As for the 486 in early 90's, I was at UF from 89-93. The 286 AT was all I really needed (and, at ~$2000, all I could afford!), but my best friend (also an Army enlisted guy that went to UF) was an Aero major. Spent everything he had to get a 386SX (could only dream of DX)... the 486 DX was "unobtainium" back then By the way, he's a VERY senior exec at GE Aviation now... another American Dream come true.
Five Star and Deet....clearly this is only because of your white privilege.
You guys had collars?My dad was blue collar and when we would get stuff like that it meant he had worked a metric ton of overtime. He took all that he could get and gave us every advantage possible. It is the whole story of my family. My great-grandfather was a farmer so poor the bank repossessed the mule he used to plow the fields that he used to grow his feed. My grandfather owned a business that was destroyed by fire. He went to work as a truck driver to keep his kids fed. Dad used his military training to get a job on the more technical side of blue collar. He had many white collar opportunities due to his background, but the union job he had and its constant need of OT gave him more immediate income potential to facilitate all our needs and a whole lot of our wants. Each and every one of my generation in this family is a college educated professional in fields ranging from engineering to finance. My oldest daughter is currently at UF with designs on medical school.
God Bless America. Not many places on Earth where that kind of upward mobility is possible.
I was 5 or 6...Nerds.
I was chasing tail when computers hit the scene. Never interested me at all. I’ve never owned a desktop.
Tandy trs80
Kennedy and Johnson did, for sure.
That is what my wife & I bought as well, 1990 I believe.
Looks like LBJ showed them Ol' Jumbo.
"During 1987–1988 the retail stores removed the TRS-80 Model 4Ds from display but they were available by special order through 1991."
You might have gotten real lucky to pick one up near the end of the lifecycle.
i did know that. back in college i had downloaded a C64 emulator and about 800 game files to my laptop at the time. some of the games were horrible recreations, but others were awesome. very fun and very nostalgic.I'm sure most of you nerds know this already, but in case you don't, there's a bunch of old C64 software emulated online, courtesy of the Internet Archive:
Software Library: C64 : Free Software : Free Download, Borrow and Streaming : Internet Archive
Other platforms, too.