• Multiplexer@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    Owning a 20MB hard drive for my Atari ST was still THE DREAM in 1989.

    Couldn’t afford it, though, so it was 720kB floppy discs until 1996, when I got my first PC.

    • KingPorkChop@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      I had one for my ST. It came in a box the size of a shoebox. If I recall, I paid $500 for it and a colour monitor. It was loaded with a bunch of games cracked by “The Blade Runners”.

      The drive died at one point but I saved the box because it was so cool. I thought about loading it with a handful of backup drives.

  • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    And every step of the way, some assholes idiots inspired society to think “we will never need more than this”

        • adarza@lemmy.ca
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          21 hours ago

          the c64’s lt.kernel hard disk had a data transfer speed of 38 kilobytes per second. compare to something like the st506/mfm (the first 5.25in hdd) with specs that max out at 5 megabits per second.

          which was a significant upgrade over the 1541 floppy drive at like 400 bytes per second (up to ~ 2.5 kilobytes per second with a fastload cartridge). atari’s floppy drive was about twice as fast, apple’s were even faster. commodore at the time insisted on backwards compatibility with their earlier disk drive, which is why the 1541 was so fucking slow.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    Way we’re currently headed, the non-oligarchs will be back to clay tablets.

  • manxu@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    It’s funny to see cost per GB on the right. Back in 1980, most people didn’t even know what a Gigabyte might be.

    • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      Around 2000 I remember a guy at the computer store telling me that 20 gigs was a ton and how would I even use it? Well, one pirated 700 Meg movie at a time is how (most pirate copies tried to keep movies to 700 mb so they’d fit on a burned cd)

      • adarza@lemmy.ca
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        21 hours ago

        (most pirate copies tried to keep movies to 700 mb so they’d fit on a burned cd)

        linux distributions used to do the same. now they dgaf, and some iso don’t even fit on a single layer dvd.

        hell, i just purged more than a “cd’s worth” of old kernels out of /boot here.

    • billwashere@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I always chuckle thinking about taking a 1TB Micro SD back in time and watching people’s heads explode.

      I remember being in college in the very early 90s and a friend got a machine with 2 2gb hard drives and wondering what he was going to do with all that space. Now I have a NAS at home with something like 100TB and it’s almost 75% full.

  • Rimu@piefed.social
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    3 days ago

    My second computer had a 20 MB HDD and it was wonderful to have soooo much space compared to the previous computer which had no HDD and 3 floppy drives.

    Then a year later I added a second 20 MB HDD and was absolutely swimming in space.

    Back then a ‘large’ app was 100 KB. You’d spend all day writing code and produce a 13 KB file.