Thursday 23 August 2012

From Vic to Slick

In 1980 or thereabouts I acquired my first computer, the simply amazing Commodore Vic-20. This was the age of the Atari, the Sinclair ZX81 and magazines that provided directions for Basic code that you could self-program by typing it out for yourself.  Data was stored on a tape drive! Yet the sheer magic of plugging in to a new world of possibilities, as it existed then, is hard to describe. And that was before the Internet!

Time trashes all technology. From the Vic-20 to its gruntier big brother the Amiga, then a forced migration to the dark side... l've been a loyal PC user ever since. Desk tops, laptops. Not for one minute was I seriously seduced by the now forgotten Acorn or the alternate Apple platform. Mixed fruit and nuts.

Now the game has changed.  I've only just clued into the advantages of the tablet. Mobile phones have morphed into Android devices, and now, with a Jelly Bean powered Nexus 7 in hand - well, it's like 1980 all over again.  Oh (with apologies to Dr. Seuss) the things you can do!

New Zealanders have been slower to make the move to tablets than most comparable societies, according to a NZ Herald report.  Part of this may reflect the delay in getting new models into the country, as the article suggests, but overpricing may be a bigger factor.  Another reason to be pleased that the Apple hegenomy has been breached.

Whether it's apparent at the moment, the desktop monitor, box and keyboard combo has effectively been reduced to retro furniture status, and the laptop's days are probably numbered.  Even the Kindle Touch that seemed so cool a few months ago now has an Edsel feel to it.

Scary!   What could possibly be next?

4 comments:

  1. I think I'll stick to my desktop computer and leave the fancy smancy world to rush on by me. At least I won't be the one causing a wreck by playing on an Android while driving.

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  2. You have to marvel at the technology. I had a Commodore 64 also. My fist Mac system with printer cost me 4,500 in 1992. Now I can hold in the palm of my hand a computer that does far more than the computers that used to take up entire rooms before. The sad part now is that what ever you buy will be outdated in 3-6 months.

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  3. One Billion Dollars later, one wonders at the survival of some of these technologies as competing companies sue each other over patents: The real technology killer.

    Hold on to your Commadore.

    It may be the last legal technology standing.

    I understand Jesus was not happy with the lawyers.

    Maybe we can understand why.

    Pencil and paper may never go out of style.

    Of course, use them, and you run the risk of copyright infringement.

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  4. I still have my VIC-1213 Machine Language Monitor cartridge
    that allowed access to its 6501 Instruction Set.

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