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What kind of computer did you work on?

40 years would make it 1964? 40 years of programming? Let's say you started at 25?

I'm not trying to give you a hard time. But, if what you are saying is true, you would be a very unusual person. Very few people would have gone thru what you have gone thru and still be programming. No disrespect - just want to find out.

Come on - are you a "card jock".
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All the IBM main frames from 360 to 3080s using assembler mostly. Wintel PCs (assembler and OOP) since they came out in the 80s. Some midframes in RPG and Assembler. The applications included Manufacturing, Banking, Insurance, Market Research, Weather forecasting, Accounting. I retired in 1980 but still keep a hand by helping develop websites for local schools and government groups.
Hi larry

Always wanted to get into the software end of the business, but spent my career as a hardware slug.

I've dabbled with assembly, but never REALLY figured out what I was doing. Had some good results with Basic jumping to assembly subroutines though. Got into something called Mobol (a twisted and raped version of Cobol) and had some minor success, but that was only good on a single product line of a single company.

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Ive also spent 10 years as an IBM AS/400 RPG programmer. Also been wondering about the number of reported bugs lately. However, AS has been working ok for me so far. Last night had a snipe placed and padded it with a 40 sec lead time,(being sunday night) looks like there was only a 5 sec delay. Didnt win though, outbid, still looking for that first sniped win, lol. Oh, and RPG stands for Report Program Generator though it does much more than that. Cool

happy sniping
quote:
Originally posted by Puppy Raiser:
Hi larry

Always wanted to get into the software end of the business, but spent my career as a hardware slug.

I've dabbled with assembly, but never REALLY figured out what I was doing. Had some good results with Basic jumping to assembly subroutines though. Got into something called Mobol (a twisted and raped version of Cobol) and had some minor success, but that was only good on a single product line of a single company.



I've always been partial to FORTH. Very strange language where you basically create your own keywords. You can have a program where, "take the beer from the refrigerator and drink it" can be a fully functional program! ... or, for those south of the equator .... "put the empty vegemite jar back in the cupboard and never admit to eating it all"!

I've been a tried and true BASIC kinda guy since the beginning ... throw some z80/8080 assembler in for fun too.

RE: AS and their intermittent bugs ... they really are few and generally fixed (by what I read in these forums) rather quickly. I'm wondering though if they could use a few beta testers to run test-auctions on their development system? Things like the recent bid-group snafu would probably have been caught ... but then on the other hand, some changes need to be implemented rapidly because eBay loves to tweak their system and break other peoplese software Smile

Mother Mary Says, 'HONESTLY! you're just ruint!'
haha, so was mine... the computer operator used to keep a spare deck of cards hidden behind the counter where you had your jobs submitted to the main frame. Bastard would wait until you were rushing in your last edit on a 3,500 card program at 11:59pm (computer center closed at midnight)the day before its due, take your deck, put it behind the counter, take out his deck of fakes, juggle it around and then drop it on the floor. Then he'd stand there and look sheepish and say 'oops' as you went from red to purple trying to control your impulses to strangle him. Then he'd laugh and laugh, grrrrrrr, lol. Cool

happy sniping
In the 60s the person high on the food list was a "Systems Analyst" and there was true story about one of those guys.

It seems that our company had too many punch cards, I mean like warehouses full of them. We had just replaced our EAM equipment with computers running a TOS (tape Operating System) and really needed to get rid of all those cards. We tried burning them but they stuck together and using gasoline was expensive and the Chicago Fire Department discouraged using solvents. So we gave it to our Systems Analyst.

He studied the problem for 10 days and came back with 12 books of charts and instructions. They boiled down to this: Go card-to-tape with the cards and
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Burn the Tapes.
Had a friend in college who taught himself Fortran using the book I had for the course I was taking. He later transferred to a school in the West in his home state. He wrote a program that could bomb out the school's computer which he would put in the in box whenever he got ticked off at the shcool. Later when on to start a software company and did quite well before selling it several years ago.
I spent many a boring night working as a grant-in-aid running the punch cards through the reader, and the finished print-outs and cards back in the bins for students. Old GE Computer actually had wires connecting all the transistors. Looked like colored spaghetti. Razz

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