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Re: OT: In Praise of Dos-Based Word Processors
- Subject: Re: OT: In Praise of Dos-Based Word Processors
- From: Harry Binswanger hb@xxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 15 May 2014 08:50:47 -0400
Since my first hard drive (for the NorthStar Horizon) in 1983, hard drive
prices have dropped one-million-fold. That's not a guess, it's a
calculation based on the $1,000 I paid then for 20 megabytes vs. the $100
you pay now for 2 TB.
Has there been any (non-electronic) good in human history whose cost has
dropped a million-fold? Maybe aluminum.
Scrapmentaljunkie.com says:
"in 1883 aluminium was round $545 per pound. Accounting for inflation, that
means aluminium cost $12,000 per pound. Less than 20 years later, aluminium
cost 32 cents per pound. This incredible change came about in northern Ohio
in 1883. Charles Martin Hall, a student at Obertin College was told by his
professor that if anybody "could commercially extract aluminium they would
be sure of a fortune!" With that Charles Martin Hall set out to discover to
refining alumina (aluminum oxide), a method still used to this day."
While some systems were using 8" floppies, Northstar was pioneering the 5
1/4. I had *dual* 5 1/4 floppies in 1980. Talk about power!
And I just missed it. Couldn't afford what a computer cost at that time,
so I
skipped the Kaypro etc. generation. (8" floppies, right ? Just like our
ICBM
silos are still using.) Kept on writing with an electric typewriter for a
few more
years, finally getting on board with computers when Zenith came out with
their
version of the XT. (That wasn't cheap either, in 1980s dollar terms.)
Jordan
--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 5/14/14, Harry Binswanger wrote:
Subject: Re: OT: In Praise of Dos-Based Word Processors
To: xywrite@xxxxxxxx
Date: Wednesday, May 14, 2014, 9:50 PM
I miss CP/M.
> Wordstar on DOS? I thought the CP/M version was better.
I don't suppose anyone has done a CP/M emulator ? ? Not that
I would ever go back - - XyWrite is a million times better.
Oh, those awful italics in early Wordstar, where you always
missed the turn-off code!
>