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nuclear war (Miscellaneous)

posted by kerravon, Ligao, Free World North, 10.11.2022, 16:22

>> People buy new computers for a reason.

> right. like running the most recent game in
> highest resolution, or running the most recent windows.

Or their old computer breaking.

I bought 4 old desktops recently, and all were working,
and running Windows 7.

One of them now no longer powers on, and another
doesn't boot from hard disk anymore, but I can
still boot PDOS from USB stick.

When the next 2 fail, what do you propose I replace
them with when the production lines have become
glass, but universities are still able to produce
some, and/or when industry starts to ramp up again?

Shooting the neighbors is like socialism - eventually
you run out of other people's money.

> I don't see how an 8-bit CPU could ever fulfill such a reason.

I happily used a Commodore 64 for years, and
I wouldn't say that I ever completely mastered it.

Other people managed to get a C compiler working
on it, I never did that, as one example.

> > > in particular not by obscure 16
> > > bit computers that nobody can program.
> >
> > What do you mean by this? Why can't people
> > program 16 bit computers?
>
> I'm aware you missed this, but programmers today (mostly) learn to code in
> python, Perl, or javascr***. these languages aren't this widespread in
> 16-bit land.

And what's preventing them from picking up C,
or the other languages available on the 8086?

Are you suggesting that programmers have
devolved to a point where they can't learn
new languages? Even if some of them have,
it's surely not all of them.

BFN. Paul.

 

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