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Web Journal: My Indoctrination Into Computers & the World Wide Web

Several years ago I attempted to write a synopsis of my first experiences with computers and the World Wide Web. I guess you could call it a "blog" although there was at the time, no such things and even if there were, there was no place to publish it. So, here are my thoughts and experiences with my first computers and learning to create HTML.

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The information superhighway

My first computer was a VIC-20, by Commodore. This was maybe in 1983? It was just a clunky keyboard that interfaced with my mom's floor model television via a formidable-looking "alligator clip" that visually was more suited for automotive jumper cables.

When attached to the two screws on the back of the television set marked “VHF”, my computer occasionally had a "color monitor" of just 16 colors.

Despite her initial protestations and concerns of this hybrid set up "…possibly damaging the television", I got fare time with the device. I was quite satisfied with my so-called computer. I could not envision much beyond the mystery of this machine and the language it spoke. I could play pre-packaged games that came as a small square "cassettes" that plugged into the back of the keyboard.

A game called Battle Chess was my all-time favorite, especially when I added a "joystick" to enhance my ability to interact with the Chess characters. I usually lost the game, but it was fun anyway

I learned a bit of B.A.S.I.C. language in which I could make a small ASCII "stick-man" character on-screen do jumping jack exercises. Faster or slower this character would jump, based upon the number of times I coded the "For/Next" loop to execute before the next "If/Then' statement. This was about the extent of my "programming abilities"

In the very early 90's I attended a brief (10-week long?) one-night-per-week Adult Education Course for Programming in BASIC. I did okay with it, I sort-of "got it". I passed the class near the top. But I could only see one thing for the future...-yeah, I'd need a better computer.

Say, isn't that one of those new-fangled MOS 6510 processors?

I next bought a used Commodore_64 computer, which was okay for about a year. I knew of a few "bulletin boards" and something called "telnet, and could possibly have connected to and send/read messages.

In 1985 or "86maybe, I "upgraded" to a new ATARI 130XE but without a modem I still could not access anything beyond pre-canned programs on mini-cassette. I wanted to exchange a few e-notes with friends met at science fiction conventions whom spoke of this "telnet" thing, but my system without peripheral upgrades would not support it. I did however, very much enjoy a "game" called “The Halley Project” and while I never attained the end of the game and subsequently found the hidden so-called "Easter Egg" Extended Game Play that was said to exist, I much enjoyed this game.

The "IBM-PC" was the golden standard, so next came my first "real" computer, a TANDY 1000 RLX computer by Radio Shack.

-Yeah, -mistakes come in threes I'm afraid…*grin*. Enough said!

While I was doing this, the Internet as we know it was quite ready to be born. There might have been quite a few telnet bulletin boards out there by now, linking together, encompassing larger areas of lay-users. The emergence of "backbone" companies such as America Online and CompuServe brought "internet" to the masses. Physical landlines were being strung by companies like Sprint, which were to be integral to the Internet boom about to emerge. From what had begun as a Professionals-users-only Old-boys club, emerged something the World had never expected, The World Wide Web. A "critical mass" of would-be users had been achieved, the ribbon was unceremoniously cut and a Information Superhighway we call "The Internet" exploded forth as many thousands of users joined in that first year alone with exponentially more every year since.

I had joined the emerging "internet" circa early 1994 with a program called PC_LINK" (not to be confused with a business that was later created in the late 1990s with the same name) on my new computer with a "i186" and 14.4kbs modem. I found a way to tweak this from the bench-tester's 14.4-baud speed to 19.2-baud. This was still quite slow, really.

An aftermarket modem upgrade to a 28.8-kbs helped. A few years later, I had to upgrade yet again, to a COMPAQ Presario with "i586" with the optimum dial-up standard, the 56-kbs modem. And still, the Internet demanded more and more of computers. Today I use a used-to-be-HP with AMD-K6, tricked-out with added-on peripherals, and can barely keep up with the changes!

Still, my biggest personal pet peeve was that Personal Web-Pages take so long to load on dial-up! Why? I learned that there are "tricks" a conscientious Web-page programmer can do to assist users of "slower" computers. -Better coding.

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