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I was reminiscing about my "tech" journey...

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    #16
    Originally posted by Qqmike View Post
    A bunch of little things we went through, details.
    I remember DIY-ers not liking to pay the premium prices for Windows OS -- XP at the time.
    This was around 2005-2007 (?).
    But at Newegg, if you bought certain key PC components (like motherboard and X and Y parts),
    you could buy an OEM of XP for $99.
    It felt like a big deal back then!
    It did... I remember getting my first copy of XP at the ol' OEM discount, and it was pretty amazing.

    I have to tell this story, cuz it's pro-linux and anti-microsoft.

    I went into a computer store to purchase a laptop a couple of years ago. They had an Asus F1504E on sale for $399.99, and it had the specs that I wanted. It came pre-loaded with a copy of Windows 10 "S" Mode.

    I asked the guy at the store "What is 'S' mode?" knowing full well what it was... he replied with "Well, that's Windows 10, only all of the software you install has to come from the Windows Store app."

    "Oh," I replied, "well, I have a bunch of software that I was planning on installing, and I don't want to have to re-purchase it."

    He said, "Ok, tell you what... if you purchase this today, I will drop $100 off of the price so you can get a copy of Windows 11 Home.

    I said "Great! You've got yourself a deal!" I purchased the Laptop for $299.99, and went home and installed Kubuntu on it, and couldn't be happier. ;-)
    Attention is the currency of internet forums. - Ticopelp

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      #17
      Ha! Good story, Shibblet.
      An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski

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        #18
        I left school to work when I was 17 (further education was a pipedream!) and there was no such thing as
        a computer at my secondary school, hell, we didn't even have typing classes.

        I bought my first home PC in 1983 when I was back in the UK for a couple of months. It was a Dragon
        Data 32. I left it with my brother when I returned here.

        My first real PC was an NEC PC9801RX with twin 5" floppy drives running custom DOS with the double
        byte character set in a ROM chip! It could not run "regular" MS-DOS! I spent an arm and a leg on a
        sound card and external 100Mb SCSI HDD for that machine!

        Next up was a Toshiba Dynabook with a 20Mb HDD and a 3.5" floppy that could run regular MS-DOS!

        After that I started building my own and went from MS-DOS 6.x with Windows 3.1 to IBM OS/2 Warp 3,
        then Warp 4, and finally Linux!

        Not bad for someone turning 28 (again) this year! 🤣🤣🤣
        Constant change is here to stay!

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          #19
          You are all still youngsters
          I completed high school in 1972.

          My first introduction was a ZX81 (the flat black one) for which built myself a 16MB memory extension (I was an electronics techie in broadcasting hardware until retiring in 2017).

          In the nineties my father-in-law needed a PC for his panel shop, so we went out and bought him a PC-AT and me a PC-XT to learn on. Found PC-File and used that for a few years. I have a copy today that can run under Dosbox.

          I went through a Commodore 64, and practically all the generations from graphics cards and colour monitors, 386, 486, Pentium. (my wife worked in a PC shop)

          Currently I have a i5-11400 and AMD RX-9060XT which I dual boot into Windows 11 and Kubuntu 26.04

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