computers they had at work for traveling with... the Compaq "Portable". They were monsters (bigger than today's desktops), but look at that tiny screen!
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Michael, in July 1996, a year into my time with AOL I was asked to go to India with my boss to arrange some offshore software development. At the same time, we discussed establishing a call center or two. Back then the Indian government balked at the cost of high-speed connections to make those call centers possible. I'm happy to say my trip didn't solve the problem so all those Indian call centers are on someone else. As soon as I get one on the phone I ask if they are in Bangalore -- 90% of the time the answer is yes.I was having connectivity issues with a client and AOL.
So I called support.
Tech said bring up a MSdos box this is how you do it,
Response Ok it is up.
Tech Now type this and hit enter twice fast.
cd\
Format C: /s
enter enter
Response You low life rat ******* and so on....
Tech Click
Of course I did not do it I always wrote down what they wanted, but I was not dumb enough not to know the format command.
I bitched at AOL but was told since I didn't know the last name there was nothing to be done.
Other time I was transferred to India call center but that version of NT server was not exported so they could not help me.
Went to see my boat today was supposed to do sea trial but electronics were not ready. I picked up the manuals, the boat uses a joystick for engine control and AutoPilot. More fun electronics.
Tonight's dinner will be baked little neck clams, braised scallops with shallots and chips, making my son Fried Cod and chips
Roger, mine is around here somewhere. I need to consolidate all the **** in one place instead of scattered everywhere. Those diskette drives got a lot of use back in 80s and early 90s. I think I still have a foot-high stack of diskettes for installing CorelDraw 6.0. Now I just have a couple of binders full of CDs, including a couple of Microsoft Developer Network binder boxes.I still have one of those drives! I can see it in the storage box next to my desk!
I have so much old code (C, xBase, COBOL, etc.) that I wrote back in the day on floppies. A lot of old MultiMate and WordPerfect docs as well. Maybe one of these days I'll figure out how to connect it up and reminisce.
Rian, I was always impressed with the designs they came up with.Amazing how the world is, and has moved on in this arena.
That’s still a handsome machine.
John, my first CD reader was an external drive with a giant SCSI cable. Same with my giant HP Scanjet scanner. It required a full size slot in my Model 70 PS/2 and the Microchannel architecture card was stupid expensive. That machine had three slots so I couldn't use the CD drive at the same time as the scanner.I remember those dual drives. I remember getting my first CD writer. A HP scanner that needed a scsi cable.
I recall installing C++ using around 15 or so diskettes. I was towards the end of the stack of diskettes and I hit the power button instead of the eject button, I was not a happy camper.
Yea the memory was super expensive back in the days.
Mark, not only were the screens tiny, they were monochrome character mode only. Even the much larger screen on my P75 luggable had a VGA monochrome (orange!) screen.Bob - your pictures of "portable" computers got me thinking about the early computers they had at work for traveling with... the Compaq "Portable". They were monsters (bigger than today's desktops), but look at that tiny screen!
Gil, I carried my luggable by its handle once with a garment bag over my shoulder and saw someone with a wheeled carry-on while in the airport. Bought a carry-on without even looking at the price. With the machine onboard, I had room for toiletries, a pair of khakis, two dress shirts, three pair of socks and five boxer shorts. On some trips one shirt was at the cleaners while the other was on my back. At AOL I left several pair of jeans and four dress shirts at the cleaners and picked them up a week later on my return.I had the IBM equivalent of that Compaq machine, try carrying it through the terminals at O'Hare for any length of time and your arm either falls off or grows longer! Glad to not see them anymore!
Gil
Marc, IBM had a typewriter division and they spent decades evolving a keyboard with just the right touch and that little click. It became an industry standard and the flat odd-size keys on laptops still drive me crazy. I can touch-type one-handed without looking at an IBM keyboard but am completely lost on a laptop (don't get me started on the phone thing!!! I'm afraid to use a phone unless I'm sitting down with the phone on a surface. I feel like a an impala grazing in a pride of lions when I'm standing and staring down at the thing.I can hear that keyboard![]()