RFguy Posted September 24, 2023 Posted September 24, 2023 Mike are you sure you just didnt leave it in the seat back pocket? 1
facthunter Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. Nev
coljones Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 On 17/09/2023 at 9:49 AM, kgwilson said: The hexadecimal code provided by CASA is linked to the serial number of the SE2 so if the robber tries to use it it can be tracked. They cannot get another code for it and by deleting the code it will not work so it will be completely useless to the robber. You should report it stolen to CASA. Both the Hex code and rego can be changed in the SkyEcho and should follow the codes in the transponder (hex Code) and the plane rego. If there is no transponder in the plane you use a Hex code supplied by CASA and the plane rego (XYZ or R1234). The SkyEcho serial number is unique and police, CASA or EBay might help. I use mine on a variety of planes and change the transponder/rego codes or the CASA Hex/rego as required. I once forgot to change and my friends friends were asking why he had flown to Cessnock when in fact he was down at Griffith.😘
Jabiru7252 Posted September 25, 2023 Posted September 25, 2023 I lost my copy of Windows 95 CD. It turned up 20 years later in an old calculus book that never gets read. I went grey and slightly mad as a result of that. 1 3
spacesailor Posted September 26, 2023 Posted September 26, 2023 I' m waiting for that day When, someone really needs a original " windows & Dos " floppy !. It comes with an Old desktop p c . spacesailor 1
pmccarthy Posted September 26, 2023 Author Posted September 26, 2023 I was in Toronto in 1995 and the Tower was draped in a giant banner that said Windows 95. We forget what a big deal it was. 1
440032 Posted September 26, 2023 Posted September 26, 2023 Someone stole my copy of Microsoft Office. I will find you. You have my WORD. 3
spacesailor Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 Windows was of No use ! , without that little " Dos " program. DISK OPERATING SYSTEM. Invented by a couple of young students. It enabled the release of having two ' floppies ' doing the ' memory work . Simple " Basic " language. spacesailor
IBob Posted September 27, 2023 Posted September 27, 2023 21 hours ago, spacesailor said: Windows was of No use ! , without that little " Dos " program. DISK OPERATING SYSTEM. Invented by a couple of young students. It enabled the release of having two ' floppies ' doing the ' memory work . Simple " Basic " language. spacesailor ..and purchased by a very canny young chap called Bill Gates.....shortly before IBM cobbled together their first Personal Computer out of existing bits and pieces and went looking for a suitable Disk Operating System....which young Bill agreed to license to them as MS-DOS. And every other clone maker since then. Which is to say that for every computer on the face of the earth running MS-DOS and/or Windows, a licensing fee has been paid to Microsoft. 1
horsefeathers Posted September 28, 2023 Posted September 28, 2023 (edited) 22 hours ago, IBob said: ..and purchased by a very canny young chap called Bill Gates.....shortly before IBM cobbled together their first Personal Computer out of existing bits and pieces and went looking for a suitable Disk Operating System....which young Bill agreed to license to them as MS-DOS. And every other clone maker since then. Which is to say that for every computer on the face of the earth running MS-DOS and/or Windows, a licensing fee has been paid to Microsoft. And MS-DOS / PC-DOS was built on the framework of (one might more correctly say copied from) the 8 bit operating system called CP/M, which ran on 8080 or Z80 cpus - dual floppy support, and command structure which MS-DOS/PC-DOS copied. I built my first commercial system using CP/M running dBASE II, on an Osborne dual floppy machine, and later used Kaypro computers, which were not quite as glacial as the Osborne, and had a better screen. Ahh, they were the days. Edited September 28, 2023 by horsefeathers 2
sfGnome Posted September 29, 2023 Posted September 29, 2023 5 hours ago, horsefeathers said: I built my first commercial system using CP/M running dBASE II, on an Osborne dual floppy machine, and later used Kaypro computers, which were not quite as glacial as the Osborne, and had a better screen. Ahh, they were the days. I used to develop software on an hp machine with one floppy drive. The disks were too small to fit the editor, assembler and the source code, so I had to have two disks, one with the editor and the source, then copy the source over to the other disk which had the assembler to compile it. Slow, fiddly and error prone. Definitely not the good old days… 🫣😁 2 1
rgmwa Posted September 30, 2023 Posted September 30, 2023 On 29/09/2023 at 6:26 AM, horsefeathers said: I built my first commercial system using CP/M running dBASE II, on an Osborne dual floppy machine, and later used Kaypro computers, which were not quite as glacial as the Osborne, and had a better screen. Ahh, they were the days. I had a Kaypro, which was a pretty good computer for its day. Compact, but luggable rather than portable. I spent a lot of time writing engineering software back in those days. 1
IBob Posted September 30, 2023 Posted September 30, 2023 I had an early Mitsubishi 'laptop' that I would class as luggable: note carrying handle across front that slid out some for lugging. Built like the proverbial brick outhouse, had every interface then known to man, had been dropped, bought 2nd hand for $500. I repaired the chassis and case and made a living writing and commissioning PLC programs.
pmccarthy Posted September 30, 2023 Author Posted September 30, 2023 I had a HP9825 on my desk at work in 1977. It had a thermal printer, a pen plotter and data was saved on an audio cassette recorder. I had to write the programs in HP modified BASIC.
rgmwa Posted September 30, 2023 Posted September 30, 2023 I remember the HP9825. We had one in the office as well but I think only one senior engineer was trained to use it. My start in programming began with one of these: How the times have changed.
spacesailor Posted September 30, 2023 Posted September 30, 2023 I still have a HP 41 calculator , but getting hard to source Ntype batteries. spacesailor 2
IBob Posted September 30, 2023 Posted September 30, 2023 We'll be getting the slipsticks out shortly......) 1
pmccarthy Posted September 30, 2023 Author Posted September 30, 2023 18 minutes ago, IBob said: We'll be getting the slipsticks out shortly......) I reckon this is better. My first proper calculator AFTER the slip stick. Used with 7 figure logs and trig tables for survey calculations. 1 1
tillmanr Posted October 1, 2023 Posted October 1, 2023 Loved the Facit, a couple forward or a couple of backwards and dada 1
facthunter Posted October 1, 2023 Posted October 1, 2023 I've always been backward in coming forward. . Nev 1
facthunter Posted October 1, 2023 Posted October 1, 2023 But I'll make an effort. Why are we still talking under the heading of a "STOLEN " anything when it wasn't? Nev 1
pmccarthy Posted October 1, 2023 Author Posted October 1, 2023 25 minutes ago, facthunter said: But I'll make an effort. Why are we still talking under the heading of a "STOLEN " anything when it wasn't? Nev When time is stolen it flies…..Joan Baez 2
Blueadventures Posted October 1, 2023 Posted October 1, 2023 48 minutes ago, facthunter said: But I'll make an effort. Why are we still talking under the heading of a "STOLEN " anything when it wasn't? Nev Maybe moderator can change title to ‘Misplaced’ 2
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