by chenrezig » 27 Jul 2013, 08:38
The nearest thing we had to a computer when I was at the Hewett 1969 to 1976 was a printer connected to the computer at City College. There were two "games" we used to play, under strict supervision.
One was where we had to land a Lunar Module on the Moon -you did this by working out (guessing!) what the fuel burn rate should be. You typed in the number and then you got an answer back on the printer (more like an old fax machine/teleprinter). If you got it right, you landed on the Moon, if you got it wrong, you either ran out of fuel and crashed or floated off into space never to be seen again - bear in mind this was all done on a printer so all you got were words.
The other game was called "Shootout", like an old Western-style shootout between two gunmen. You typed in your opponents name -for some reason Dr Roy's name (the then much respected head of the Hewett) seemed to be popular. It then asked if you wanted to shoot at a set distance, and you typed in yes or no. It would either say you missed or hit your opponent, if you missed too often you were in dire danger of getting shot yourself.
I remember a visit to City College where we were shown the computer... it used punch cards, bits of card with holes/slots cut in, then they were then put into "something" then the computer started work. At the end of the visit we were given the choice of either a picture of James Bond (Sean Connery) or Concorde. Yours truly went for Concorde. The computer then printed it off -the pics were made up from letters n numbers and symbols printed in bold and non-bold text.
I remember when we had a really good clear out of cupboards at one place I worked ... we turned up some 5 and a half inch floppy disks ! I still have an external floppy disk drive and a few unused disks .. I have even seen the odd few floppy disks for sale in charity shops...
My least fave job where I last worked was "shredding" clients floppy disks after they had finished with them as they had CV's and personal info on. The shredding involved splitting the hard plastic outside open, having two separate bins, then cutting each actual floppy disk film into little bits, afetr each bin had a good stir round to mix up all the little bits, one half went for rubbish one week, and the other half the next week - incidentally this was supposed to be the safest n best way at the time, but boy if you did too many you didn't half feel it the next day
Liz