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linearchaos ,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

Linus tech tips and strange parts have done videos on having computers and custom electronics built in Akihabara.

tunetardis ,

I remember magazines from the 80s where you could find code in BASIC for some little game. It’s how I learned how to program as a kid.

MutilationWave ,

I started learning by editing gorillas.bas. Eventually created an copy of my elementary school’s IBM system at a very basic level, from memory! Another kid my same age and I knew all the admin passwords and we would have hacker wars to lock each other out. We were 11. We also played a lot of a game called Chopper that was on the server. It was fucking awesome and i just tried to find it to link and I can’t seem to.

Went on to build areas and program mobs/rooms/items with whatever the hell that language was for a low population MUD. I put in thousands of hours. As far as I know all that work is lost.

Anyway I could have been smart! Instead I discovered that girls are pretty and now I do labor for work.

Oh what could have been. Just kidding, no regrets.

shalafi ,

Oh god, don’t make any typos or you were going from screen to page, page to screen, over and over and over…

whome ,

I remember typing a whole afternoon with a friend just so the screen did alternate colors, it was so underwhelming I think that killed any spark that I might have had for programming.

Blue_Morpho ,

This was also in the US up until at least 2000. There were frequent Computer Show and Sales held at fairgrounds. Hundreds of vendors each selling different components you’d mix and match.

hedgehogging_the_bed ,

I was coming here to say this. Before NewEgg, the best way to buy computer parts was to show up at a conventions center or fairgrounds, firehall or community college for the next Computer Show. Buy some parts in cash from people who speak barely any English and then either take it all home and start assembling or hand it off to the ancient guy chain-smoking at the back door and pay him to zip-tie it together in 5 minutes for you.

Years and years of doing this and we only had one situation when we cracked the case later and found out the guy has swapped the parts we bought for used Dell components when we were at lunch. Always took them home after that.

shalafi ,

God those were fun! And if you wanted to play with older tech, you got rock-bottom prices.

poVoq ,
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar

Haven’t watched the video, but isn’t that what most small computer shops do to this day?

davidgro ,

I was about to reply with pcpartpicker.com

But actually they mean on the chip level - and interview a guy who made whole clone machines himself including his own motherboards

SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Wow, that’s impressive! It’s a shame such a cool skill is not really needed nowadays where everything is either standardized or there are a few models.

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