
At 10:26 PM 6/12/96 -0700, Timothy C. May wrote:
I caught the show and thought it was pretty good, all in all.
I thought so too? When is part II coming on? (I hope it didn't come right after that, I had to run.) Next week?
I personally despise the term "nerd," but I won't get into that here.
Ahhh... it makes them happy. What I find most unnapealing is the unabashed, "I don't have a life, I live with a computer" mentality. I was rather taken with that mentality myself for a bit (and I'm sure it contributed to the RSI), but even then I would have found it painfully difficult to only associate with one "culture" and only do one thing all day long. Maybe "nerds" over do it, but they do do other things, like play magic, or assasin, D&D, or whatever. <grin> And the most interesting/brilliant computer people that I run into _have_ other interests beyond computers.
first employee hired by Jobs and Woz. Personally, my first personal computer was a Processor Technology SOL, as I thought the Apple II looked too much like a toy. Shows you what I knew.)
The thing that startled me, was the contrary temporal perspective. Watching it I felt like, "Hey! I remeber that, I used an Apple II in kindergarden to write LOGO," or though I didn't have an Altair, I had a Bailey Arcade. No one here probably remembers, but it was a kick ass game playing (the best at the time) and programmable machine. I remember belonging to a mailing-list club and getting a thick envolope of type written code that I'd dutifully punch into a calculator like entry pad. (All ~20 keys for quadrupely overloaded!!) The cool thing was it had cool (c-64 like) peeks and pokes and you could call a plethora of the pregenerated graphical things from your own code. Then there was always saving it to the audio tape... <ack> Ok, so that is the nostalgia bit (hey I remember that), the other bit was a, wow that was a long time ago. Looking at PC-history always feels like a contradiction in time. _______________________ Regards, Laziness is no more than the habit of resting before you get tired. -Jules Renard Joseph Reagle http://farnsworth.mit.edu/~reagle/home.html reagle@mit.edu E0 D5 B2 05 B6 12 DA 65 BE 4D E3 C1 6A 66 25 4E

I'm delurking here ... just signed up on cypherpunks, though I've known about it for a long time. I don't watch TV, don't have cable, and thus can't watch this PBS show everyon's a-buzz about. I would like to see it, though. I would be most grateful if someone who has taped it could loan me the tape so I could watch it. I live in Santa Cruz, CA, and work in Mountain View; surely someone in the south bay has been taping this? I hope so. --Bill.
participants (2)
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Joseph M. Reagle Jr.
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William R. Ward