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what could have been
Wayback Machine - Part 2 - The College Years
As I began college in 1990, I knew I needed to invest in a "real" computer. My sister's boyfriend and I decided to pitch in and get a computer. Our budget was tight. $500. We bought an IBM XT clone at Sears (yes, that Sears). This machine had 640K RAM, CGA graphics and two 3.5" floppies. No hard drive. None. The machine ran MS-DOS 3.3. We used it for Lotus 1-2-3 and WordPerfect 5.1. A year later my parents got me what is probably the best gift of my life, a 40MB hard drive with an IDE controller card. They paid at least $300 for these 40MB. Not GB, kids....40 megabytes. The hard drive brought a new world of possibilities. This was the second big upgrade I experienced. I could run more and more complex software. I learned DOS inside and out. I became a computer person, a geek.
I declared my major as Information Systems. This was in the business school at my University. It was the perfect major for me. I didn't feel I had the math background to handle a Computer Science degree. In addition, I didn't want to design compilers or new languages. I wanted to use computers, and to help others use computers to solve problems. I purchased GeoWorks Ensemble and ran that on my little 10Mhz XT. I had a full GUI, multi-tasking and near laser quality printing on a dot-matrix printer. GeoWorks is still somewhat alive today as Breadbox Ensemble, Check it out. Again, multi-tasking and a GUI on an 8086 processor with 640K RAM! I later purchased a VGA card and VGA monitor at a computer show in the Marriott hotel. Remember these computer shows?
I loved this machine. I still have it today, 24 years later.