G
Guest
I know it well. I used to own a business called Flamingo Data Services. We did custom databases, sold databases we compiled, and maintained databases for clients that did not have computer access. Our clinets included U of M, Dade County Public Schools, and American Friends Service Committee (Quakers). We ran the thing on CP/M boxes (Apples with CP/M cards) running dBase (and we used Clipper to compile) and also on a whole bunck of Apples and Franklins (Apple clones) using a program called DB Master. All this was done from 51/4" floppies....hard drives really were not readily available and were very expensive then. If I remember correctly a 5 MEG (NOT gig) drive took up about a 2'x3' piece of desk real estate and cost abut $1000. (a FULLY stuffed Apple, i.e. 48k base memory, 80 col card, parallel card, serial card, modem, language card {16k memory expansion}, 1 or 2 disk controller cards and either 2 or 4 floppy drives {2 drives per controller card, 2 drives was bare minimum for business applications or CP/M--4 was better! Each drive was 360k if I remember correctly} was around $2500-$3000!)Ohm_Boy said:dBase II was cool. I was actually pretty adept w/ dBase III. I think I mentioned that I wrote a maintenance management system in Clipper... 86 thousand lines of code, with custom assembler libraries.
"Back in my day, all we had were ones and zeros. And some days we couldn't even GET zeros - we had to use leftover capital 'oh's..."
We printed with a Diablo Daisy Wheel (Talk about SLOW) and Oki dot matrix (hated it) an Epson dot matrix (MX-80 II F/T--LOVED it).
We also did limited desktop publishing (with non WYSIWYG programs there was a LOT of paste up!) We published newletters for several professional organizations.
This was done with a 2 person staff, myself and my partner in the business. That was a very common business model back then. In fact, micro$oft and apple started in much the same way!
So tell me, did you ever do any hacking, cracking, or phreaking?

