Start the Wayback Machine - Part 1
Before we can move forward together I think it would be good to give my background. Hopefully, having this information can help you understand my POV.
I am in my 40's. I have been using computers for over 30 years. I inherited my technology and gadget love from my father.
Our first computer was the Atari 800. This was one of the lower cost home computers of the 8-bit era. My father purchased the Atari computer, a monitor and the Atari cassette drive and my computing life was underway.
My dad used to copy BASIC programs--line by line--from the back of Antic Magazine. After a few hours of work, you'd have an American Flag made from ASCII dancing across the screen. The National Anthem would play in all it's 8-bit glory.
We later upgraded to the Atari 130XE--complete with 128K of RAM and a 5 1/4" floppy drive. Having the floppy drive was the first major upgrade I experienced. The speed improvement of loading programs from a floppy vs the old cassette tape was incredible.
I used these computers to play games, write school papers and create banners and flyers with The Print Shop. I created a very nice science fair project using this machine to create all the write-ups and graphics.
The 130XE served me well thru high school. But, I do remember typing my high school term paper on my sister's dedicated word processor, not on the 130XE.
I used Apple II's in grade school alongside TRS-80s and the Commodore 64. We could not afford an Apple computer and therefore we were an Atari household.