Maggie’s Motivational Pic Thread v2.0 - - New Rules - See Post #1

Uhhh… I hunt wolverines in Alaska, bruh!

…with a 12-gauge!

What do you do but poke holes in paper n’ stuff, and bang hot Eastern European chicks.

Fag.
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Why you wear a seat belt while driving a fork lift. There is a paper packaging company next door and as I was pulling out of the parking lot I heard a loud noise and looked over and saw the trailer bed collapsing and large paper rolls crashing out. Ran over to check on the fork lift driver. She was shaken but ok. Good thing she was wearing her seat belt other wise she could have been seriously injured or killed.

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I used to haul those big rolls of cardboard, they used to walk occasionally.
 
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You'll not know how "close to home" for me, this hits.


Back in College, they had a huge computing center that served (primarily) as the training machine for all IT students (but also as a huge R & D facility for the profs, etc.). The star of that center was a CDC 6400 mainframe. This, during my freshman year, But it got upgraded suddenly to a CDC - 6600 for the rest of my time there. HUGE, "number cruncher" scientific machines. They were "octal" (Base-8) IBM Who? :eek: :ROFLMAO:

iu


Fast forward like 8-9 years and I've just joined a new company. All IBM machines after I graduated. IBM machines are "Hexadecimal" (base-16) and better suited for "data manipulation/movement" than number crunching (scientific). (Well, truth to tell, I did get some IBM experience using the University's "Admin." computing center that did all the business work for the Univ (Payroll, Student course/grade registration, Alumni contribution processing - which, believe it or not, is the most secure/confidential work they do, on the 3rd shift, overnight so that only the one operator is there)). I did 2nd shift there and operated the machine as it did the Univ. Library's electronic catalog manager. Only a few short years later, the library got it's own IBM machine (4331).

My new company sent me to the Boston area for some training classes on a specialty CICS/COBOL facilitator product they had implemented called TELON (if you know it). It's supposed to facilitate the creation of CICS maps.

One afternoon, during my "off time," I did some sightseeing around Boston proper, and I happened to discover the "International Computer Museum." I figured, "This should prove interesting...", wondering what might be so old as to constitute "Museum worthy" status. at that point in time. "What? Like an ENIAC or something?" I paid my money and stepped inside.

Wouldn't ya know.... The very first display in the very first room I went into, was the above CDC-6600 mainframe. I couldn't believe how "old" that made me feel, even back then.

Of course, now my "feeling old" index has exploded geometrically, but... :eek::ROFLMAO:
 
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