Apparently there are a number of older geeks like GreyGeek who hang out here. Personally, I very much appreciate GreyGeek's contributions and answers to questions. I'm 75 with a long history of geeking; my proudest long-ago accomplishment was writing a PL/I compiler for the CDC 6600 back in the 1970's and bootstrapping it from the IBM 360. It still astounds me to think that my $10 thumb drive has far more and faster memory than that multimillion-dollar machine (in 1970 dollars) with its 128K (or was it 256K?) of 60-bit words.
There was a time when one person could know a good part of what there was to know about computing. How things have changed!! Both the complexity and variety of software have exploded, so a single individual can only know a miniscule fraction of what is going on.
There was a time when one person could know a good part of what there was to know about computing. How things have changed!! Both the complexity and variety of software have exploded, so a single individual can only know a miniscule fraction of what is going on.
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