T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
725.1 | Numismatic Lament | REVEAL::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Fri Sep 29 1989 18:33 | 13 |
| ... when a coin minted the year you were born is worth more than face value.
... when *all* of the coins in your pocket were minted after you hit puberty.
... when the oldest coin in your pocket was minted *after* you were born.
... when you can remember spending a Mercury dime. [I can't. - WL]
It was while I was counting my change that I came up with the topic. I'm not
yet that old chronologically, but lately I've been creeping toward mental
decrepitude. The fact that I even started this topic is evidence of that!
Wook (@ 27)
|
725.2 | an old (sorry) one | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Fri Sep 29 1989 21:00 | 1 |
| ... when your back goes out more often than you do
|
725.3 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Fri Sep 29 1989 21:55 | 1 |
| shop assistants offer to help you carry a small package to your car!
|
725.4 | | DELREY::DAVIS_SA | illegitimi non carborundum | Fri Sep 29 1989 22:41 | 4 |
|
...everyone refers to you as "youngster".
|
725.5 | | PROXY::CANTOR | Hide, Cecil, here comes Uncle Captain! | Sat Sep 30 1989 06:40 | 29 |
| Re several previous
numismatics
-----------
When you remember spending a Mercury dime, and remember thinking about
the fact that it was in good condition, and thinking, what the hell,
their as common as buffalo nickels!
aching backs
------------
I heard that phrased as "... when your back peters out, and vice versa."
And now some new stuff.
When you realize that most people around you weren't yet born when your
favorite music was first popular. (For me, that's early-to-mid-60s
bubble gum and rock and roll.)
When you realize that it isn't common any more for people in our
industry to know how to read a punched tab card.
When your hair stylist says she's going to her tenth high school
reunion, and you realize that you've been out of high school longer
than she's been alive.
Dave C.
|
725.6 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sun Oct 01 1989 02:42 | 10 |
| Re: 725.5
>> You know you're getting old ...
>> When you realize that it isn't common any more
>> for people in our industry to know how to read
>> a punched tab card.
When there are people in our industry who don't know what
a punched tab card is!
|
725.7 | New horizons | BLAS03::FORBES | Bill Forbes - LDP Engrng | Sun Oct 01 1989 16:52 | 4 |
|
You know you're getting old when someone mentions "...doing THE
THANG" and your first though is of bowel habits.
|
725.8 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Oct 02 1989 15:12 | 10 |
| From a song by the Weavers....
"How do I know that my youth is all spent,
my get up and go, has got up and went.
But inspite of it all I'm able to grin,
when I think of the places my get up has been!"
Bonnie
|
725.9 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Mon Oct 02 1989 17:16 | 10 |
| Or the similar lyric I think from Tom Paxton which I've forgotten
but went something to the effect
"I get up each morning and read the obits
and if my names not there ......"
Stuart
|
725.10 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Mon Oct 02 1989 17:18 | 2 |
| When your kiddy does a somersault as easy as pie, but when you just
put your head down, you wonder how the hell you EVER could do this!
|
725.11 | He looked like he was about 17. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Damnadorum Multitudo | Mon Oct 02 1989 18:32 | 3 |
| I had my appendix out last April and my surgeon had braces on his teeth.
Larry
|
725.12 | Don't know who recorded it first | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Oct 02 1989 19:06 | 10 |
| in re .9
That's a verse from the same song...
"I get up each morning and dust off my wits
open the paper and read the obits,
and if I'm not there I know I'm not dead,
so I eat a good breakfast and roll back to bed."
Bonnie
|
725.13 | If you haven't heard of them you aren't there yet. | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Tue Oct 03 1989 22:13 | 3 |
|
...when you look in your medicine cabinet and find Maalox, Dentugrip,
and Preparation-H!
|
725.14 | | SHARE::SATOW | | Tue Oct 03 1989 22:52 | 21 |
| ... when you remember the Stones the *first* time around
... when someone puts up a poster of James Dean and everyone except
you says, "Who's that".
... you watch professional athletes and remember watching their fathers
Hey! Whatzis gotta do with Joyoflex any way? So in the spirit of the
notesfile
... when you remember when "awesome" was a respectable word, reserved for
unusual situations
... when "wicked" referred to bad witches who dispensed poison apples and
cast evil spells.
Clay
|
725.15 | Back to the '40s and '50s | GRNDAD::STONE | >>>--He-went-that-a-way--> | Wed Oct 04 1989 16:22 | 7 |
|
...when you can remember wiring a plug-board for an IBM 402, et al.
...when you can remember sitting around the radio on Sunday evening
listening to Jack Benny, Fred Allen, and Charlie Macarthy (and his
friend Mortimer Snerd). [Ten points to anyone who can remember
the name of Charlie's other friend (Effie _____).]
|
725.16 | | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Wed Oct 04 1989 20:12 | 4 |
| [Ten points to anyone who can remember
the name of Charlie's other friend (Effie _____).]
Clinker (Klinker?). That's from hearing re-runs not the original.
|
725.17 | More | SSGBPM::KENAH | Break the pattern, break the chain | Wed Oct 04 1989 21:15 | 11 |
| More meaning shift examples:
... when gay meant carefree
... when stoned meant drunk -- and you realized that Dylan didn't
mean alcohol in "Rainy Day Women 12 and 35"
And:
... when you listen to sixteen year olds and realize that they've
developed a generational slang to confuse YOU!
|
725.18 | And even more | WLDWST::DERICKSON | | Thu Oct 05 1989 09:27 | 9 |
|
When you remember at 16 thinking everyone over 25 looked like
a senior citizen and now you think everyone under 25 looks 16.
(And they do too!!!)
|
725.19 | ...pearls of wisdom via our Fred.... | IOSG::ROBERTS | Richard, Developer/UI Specialist | Thu Oct 05 1989 11:09 | 12 |
| I'ma amazed no-one has rattled-off the Fred Wedlock classic yet; well,
I don't want to excite you to death, so here are a few snippets ...
"When you're feeling as stiff as a skinhead's boot,
Rub on Vick where you use to splash Brut,
And when the latest punk fashion is your wedding suit...."
and of course....
"When it takes you all night to do what you used to do all night...."
R|tch^d
|
725.20 | Worse than young policemen! | AYOV27::IHAGGERTY | | Thu Oct 05 1989 13:04 | 5 |
| When I started in this business, many moons ago, air hostesses were
sophisticated older women, full of mystery. Nowadays, they are
young girls. Have the airlines changed their recuitment policies?
IJH.
|
725.21 | And the pilots were all men! | GRNDAD::STONE | >>>--He-went-that-a-way--> | Thu Oct 05 1989 16:30 | 7 |
| Re: .20 [air hostesses]
You really have a few years on if you remember flying when they had
stewardesses instead of "cabin attendents", and that all stewardesses
had to be unmarried (which by default meant childless).
|
725.22 | ah, Gawd! I'm not old; I'm prehistoric ... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Time takes things. | Thu Oct 05 1989 17:46 | 8 |
| Re .17:
>... when stoned meant drunk ...
And before that, when "stoned" meant being the target of hurled
rocks, either physical or figurative.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
725.23 | So old, I creak when I sneak! | CSCOAC::CONWAY_J | life's too important to take seriously | Thu Oct 05 1989 22:41 | 6 |
| re .21
And when the 'Stews were all registered nurses? and when the drinks
were free? and when they gave you a complimentary pack of cigarettes
as you boarded? and when the "Super D Constellation" was king of the
sky! t'was another world, and it long dead.
|
725.24 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Fri Oct 06 1989 18:03 | 2 |
| seems to me the term for drunk once upno a time was "plastered" ..
used rarely now ...
|
725.25 | | SEINE::RAINVILLE | Messiah wanted, experience a plus! | Mon Oct 09 1989 03:00 | 6 |
| .....you have a different doctor for every body part!!
;-)
MWR
|
725.26 | Someone over 21, going on 16.. | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Mon Oct 09 1989 10:18 | 24 |
| ...when your narrow waist and your broad mind begin to change places
when you remember the original Rupert, Phantom. Batman comics and
movies
When you remember that movies required you to be able to read ;-)
and quickly
when your PC stood 8 feet tall, 3 feet wide and 30 feet long (mine was
a Ferranti 'Pegasus')
When radios had LETs (light emitting transistors = valves)
When you had 5 hole paper tape as input and output....
derek
Who is about to celebrate another birthday 8-( and is still accused of
being a 'kidult' by his son.
|
725.27 | It's nice to be remembered (I think) | SSDEVO::HUGHES | Thus thru Windows call on us(Donne) | Wed Oct 11 1989 00:17 | 10 |
| > <<< Note 725.26 by LAMHRA::WHORLOW "Venturers do it in the bush" >>>
-< Someone over 21, going on 16.. >-
> when your PC stood 8 feet tall, 3 feet wide and 30 feet long (mine was
> a Ferranti 'Pegasus')
When the first project that you ever managed as a young engineer shows up
as an item in a "You know you are getting old" topic ...
Jim
|
725.28 | When you remember blocked magtape transfers! | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Wed Oct 11 1989 10:19 | 29 |
|
G'day,
>> When the first project that you ever managed as a young engineer
>> shows up as an item in a "You know you are getting old" topic ...
I'm proud and honoured to make your aquaintance.
Pegasus was a _fine_ machine. 39 bit words and a clock so you could see
when your time on the machine was over. Wonderful!
Pegasus was my first machine........ There have been many since, but
none are the same as the first ;-)
derek
ps
I used it in 1965 when the design was already 11? years old. First on
the drawing board in 1954??
|
725.29 | | CURRNT::PREECE | I don't know why, I call him Gerald. | Wed Oct 11 1989 10:22 | 11 |
|
.... when your son comes home from school and shows you a picture
of your first computer - in a history book !!!
(Honest ! It was an Elliott (later ICL) 920A, and it was featured
as a museum piece in a "History of Technology" article.)
.... when you proudly mention that you went to Jimi Hendrix' last
concert, and everybody around you says "Jimi who ?"
Ian
|
725.30 | Forgive us our digression ... | SSDEVO::HUGHES | Thus thru Windows call on us(Donne) | Wed Oct 11 1989 20:21 | 34 |
| Re: <<< Note 725.28 by LAMHRA::WHORLOW "Venturers do it in the bush" >>>
> Pegasus was a _fine_ machine. 39 bit words and a clock so you could see
> when your time on the machine was over. Wonderful!
:
:
> ps
>
> I used it in 1965 when the design was already 11? years old. First on
> the drawing board in 1954??
You are probably correct. I joined Ferranti in 1953 and worked for 18
months or so on the old Mk 1* machines (Williams' Tube CRTs for "fast"
memory, but they also had drums with a guaranteed access time of 20 msec
... not much progress in that department!).
Meantime the Pegasus design was being worked on by a joint development team
that was led by people from the government-backed NRDC. As a consequence,
it was probably the first machine whose instruction set was designed by a
programmer, rather than a hardware type. The designer is no longer alive,
sadly, but given time I might remember his name.
Another interesting oddity of Pegasus arose from the fact that computers
were so rare at that time that most companies/organizations owning one (!)
would put it in a "fish-bowl" enclosure and show it off to VIP visitors.
As a Sales gimmick Ferranti had Van den Plas (the specialist coachwork
people for Rolls Royce and Bentley) design and produce the outer skins ...
they had a mirror finish and 17 coats of paint.
I think I saw the prototype Pegasus in London in 1954, and took over
the development project for the production version when it started up
(in Manchester) around the end of '55 or the beginning of '56.
-Jim
|
725.31 | Post-digression ... | SSDEVO::HUGHES | Thus thru Windows call on us(Donne) | Wed Oct 11 1989 20:27 | 10 |
| Re .30:
> ...
> it was probably the first machine whose instruction set was designed by a
> programmer, rather than a hardware type. The designer is no longer alive,
> sadly, but given time I might remember his name.
I just remembered ... it was Chris Strachey.
-Jim
|
725.32 | remember "groovy"? | GOLETA::BROWN_RO | blame it on the bossa nova | Wed Oct 11 1989 22:33 | 10 |
| I know I am old when the photograph of me at Woodstock in Life magazine
was re-published in a 20TH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE!
"When Mozart was my age, he had been dead for two years."
-Tom Lehrer
-roger
|
725.33 | For they also digress against us! | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Thu Oct 12 1989 00:25 | 47 |
| G'day,...
Remember Initial Orders? an operating system in uder 2k words! There
were about 3 blocks left, as I recall and someone where I worked (Road
Research Lab, MoT) doctored them to punch out "Happy Christmas" if the
debug switch?? was on!
We also doctored the tube display so it drove a tv, and a Decca tape
drive so that it read a special tape and sent the output to a speaker.
The TV showed a traffic simulation - a big blob in the centre of the
top half of the (round) crt was a slow truck, random moving bits from
the left on the top line were faster cars, and random bits moving right
on the bottom half of the display were cars goingthe other way. Every
now and then a car would overtake the truck..... and if it collided
with bits going the other way, the tape would start up and spin along.
The speaker would announce "You _really_ must be careful when trying
to overtake!" Ahhh computing was _fun_ in those days....
Oh yes remember STORE USE? 16 instructions that went through the (drum)
memory and determined how many negative words(instructions) there were,
formatted the output and punched it. I remember the middle instruction
went 16 0 10 4 or something like that
16 0 10 punched the contents of the register 0, modified by the top
part of register 4 to a tape. At some point, however, register 4
pointed to this instruction and the pattern 16 0 10 came out as
<cr><lf>.
Wonderful.....
Telling of this machine recently, to a young bloke, I talked of
swapping the contents of two locations without using a third location
(or register or anything). Blew him away, it did.... had some mental
block that said it couldn't be done...
such were the tricks? of the time.
See ya
derek
|
725.34 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Oct 12 1989 00:47 | 18 |
| Re: .33, an "exchange" instruction
Some PDP-1s had a "SWP" instruction which exchanged the contents
of the AC and IO registers.
The PDP-6 and PDP-10 had an EXCH instruction which exchanged the
contents of a register with any memory location.
Then there are the algorithms to do the same thing without using
a third register: to exchange A and B
A <== A .xor. B
B <== A .xor. B
A <== A .xor. B
The same instruction repeated three times; very unusual, and it works
on any VAX machine. I don't think your young bloke was up on his
algorithms.
|
725.35 | I can remember when bytes were not always 8 bits | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Oct 12 1989 12:13 | 10 |
| The PDP-8 has a "swap byte" instruction which exchanges the two
halves of the 12 bit accumulator. I wonder if he would have been happy
with 6 bit bytes? Incidentally, the French for "byte" is "octet", and
the idea of a 6 bit "octet" would probably boggle a lot of the new
generation of French computer scientists.
Anyone remember about 17 years ago there were strong rumours in the
computer press that IBM was going to introduce the 9 bit byte in its
"next range"? The proposed motive was to handle all the extra
characters in European languages.
|
725.36 | old? me? | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Thu Oct 12 1989 13:47 | 11 |
| RE last ten or so.
You know you're getting old when you read those entries and actually
*understand* them......
;-)
Arie
(who once wrote an INTCODE interpreter for the PDP8 -- in 2K of memory!)
(.... and who was proud to say that he had forgotten all of it, until you guys
came..... ;-);-))
|
725.37 | It brings back memories. | GRNDAD::STONE | >>>--He-went-that-a-way--> | Thu Oct 12 1989 16:35 | 6 |
|
...when you can recall seeing Whirlwind I in operation in MIT's Barter
Building (1955).
...when you can recall working with 90-column, round holed punched
cards (used in Burroughs punched cards systems).
|
725.38 | From the Mouths of Babes | REVEAL::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Thu Oct 12 1989 19:55 | 11 |
| When a kid you know exclaims:
"You were alive before there were calculators???"
or says to you,
"You're pretty cool for an old guy."
You know you're getting old ...
when you feel the irresistable urge to reminisce
about the "Good Ole Days".
|
725.39 | oh dear and its fri the 13th too | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Fri Oct 13 1989 01:03 | 28 |
| G'day
>When a kid you know exclaims:
>
>"You were alive before there were calculators???"
in my case...
"You were in computers before I was alive!" and he now works for
Digital!
...When you used to check the results of your pegasus program by
tabulating the results using a Hollerith card sorter/counter using the
cards of data that were used to create the magtapes that the Pegasus
used....
When you can still remember rationing....
and London trams.....
and wooden seats in 3rd class carriages on God's Wonderful Railway
(GWR)
derek
|
725.40 | | DASXPS::TIMMONS | speling and grammer count four tu! | Fri Oct 13 1989 13:37 | 4 |
| When you meet an old girlfriend from high school, and you think
it's her mother!
Lee
|
725.41 | | SHARE::SATOW | | Fri Oct 13 1989 14:36 | 8 |
| . . . when a couple of folks who died recently are real, not historical,
figures to you.
________[forget his name], creator of Rocket J. [Rocky] Squirrel, Bullwinkel
Moose, Boris Badinov, and Natasha Fatale
Joe Foy, from the 1967 Red Sox "Impossible Dream Team"
|
725.42 | | GRNDAD::STONE | >>>--He-went-that-a-way--> | Fri Oct 13 1989 15:43 | 6 |
|
...when you can remember all of your school desks had ink wells (with
ink in them) and you learned penmanship with a wooden pen with a
replaceable metal nib.
...when you can remember seeing your brothers go off to serve in WW-II.
|
725.43 | | SSGBPM::KENAH | Break the pattern, break the chain | Fri Oct 13 1989 17:32 | 4 |
| re .41:
Jay Ward, RIP
|
725.44 | child of the 50's... | VINO::MCGLINCHEY | Sancho! My Armor! My TECO Macros! | Fri Oct 13 1989 19:53 | 20 |
|
When you can remember...
_BEING_ on Dick Clark's Bandstand out of Philly
The universal panic following Sputnik I
Programming a PDP-12 in the DIAL monitor
EE curricula where they taught only analog electronics
78 RPM records
Joe McCarthy's hearing on TV
Houses that had no TV, and _not_ by choice.
Amos and Andy on Radio (they were on before Bob and Ray)
-- Glinch (who'd better stop before he gets depressed)
|
725.45 | ...and counting | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | | Fri Oct 13 1989 23:47 | 4 |
| Elizabeth and Phil's wedding...
California air raid drills...
|
725.46 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sat Oct 14 1989 04:56 | 4 |
| How about school fire escapes consisting of 4-foot diameter tubular
slides to get you from the top floor down to ground level. The first
two guys down would slide on a burlap bag to polish the metal so
everyone following would slide faster. Fire drill were GREAT fun!
|
725.47 | only in my early thirtysomethings | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Sun Oct 15 1989 21:23 | 3 |
| Geez, some of you are OLD! :-)
Dan
|
725.48 | How things have changed! | GRNDAD::STONE | >>>--He-went-that-a-way--> | Mon Oct 16 1989 15:50 | 11 |
| Re: .44
> 78 RPM Records
...played on an old Victor phonograph with a steel stylus and no
electronic amplification! (Remember the "His Masters Voice"
trademark.)
Going back a little further...listening to cylindrical records on
the old Edison phonograph in the attic.
|
725.49 | movies and film strips | CAM::MILLER | Run my pony through the sand | Mon Oct 16 1989 16:25 | 5 |
| Watching film strips and reel-to-reel movies in high school (now
everything is shown on VCRs).
Not knowing that the "Wizard of Oz" changed from black and white
to color (the parents couldn't afford a color TV)
|
725.50 | | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Mon Oct 16 1989 18:09 | 1 |
| listening to the magical wire recorder
|
725.51 | | WR1FOR::ADELMAN_AA | PLAY b A's eball | Tue Oct 17 1989 23:12 | 1 |
| ...When you start coughing up dust.....
|
725.52 | A "crank" reply | VMSSPT::MAGOON | Village idiot | Wed Oct 18 1989 22:32 | 1 |
| Having dance lessons in grade school with the music coming from a crank Victrola
|
725.53 | Steel? | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Running old protocol | Mon Nov 06 1989 14:17 | 10 |
| �> 78 RPM Records
�
� ...played on an old Victor phonograph with a steel stylus and no
� electronic amplification! (Remember the "His Masters Voice"
� trademark.)
Steel stylus? Arriviste nonsense. Next you know they'll be bringing in
Dansettes. Everyone knows that a proper stylus is just a chip of wood
that you have to sharpen every time you use it (I've still got an HMV
tin that contained them).
|
725.54 | WW II | GRNDAD::STONE | SPECIAL WHEN LIT | Tue Nov 07 1989 17:42 | 5 |
|
...if you can remember your family being issued ration coupons to buy
food and gasoline. (With a sticker on the car windshield to
indicate which ration category was authorized for that vehicle.)
|
725.55 | ... when your knees buckle and your belt doesn't | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Mon Nov 13 1989 17:29 | 0 |
725.56 | On aging | BLAS03::FORBES | Bill Forbes - LDP Engrng | Tue Nov 21 1989 03:25 | 15 |
| I don't recall where I saw this...could have been in this conference.
First you forget names.
Then you forget faces.
Then you forget to pull your fly up.
Then you forget to pull your fly down.
|
725.57 | | NHASAD::KRINER | tanstaafl | Thu Nov 30 1989 23:46 | 1 |
| ...when sex goes from tri-weekly, to try weekly, to try weakly.
|
725.58 | ...when you remember this joke. | BLAS03::FORBES | Bill Forbes - LDP Engrng | Fri Dec 01 1989 00:06 | 10 |
| Re: <<< Note 725.57 by NHASAD::KRINER "tanstaafl" >>>
A spaceship lands in the Belgian Congo. A Little Green Man gets out
and walks up to the nearest person and says, "Take me to your
leader!" The individual replies, "Lamumba, Mobutu, or Casavubu?"
The L.G.M. says,
"I will dance with you later. First take me to your leader."
Bill
|