DosMan007 wrote:
YES!! Such great memories. My friend from high school, Alvin, well he used to have a Tandy 1000 also. He loves airplanes and all that, so he used to play a lot of Chuck Yeagers Flight School. I'd go over his place most times and he'd have computer magazines all over the place that I'd read while I was there.
The magazine we all thrived off of was a local one called
ComputorEdge. (This brought back some serious nostalgia thinking about it - and found that they eventually went online - and they have an
archive... but from like 2009 and onward... all the super classic ones are not archived).
DosMan007 wrote:
I do remember also going over other friends houses watching them play Police Quest or LSL. My 486DX/2 before was a 386. Not sure how it came around, but my dad mentioned something about upgrading, or maybe I mentioned it to him, well he found a guy who did upgrades, so my dad and I went to this guy's apartment and I remember it mostly being empty, other than he had stacks of closed up computer cases brand new, (not sure if they were empty cases or assembled PC's) and on the spot he upgraded the PC to, my choice of a SX or a DX. I wanted to play Star Trek: A Final Unity at that time, and I remember reading in a computer magazine article that the game required you to have a DX/2 math co-processor. So that was why I went with the DX/2.
That guy in that apartment probably made money hand over fist back then, because computers were such a big deal...
DosMan007 wrote:
My one uncle, my dad's brother who passed away last year, had a 2400 baud dial up modem, that sat on the desk and some how we obtained it. So in the area was a BBS called The Nexus, best BBS from what I can remember, but my dad hated us using the modem, so while he was away at work, we'd get it hooked up, call The Nexus a few times, and put everything away before he came home lol.
Ummmmmm... where was this Nexus BBS located? Tennessee or San Diego by chance? Because... if so, it may have been MY BBS! My BBS was called The Nexus (named after the Deathgate Cycle books!) I talk about it more
over in the "Origin of Your Handle" thread... there's just no way you were dialing into my BBS... The Nexus was probably a super common BBS name back then... just funny...
DosMan007 wrote:
All in all, the memories are great. I just hooked up my old DOS 6.20 computer and have it hooked up to the TV. Just almost beat Life And Death, and the game locks up. It was weird, like I lost all mouse and keyboard control, and when the patient had died in the operating room, it didn't go to the death screen it just sat there with the PC speaker whining when the patient flat lined.
I have two old computers in the shed (both of them dead) - one's a Pentium like 100mhz... the other is a... 486, I think... but higher end (for 486's back in the day)... No longer have any machines that run on just DOS anymore... (for which I am super thankful for DOSBox).
DosMan007 wrote:
Yes, I have to agree, I hate being old, but the memories are wonderful. I also had to get an Atari, and almost have 100 cartridges. Such great memories that I love being able to go back to them and just relax... that's what I'm missing. A bean bag chair lol. Can't get anymore retro than that.
Oh, I was all over the consoles, even back then... the Atari 2600 was like my original jam... had SO many games on there... probably beat about 5% of them.
And yes, Beanbags for the win... I had one, just recently, but my husky (Odin) took it over as a dog bed.
Rath Darkblade wrote:Heh. My first computer was
one of these. (Without the screen - I used the TV screen - but I was just 5, and it was great!)
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_e_wink.gif)
Heh - That's what my friend Shawn originally had too. My friend Chuck had a TSR-80 (the cassette player was the "drive" and the game played on an actual cassette!) - a game called
Raakatu. It was a text adventure game, with that "You are standing in a jungle. There is a path to the (W)est and (E)ast." It was through that game I learned basic (or is that BASIC?) programming (see what I did there?) - and it would be years and years and years later, playing Colonel's Bequest, that I'd be inspired to write my own little text adventure game called
Final Soul.