Forum: Bryce


Subject: All right, age check

draculaz opened this issue on Feb 24, 2005 ยท 99 posts


draculaz posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 4:22 PM

Was chatting with Phil in #rendergods today (he likes slapping me with trouts), and he told me that he's 30-something. I couldn't believe it. More and more I find out about the people in this forum, I'm led to believe that the usuals are older, mature people. I'm 22. Is there anyone out there who's younger or at least my age? Drac (not in bryce's target audience, apparently) ((http://www.freewriters.ca/wings3d/rendergods.htm, install mirc and come over for a chat))


RodsArt posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 4:43 PM

Young Mr Drac, You are a very well rounded mature 22 year old, exhibiting great feats of accomplishment & responsibility. WAIT !!, What am I saying...You're hangin out in a chat room smackin people with fish. (LOL)J/K I meant what I said...That's why you fit in so well with us seasoned vets.(like that term huh??) I just posted an Image I did, based on a sketch that's almost as old as you are. Sorry No mIRC. :P ICM (L.U.L.T.)

___
Ockham's razor- It's that simple


Slakker posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 4:56 PM

Drac, don't feel bad, i'm a wee 17 years old. Find someone younger than me, and i'll...i don't know. I've gotta get mIRC...


Ardiva posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 5:10 PM

Drac Sweetie...
I may be over-the-hill here going on 65, but I can handle my own with younger ones as I'm also a product of the 60's and 70's era protesters who knew how to jerk with anyones psychi. :)
But I'm not going into MIRC to prove that as I wouldn't want to crowd ya any. lol

hugs
Me

Message edited on: 02/24/2005 17:12



Zhann posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 6:17 PM

I'd say that most of the regulars here are between 35 and 70. With it leaning to 35 to 45 crowd. I 'think[ the youngest is woodhurst at 16. So we're either old enough to know better, or not old enough to know anything....=)

Bryce Forum Coordinator....

Vision is the Art of seeing things invisible...


vangogh posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 6:18 PM

Hey, drac.....I'm the same age as you...who would of thunk it!!! Me and you...the same age...well, almost the same...if I take off 32 years, close one eye, and squint out the other. well, now...that seems to make me somewhat more like 54 doesn't it? Oh well, at least I try to think young...thats gotta count for something!


FWTempest posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 6:19 PM

36 going on 18... ;o)


Kemal posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 6:22 PM

40 and staying there !!! :D


Claymor posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 6:37 PM

Seems to me MoonGoat is a youngster if I remember right. As for myself...I was 22 when Reagan was in office.


dan whiteside posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:02 PM

52 - a year before the introduction of network TV. We didn't get our first TV till I was 5.


RodsArt posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:09 PM

Oh yeah.....44

___
Ockham's razor- It's that simple


MoonGoat posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:21 PM

I'm 14.

15 on March 5th.

I think Woodhurst and Mrdodobird are both 16.

This is weird, I'm probably the youngest in here, and I just taught some stranger with a much greater age than me how to enable soft shadows.

Strange, how this internet behaves. And I suppose calling me a :youngster" is better than Ang's personal favorite slander: "Moonie"

Message edited on: 02/24/2005 19:23


FranOnTheEdge posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:33 PM

Er... I'm 13... been 13 for ages... Wanna stay 13... only, I might get arrested next time I drive the car. Um... there's just no happy medium, either you're old enough to do things, or young enough to enjoy 'em. It's all in the mind. In terms of artistic ability, I'm probably about right at 13... or should that be 3? Fran

Measure your mind's height
by the shade it casts.

Robert Browning (Paracelsus)

Fran's Freestuff

http://franontheedge.blogspot.com/

http://www.FranOnTheEdge.com


ysvry posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:35 PM

well i like moonie better :P maybe we should call ang that then from now on lol, im 42 now btw

for some free stuff i made
and for almost daily fotos


TobinLam posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:41 PM

19.33 years ago I emerged from my sweet mother's womb into the cold harsh world. I had no clue drac was 22! This is so crazy! Fran, you do not want to stay 13. Summer after your 18th birthday is where it's at.


Ardiva posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:54 PM

When I was very young, I yearned to be 21 and be able to order a drink legally. :)

Message edited on: 02/24/2005 19:55



Zhann posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 7:57 PM

Hmmmmmmmmm, I'm 55, my current body's age.......;]

Bryce Forum Coordinator....

Vision is the Art of seeing things invisible...


FranOnTheEdge posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:04 PM

Actually you could be right, but my 21st birthday was the only one where I had a party, a REAL party. Them were the days... day actually... er night too! (gggg) No no no! I'm still just 13 really! F

Measure your mind's height
by the shade it casts.

Robert Browning (Paracelsus)

Fran's Freestuff

http://franontheedge.blogspot.com/

http://www.FranOnTheEdge.com


GROINGRINDER posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:05 PM

Soon to be fifty.....going on ten.


electroglyph posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:09 PM

I'm 308 in dog years.


Ardiva posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:10 PM

Right now I would like to be the age where I can stay up for 72 hours straight! ;)



erosiaart posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:28 PM

35.. and loving being in the 30's... so may stay where I am for a very very long time...


LordOfAcid posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:37 PM

I'm over the hill and heading down in to the valley on the other side. Not wanting to give my age away but i'm older than some and younger than others on here.


drawbridgep posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:53 PM

I have no problem saying I'm 36. but actually, I remember very little of the late 80's early 90's, so I think that means I'm actually 26.

---------
Phillip Drawbridge
Website 
Facebook


Dann-O posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:56 PM

Older than Drac younger than Pakled. About 41.

The wit of a misplaced ex-patriot.
I cheated on my metaphysics exam by looking into the soul of the person next to me.


Mahray posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 8:59 PM

I feel young again! (21)

Come visit us at RenderGods.

Ignore the shooty dog thing.


Claymor posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 9:23 PM

LOL. No slander intended MG...anyone under about 28 is a youngster to me. :)


kimpe posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 9:54 PM

49 and in my prime! ;)


MoonGoat posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 10:06 PM

Forgiven, Mr. Mor. It's my middle name that I have to be vigilant about. 9 days till thy 15th birthday! counts 167 days till I may start drivers ed!


ellocolobo posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 10:08 PM

Oh my G....You all do realize that we have been talking to youngsters across state lines....Im going to do like Charo and go to court to have my age changed....40


frogdot posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 10:16 PM

52, but I'm told I have the mind of an eight year old.


pakled posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 10:16 PM

true..;)
When I was Born
There were 48 stars on the flag
People were still arguing about Sputnik
Elvis was considered a dangerous animal
COBOL was the hot new computing language, compiled that year
Tail fins were bigger than ever
Coonskin caps for kids were the bom...uh groov..uh, wicked..;)
Transistors were the hot new invention, most things were still tube-driven
Rumania was an occupied country, with no good Internet connections..uh, wait, uh..;)
Kennedy was a Senator, Nixon was a Vice- President, Johnson was a Congressman (landslide Lindon), Ford may not even have been a Congressman yet, John Glenn was a test Pilot, Carter was in the Navy (I think), Clinton was in grade school. Kruschev was in Power, the Shah was just back in Iran, De Gaulle was running France..yada yada yada
It was the year of the Rooster
Ok, I'm 47 going on 48..;)

I wish I'd said that.. The Staircase Wit

anahl nathrak uth vas betude doth yel dyenvey..;)


JimBobCarl posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 10:48 PM

I am 34 about to turn 35. SAD!


tjohn posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 10:53 PM

52 at the end of August. 7.4 in dog years.

This is not my "second childhood". I'm not finished with the first one yet.

Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.

"I'd like to die peacefully in my sleep like my grandfather....not screaming in terror like the passengers on his bus." - Jack Handy


xenic101 posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 11:17 PM

31, maybe 32, pretty sure it's not 33.


haloedrain posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 11:33 PM

20 now, and in 4 months I'll be 21 and I won't have to take the trolley to Tijuana to get drunk legally anymore, woohoo! Well, ok, so I don't actually do that.


sackrat posted Thu, 24 February 2005 at 11:35 PM

Old enough to know better,........52.

"Any club that would have me as a member is probably not worth joining" -Groucho Marx


Aldaron posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 12:22 AM

39, I'm not going any further....think I'd rather go back to 25. :)


TwistedBolt posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 12:49 AM

I'm 23, turn 24 in 27 days.

I eat babies.


draculaz posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 2:12 AM

bah :P fine, you're all young. geeze, didn't imagine there would be this avalanche of people posting their ages :) drac


TwistedBolt posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 2:17 AM

we're all like sheep... Drac's I guess...LOL^_^

Message edited on: 02/25/2005 02:19

I eat babies.


Lucifer_The_Dark posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 2:33 AM

baa baa I'm 36, 37 next birthday but I still feel 18.

Windows 7 64Bit
Poser Pro 2010 SR1


Kemal posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 2:33 AM

Would that make Drac a Shepperd ???:P


matrixmode posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 2:46 AM

I'd like to sheepishly add that I was born Feb. 4th. The same year that Alaska and Hawaii became states. :P

"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." Leonardo da Vinci


RodsArt posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 2:56 AM

Does that mean Drac would be having little Lambs instead of babies? "Yo!....I wanna have your Lamb".....Nah, doesn't roll quite right. LOL

___
Ockham's razor- It's that simple


Gog posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:08 AM

I'm 36, 37 next birthday too!

----------

Toolset: Blender, GIMP, Indigo Render, LuxRender, TopMod, Knotplot, Ivy Gen, Plant Studio.


draculaz posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:12 AM

zhaaaaaan... Rod is having dirty dirty thoughts!!! drac (thoughtpolice)


jasonmit posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:19 AM

I was born two days before Paul McCartney left the Beatles.


alvinylaya posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:24 AM

29 turning 30 in March :(


rj001 posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:25 AM

um, according to the label in my underwear i am 40degreees wash only. when i was born the Stones had paint it black in the charts, i have rendered the mp3 in bryce for you. . . . thats what you get for growing up with humour from Spike (Milligan)

Experience is no substitute for blind faith.

http://avalon2000.livejournal.com/ - My Art Blog

http://jeferies.jalbum.net/Richard%20Jeferies%20Future%20Perfect/


Zhann posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:27 AM

Dirty thoughts don't count, acting on them, well that's a whole other can o'worms.....(what did I do with that whip and handcuffs, hmmmmmm)

Bryce Forum Coordinator....

Vision is the Art of seeing things invisible...


draculaz posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:28 AM

heh


chohole posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 3:59 AM

I have just discovered I am not the oldest person here quite. In the way my Father taught me to calculate my age I will be 40 and a half next b'day, but my son says I grow older but refuse to grow up.

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."



Flak posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 4:02 AM

Most of me is 37.... except for my right ankle which is currently thinking its about 60.

Dreams are just nightmares on prozac...
Digital WasteLanD


Elsina posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 4:34 AM

Born in July 1963....


My gallery @ Renderosity


lindans posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 4:38 AM

49 next birthday Mar 26 and DEFINITELY growing old disgracefully!!

Oh, let the sun beat down upon my face. I am a traveler of both time and space ....Kashmir, Led Zeppelin


LordOfAcid posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 4:54 AM

My god half of you people i actually thought you were young and very mature for your ages. The young ones i have to honestly say you are mature young people. LordOfAcid (Twice dracs age)


cambert posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 5:00 AM

39 now, 40 in July. That is going to be one hell of a party. Can't wait :o)


DragonCB posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 6:47 AM

I'm 33 going on 100.

Wait, that is how I feel after just finishing a Microsoft software beta test. ;)

-Chris


Gog posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 7:55 AM

you mean micrsoft do beta testing? I thought that was the time between release and service pack 1 ;)

----------

Toolset: Blender, GIMP, Indigo Render, LuxRender, TopMod, Knotplot, Ivy Gen, Plant Studio.


markostimpy posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 8:44 AM

40 and counting. Cannot wait until senility sets in and I will have an excuse for my attitiude.

Mark S. Popham
http://www.markostimpy.com
markostimpy@gmail.com


Uncommon posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 10:20 AM

Might as well jump on the bandwagon ... 37 here. Mentally I think I'm still stuck in the 80's.


Ardiva posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 11:05 AM

I can't believe I'm the oldest here! WooHoo!! Boy, the things I could tell you, you wouldn't believe. ;)



TheBryster posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 11:31 AM Forum Moderator

Born on the Planet 70s. I'll be 50 in June.

Available on Amazon for the Kindle E-Reader

All the Woes of a World by Jonathan Icknield aka The Bryster


And in my final hours - I would cling rather to the tattooed hand of kindness - than the unblemished hand of hate...


Ang25 posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 11:34 AM

WoooHooo! Lindins-my birthday is Mar 26 also!
I'll be 43 then. I like 42, not as much as 25 but 43 is not a nice sounding number.
The worse part about the late 30's into the 40's is the weight gain, memory loss and ummm I can't remember the other stuff. ps sorry for that nickname Moonie. Hope it doesn't end up sticking. ;P

Message edited on: 02/25/2005 11:35


Erlik posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 12:49 PM

Ang, I can still sneer at you as a youngster, for being almost three months younger. :-))

-- erlik


RobertJ posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 12:55 PM

Year of the Dragon for me (1964, and a Leo as well ^___^)

Robert van der Veeke Basugasubasubasu Basugasubakuhaku Gasubakuhakuhaku!! "Better is the enemy of good enough." Dr. Mikoyan of the Mikoyan Gurevich Design Bureau.


GROINGRINDER posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 5:47 PM

I was born on Friday the thirteenth. The world's lucky day. Thirteen is my lucky number. On my thirteenth birthday I dropped a thirteen pound bowling ball on my face.


Ang25 posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 6:03 PM

1962 year of the tiger and Aries a Ram! Don't get in my way, lol, if my claws and fangs don't do the trick I'll head butt ya!


tjohn posted Fri, 25 February 2005 at 10:45 PM

When I first came to work for the company where I'm currently employed I was in my 20's and was constantly badgered for my "bad attitude" every time I expressed an opinion about things that weren't fair or honest. I noticed some of the older guys bitched and moaned loudly about anything they wanted to and never were lectured about their "bad attitude". When I asked why that was, people would say, "That's just the way they are." Although I haven't changed my attitude one iota in almost 30 years, nobody has lectured me in about 10 years. I suspect that people are saying, "That's just the way John is" behind my back, LOL. I suppose some things do improve with age.

This is not my "second childhood". I'm not finished with the first one yet.

Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.

"I'd like to die peacefully in my sleep like my grandfather....not screaming in terror like the passengers on his bus." - Jack Handy


EricofSD posted Sat, 26 February 2005 at 2:25 AM

I am a totally immature 45. Its fun, try it.


Quest posted Sat, 26 February 2005 at 4:03 AM

I was born 3 years after WWII in Brooklyn New York. The same year the Israelis were given their promised land through UN resolution in compliance of the British Balfour agreement. I remember Black & White TV. I vaguely remember seeing President Truman, and then President Eisenhower on TV. I remember thereafter a short period of tranquility and peace. Then, in elementary school, taking fallout shelter procedures against an atomic War. Nowadays we know its bend over and kiss your ass goodbye! I remember the assassination of our beloved President Kennedy in 63 and how utterly shocked I was, I was in High School then. I was utterly as shocked when Dr. Martin Luther King was murdered in April of 68, five years later. Then a couple months later, Bobby Kennedy was killed in June of 68. I bare witness to the civil rights movement era of this great country. I remember tricky Dick. I was 20 when man first landed on the Moon. I was there to see the beginning and the end of the Vietnam War and was a college activist against it and remember many friends in flights to Canada over the Peace Bridge. Got my degree in 72. Joined the United Federation of Teachers Union and tutored High School programs for a while (namely High School math, English comprehension, and Spanish) but found myself being cautioned by the school dean (an older female) against the young girls that might think me attractive and therefore, I needed to take special precautions, I was very young still you see. I remember the early rock era, groups like the Harptones, Flamingos, The Cleftones, Little Richie, The Capris, The Marcels, Fats Domino. Later the Temptations, the Four Tops and Marvin Gaye. I remember seeing Elvis Presley on the Ed Sullivan show for the first time. I remember seeing the Fab Four Beatles on the same show and the Rolling Stones when I was in High School. Later I worked there, in the underground building bridges in the Ed Sullivan theater, the narrow passage straights that all performers took to traverse between dressing rooms and stage, and in my bones I couldnt help but feel the presences of greatness, thereafter it became the David Letterman Show. I tried but didnt make my way to the original Woodstock, the highways were backed up for many miles. I remember Hendricks fabulous rendition of the American National Anthem. I was a martial arts expert at 22, Shodan in Tae Kwan Do, Shotokan and Goyu Ryu Karete. The police department would come to my free classes. I was taught boxing at the age of 9 and Judo at 12, at a time when martial arts was not known in the populace USA. And way before it became an assembly line, cash in hand business. I was there and waiting when the first home computer came to bare. Graphics were nil! Ive worked in, and supplied the largest skyscrapers in New York City. And I was there on 9/11 when the great Towers fell to terrorist attacks. I ran for my life and sucked down the ash and dust, and felt the Earth tremble and day turn to night. I saw, first hand, Tower two go down and my belief in humanity had never been lower. I lost both friends and family there that day. Im 56 years old and have a tale to tell. What Ive exposed now is nothing to my real life experience. But if I could relive it all, in two wordsI would.


catlin_mc posted Sat, 26 February 2005 at 9:44 AM

I just turned 44 three weeks ago and I'm coming up for 14. 8P Although my body thinks it's coming up for 100, but I'm definately coming up for 14 on my next birthday. 8) Catlin


TheBryster posted Sat, 26 February 2005 at 9:57 AM Forum Moderator

Quest: Thank you! You've reminded me of so many things I've done and seen, even though they are not the same things as you. I'm often staggered at what the 'youth of today' DON'T know and what they haven't seen though that is no fault of theirs. The first time I came to NY, the 1st thing I saw was the Twin Towers. I always wanted to go there but never got the time. I DID go up the Empire State building and that was one of my greatest experiances. I went to Isreal with 2000 Jews mainly from the USA, to celebrate the 25th Anniversery of that county's independance/birth of a nation, only to discover on my return to the UK that the ship I was crew on, the QE2, was being shadowed by an arab submarine rumoured to have nuclear torpedos on board. We wouldn't have even seen the flash! I've circumnavigated the globe 3 times. Been most every where. Done lots of things that nearly got me killed and had adventures and done stuff that other people only get to dream about. But as I grow older and as we have done here, start to look back on life, I realise that the greatest thing I've seen was the birth of my first child. And after that, becoming a Grandparent - five times! I've seen people suffer and die and like the rest of us, stood witness to some of the worst humanity can offer. But even now I think 'Earth - It's a wonderful world' - even if I do live in Mars.

Available on Amazon for the Kindle E-Reader

All the Woes of a World by Jonathan Icknield aka The Bryster


And in my final hours - I would cling rather to the tattooed hand of kindness - than the unblemished hand of hate...


Nukeboy posted Sat, 26 February 2005 at 11:37 AM

I'll be 42 on the seventh of next month. After a week of training and PT with folks half my age, I feel about sixty. I've got aches in places I never knew I had! Considering I've been in this profession for half my life, it was kind of depressing to find out I'm not as fast, strong or tough as I was when I started. Oh well. One thing that does amaze me about today's "youth" (at least here in the US) is not that they never knew a time without computers, never saw a rotory dial phone, have a bizzilion channels to surf, it's their lack of even knowing about the past. I was talking with a coworker the other day about "Check Point Charlie" in East Berlin. One of the newer officers asked, "What's that?" He didn't know about East Germany, the Berlin Wall or even the Soviet occupation of eastern Europe -- all things that happened in his life time. Don't they teach history anymore?


tjohn posted Sat, 26 February 2005 at 3:44 PM

Nukeboy: I think they teach it, but only a select few actually are paying attention. (Of course, I'm sure all our bright young Bryce Forum members have been among those who ARE paying attention - judging by their messages here, very little escapes their attention). :^)

This is not my "second childhood". I'm not finished with the first one yet.

Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.

"I'd like to die peacefully in my sleep like my grandfather....not screaming in terror like the passengers on his bus." - Jack Handy


chohole posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 3:48 AM

The gripe in the UK is that in schools nowadays they are only teaching "Modern History" and not bothering about anything much before the 20th century. Basically that means that people who are the age of Ardiva, Sambucus, myself, Quest and even Bryster are now "historical" characters......sobering thought that, what! Message671422.jpg

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."



TheBryster posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 5:48 AM Forum Moderator

Chohole: Shouldn't that be 'hysterical' characters?

Available on Amazon for the Kindle E-Reader

All the Woes of a World by Jonathan Icknield aka The Bryster


And in my final hours - I would cling rather to the tattooed hand of kindness - than the unblemished hand of hate...


chohole posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 7:19 AM

Hysterical...who's hysterical, I'm not hysterical, I'm not. I am not hysterical,how can you say that, how can you I mean how can you say that, I am not hysterical, not, not not, I mean I am not hysterical, no I'm not. I mean I AM NOT SCREAMING AND YELLING AM I, WELL AM I?....... Umm.......You could be right Bryster! :-)

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."



drawbridgep posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 8:03 AM

LOL and chohole. When I were a lad (longer ago than some, not as long as others) we started learning history from the stone age and worked our way forward, but over 4 years didn't even get as far as the tudors. It was incredibly dull though. And has the honour of being the lowest score I ever got in an exam (35%) (I think I got my name right and that helped)

---------
Phillip Drawbridge
Website 
Facebook


unclebob posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 9:22 AM

aarrg, I turn 48 tomorrow (Feb 28) gawd, do rock really live that long ? :-) used to post here and lurking frotm time to time, since getting Cinema I've spent most of my time learning that. hafta play with Bryce again since Daz is breathing life back into it.


chohole posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 9:48 AM

Well I have to admit Drawbridge that History was my fav subject. Perhaps I went to a good school, one which actually got some pupils interested in the subject, but in "O" level (and thats old style GCE O level, not the modern gcse, where 50% is a pass mark) I got not only a grade 1, but also a distinction. In our "O" level class we got 13 grade 1 passes and 5 at distinction level. I don't think they do things like that nowadays. We had an absolutely brill teacher, His name was Mr Levi, and, yes you've guessed it, he was a nationalised jew. He was the sort of teacher who, when teaching about deprivation in some ages/countries, was not ashamed to stand on his desk and pull up his trouser legs to show us the effects of a poor diet and rickets. Say no more.

The greatest part of wisdom is learning to develop  the ineffable genius of extracting the "neither here nor there" out of any situation...."



SevenOfEleven posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 1:39 PM

I actually got to visit the Twin Towers the weekend before they went down. Been to the offices of Cantor/Fitzgerald, guess I am glad I did not get that job working for the consultants working with Cantor/Fitzgerald. Miss the time before 9/11, wake call is a bit too harsh. I remember seeing the vietnam war on tv when I was a kid way back when. Went to college and got to mess with computers, networked and not. Remember when bulletin boards like Bix were the thing. Personal computers weighed 50 pounds and had teeny tiney monitors (Pet computers). Played Dark castle on macs, Apple panic on apple II machines and castle wolfenstien on pcs. Did do Cobol, PL/1, Apple (6502) and Pc (8088,8086) assembly languages and Basic. "C" was the hot new language and I jumped on the bandwagon because basic was too slow and assembly language was a pain to work with. Can't really write anything big with it, had to write my own linker so I could finish my games. You could get a "C" compiler on 2 floppy discs back then. Eventually got a job from a newspaper ad to work at a small multimedia company. Got introduced to macs and 3d apps like Strata 3d, Bryce and Photoshop. Its sad when people do not care or are uninterested in the past, that means that they will be doomed to repeat it.


sackrat posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 3:32 PM

OK,.......memory lane ? I was born BC(before computers) I was a hippie, have seen Cream, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, The Doors, Led Zepplin(first american tour, opened for The Who) and numerous others live on stage. Grew up during the 1960's. I remember when the Radio Shack TRS 80 was a big deal, my first computer was a Pentium 133 with a 4GB HD and a whopping 16MB's of RAM. I had 2 very close friends who died in Vietnam, an uncle I never met who died at Omaha Beach on D-Day 6 June 1944, My father served in both WWI and WWII(95th Areo squadron USAAF-WW1, 8th Air Force USAAF-WWII), yes, WWI, he was born 2, December 1898. I had 2 uncles who served in the Pacific theater during WWII and one who served with General Patton's 3rd Army. I am a child of history. As far as history, my favorite author is the late Barbara Tuchman.

"Any club that would have me as a member is probably not worth joining" -Groucho Marx


diolma posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 4:03 PM

Sackrat, if you were born before computers, that certainly makes you one of the oldest persons here (even if you limit that to electronic ones):-))

(1st electronic computer was ENIAC, 1943)

I was born 4 years later, so missed the event....

Cheers,
Diolma :-)
(Edited to add): My 1st computer was an Apple II, with 16K mem (IIRC - might have been less), and tape-drive storeage...

Message edited on: 02/27/2005 16:06



sackrat posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 4:19 PM

OK,.......AC(after computers) 9 years,........1952.

"Any club that would have me as a member is probably not worth joining" -Groucho Marx


Nukeboy posted Sun, 27 February 2005 at 7:38 PM

First computer that I had access to was a PET, my first was a Z80... Bad ol' days of machine code. Of course, COBAL, BASIC, FORTRAN were required courses. Plus the five hour wait to get to the card puncher...


unclebob posted Mon, 28 February 2005 at 8:18 AM

ok .. ok ... I'm dating myself but ... show of hands that KNOW the Hollerith code ? umm .. show of hands that know what the code was used for ? errr .. how about, how many have seen and IBM punch card ? When I took data processing in high school (mid 70's), I had to be able to read a punch card using the Hollerith code, not using a machine mind you, look at it, read the holes and translate.


RobertJ posted Mon, 28 February 2005 at 8:47 AM

Reading punched cards and tape, well i never got that far, being able to read punched tape, but i know people who probably still can do that. Until 1983 the banks in the Netherlands still used punched cards for money-transfers and bank-cheques. My first computer was a ZX81, 3.25 Mhz, 1 kilobyte of memory, no color, no hi-res graphics, no sound, program loading from tape or typing from listings (big fun, 7k of hexadecimal codes for example ^___^). It took some time before i could afford a 16KB memory. This was a time that 8" disks where still widely in use and a 5MB Harddisk was something you could not imagine how much it was.

Robert van der Veeke Basugasubasubasu Basugasubakuhaku Gasubakuhakuhaku!! "Better is the enemy of good enough." Dr. Mikoyan of the Mikoyan Gurevich Design Bureau.


chohole posted Mon, 28 February 2005 at 8:57 AM

I used to use a ledger posting machine that made the punch tapes to be fed into the big computer bank at the NCR Place. First job I had when I left school.

And our first pc was a ZX81 as well, bought for my eldest who was 14 at the time, and studying for "0" level in computer studies.

Message edited on: 02/28/2005 08:58

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scoleman123 posted Mon, 28 February 2005 at 10:15 AM

so i guess that i bieth the youngest, at 15

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catlin_mc posted Mon, 28 February 2005 at 8:40 PM

My first computer was a Amiga2000 which could multitask, but you still had to boot every time from floppy. When I got it I was in heaven 'cos when I was at school the teachers said personal computing would never happen 'cos a computer took up and entire office block. 8P I also had one of those things you plugged into the Tv, it ran from cassette tapes and was oh,so,slow, it played that stupid table tennis thing and not much else. As for history I was pretty good when it came to exams but was almost frozen rigid in the class by boredom, so I'd go to the library to educate myself. I didn't tell any of my class mates that's what I was doing 'cos that would have made me a swat and at my school swats got a beating. 8) That was so good finally telling how I got good grades. 8D Catlin


SevenOfEleven posted Tue, 01 March 2005 at 12:07 PM

I remember punch cards, keep the JCL cards and throw everything else away when the program was done. They were into flow charting too, remember seeing the plastic templates. Remember when I had to take Cobol and PL/1, PL/J. Had to get to the computer room early so I could get a punchcard machine. Was so happy when I got a Wylbur account so I could use a terminal. The good terminals were in the front and you had to get in early for those. During winter, the crap terminals were static electricity sensitive, touch them the wrong way and the cursor would jump up the screen. Can end up with an unprintable char in your code and that would mess up the printout and maybe the code may not run. Don't think about deleting the char because the cursor would jump away.


Gog posted Wed, 02 March 2005 at 8:30 AM

my first computer was a jupiter ace - looked like a white xz81, shipped with a version of forth rather then basic. followed that with a zx81 and started learning z80, then followed with 6502, 6809, 68000 (and 68030), switched to a combination of x86 and PASCAL, the switch to C was like an event horizon for me!

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drawbridgep posted Wed, 02 March 2005 at 9:31 AM

I started with a ZX81. I was so excited, but my mum looked at it and thought it looked like a calculator without a display. Then I got a VIC 20 3.5k RAM! Then an Atari 512, which I bluetacked another 512k to get a 1024k RAM (I kid you not, the bluetack would melt and it would jump back to 512k after a while). Then got my first PC. A 286 I think. As for PASCAL. I did my A-Level in PASCAL. It was the first and last program I ever wrote in it. A simulation of a eco-system. Had Carnivores, herbivores, plants, all of which you had to balance over years (numbers wise) to keep the system going. Also had random things like fires, droughts and rain and even programmed a flood which would sometimes kill everything. I failed anyway, but I liked it. The bigger blow was the other guy in my class (there were only two) was an exchange student and couldn't speak English and he PASSED. His program worked out the refection of lenses or something dull. I mean, my program killed things, what more could you want?! OK, sorry, got OT a bit there, I'm still sore.

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drawbridgep posted Wed, 02 March 2005 at 9:33 AM

As to judge age. I don't remember punch cards. But I do remember 8inch floppies that stored something like 64k.

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AgentSmith posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 2:04 AM

34 years old. I remember seeing Bryce 4 on the shelf at "Best Buy" for $269.00 It as sitting next to Play's "Amorphium" 1.0 for $100..... Lol.... AS

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jasonmit posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 2:15 AM

Cool. AS is my age. Well, until I turn 35 next month.


SevenOfEleven posted Fri, 04 March 2005 at 9:47 AM

Used to have a Bryce3d and Bryce 4 disks before I tossed them.