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Gin… had a bit too much at older brothers wedding when I was a teenager… haven’t touched the stuff since. Cannot stand even the smell.
The agony of defeatWhat in the Wide Wide World of Sports...
Some will get that...
Sirhr
The thrill of victory!The agony of defeat![]()
What in the Wide Wide World of Sports...
Some will get that...
Sirhr
What in the Wide Wide World of Sports...
Some will get that...
Sirhr
Until Howard Cosell talked about a little monkey………That was a great show, back before sports programming was $150 a month!
Yeah I'm like 40-50 yrs older than xp
And just on this thread with starting to be civil again all the sudden, it’s not
I believe that was Jimmy the Greek was it not?Until Howard Cosell talked about a little monkey………
That was in reference to Post 46,189it popped into my head, but I used some restraint by finding that picture.![]()
That was in reference to Post 46,189
Apologies for any confusion
This scene always made me wonder....
Vaguely when I was learning VersaCAD many moons ago. I also remember working with this one too.You probably don't remember c prompts.
Don't know about that, but I doubt the Wide Wide World of Sports was on TV then....This scene always made me wonder....
In 1874, was Kansas City a "hotbed" of faggotry much like San Fran today.
Interesting.
I'm older than that...but still not as old as you.You probably don't remember c prompts.
We were doing MS-DOS when Word first shipped with Windows 1.0, that’s how old I was.
Back in grad school we were running LP models using punched cards. We would deliver boxes of them to the IT department and they would run the models at night on the mainframe computer. Remember the first time I used an original PC. Turned it on and the C prompt came up and wondered what the fuck do we do now. In the mid 80's used to travel with one of the first Compaq portable computers. Looked like you were carrying around a sewing machine. Remember VisiCalc? the original spreadsheet program and you had to write all the formulas for the computations. Remember writing IRR and NPV formulas for work.We were doing MS-DOS when Word first shipped with Windows 1.0, that’s how old I was.
My mother was working for Phillips 66 in California in 1971 and they had an IBM 360 mainframe and she was running the key punch machine. Sometimes we could go with her. And then visit our step-father, a second class boiler tech aboard the USS Ogden (which later transferred from the Port of Los Angeles to the Port of San Diego.) To this day, "Brandy" by Looking Glass, released in 1972, reminds me of the ship yards.Back in grad school we were running LP models using punched cards. We would deliver boxes of them to the IT department and they would run the models at night on the mainframe computer. Remember the first time I used an original PC. Turned it on and the C prompt came up and wondered what the fuck do we do now. In the mid 80's used to travel with one of the first Compaq portable computers. Looked like you were carrying around a sewing machine. Remember VisiCalc? the original spreadsheet program and you had to write all the formulas for the computations. Remember writing IRR and NPV formulas for work.
I knew exactly the reference… funny as hell!That was in reference to Post 46,189
Apologies for any confusion
I started with DOS and DBase1
It was Howard Cosell that used little monkey reference.I believe that was Jimmy the Greek was it not?