I still listen to "Whisper to a Scream" by Icicle Works... not sure how my eye caught that almost right off the bat.At the last place I worked in NC, we had a developer go on a sabbatical for a month. When he got back, this was his whiteboard. He always cleaned his whiteboard every evening before leaving work. To his credit, when he saw this he just moved it to an unoccupied cube and took the clean whiteboard from there. I think all 60 of us found something to write.
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Now it’s stuck in my headI still listen to "Whisper to a Scream" by Icicle Works... not sure how my eye caught that almost right off the bat.
That was roughly my setup in Gainesville... but with bad ass dual floppy drives and my bitchin' Panasonic KXP-1124 24-pin printer!
I still listen to "Whisper to a Scream" by Icicle Works... not sure how my eye caught that almost right off the bat.
Thankfully this was well before Nickelback existed.Yeah, I’m kinda surprised Kajagoogoo didn’t grab you first.
Mine was a Commodore 64 with a floppy drive bigger/heavier than most laptops these days. But yes, Panasonic dot-matrix, probably older than that one.That was roughly my setup in Gainesville... but with bad ass dual floppy drives and my bitchin' Panasonic KXP-1124 24-pin printer!
I still played games on my 64 in Gainesville from 89-93, but we splurged for a fancy 286 for school workMine was a Commodore 64 with a floppy drive bigger/heavier than most laptops these days. But yes, Panasonic dot-matrix, probably older than that one.
State supplied our FDA agency with Zenith 286 with amber monitors, 5.25 inch real floppies and a whopping 5 Mb hard drive…shared laser printers x 2 though. Local parallel network for 20 peeps for printers only. 4 day courses on msdos, msword, d baseIII and excel at a local joint that were basically worthless unless you used the program every day.I still played games on my 64 in Gainesville from 89-93, but we splurged for a fancy 286 for school work