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Apr 9, 2019 at 2:35 comment added FeRD @ÁrpádMagosányi You have a funny definition of the "good" old times. (When replying to this message, please copy me via UUCP at mintaka!ogicse!uwm.edu!rpi!vm.ecs.rpi.edu!danaf, as I am not subscribed to the list.)
Apr 2, 2019 at 15:08 comment added Árpád Magosányi Well, html has been so fscked up in the browser wars, that no one in its sane mind tries to parse it, with regex or otherwise. Oh, good old times when we were using gopher by connecting on an X.25 line to the terminal server of a VAX, going to another IP-connected VAX on BITNET, and using telnet from there...
Apr 2, 2019 at 12:11 comment added Lucas Take a look on this answer
Apr 2, 2019 at 6:04 comment added FeRD @KevinCook Or worse. Summer of 1992, between high school and college, I took a summer job doing in-house development for a business graphics firm. They produced slides and prints from user PowerPoint, Word, PageMaker, etc. files (a rarity at the time), so the PostScript print jobs required some pretty heavy preprocessing on their way to the slide printers. As a result, I once spent 45 minutes on hold @ Microsoft Dev Support Hotline's C++ queue, a behemoth operation which featured a live DJ to pitch products & announce hold queue lengths and wait times, drive-time radio style, in between songs.
Apr 2, 2019 at 5:01 comment added Mohit Singh Someone from the future (using time machine) told them to do so.
Apr 1, 2019 at 19:43 comment added Kevin Cook At least in 1998 you had the web, in 1988 you had to hope you could catch another programmer online in chat on a bbs and maybe they had some insight into the programming problem you were working on, or hope there was a forum thread available on the subject.
Apr 1, 2019 at 7:30 comment added Wil Koetsier aw the sound of dial-up...
Mar 31, 2019 at 18:12 history edited Árpád Magosányi CC BY-SA 4.0
an entertaining answer added
Mar 31, 2019 at 17:49 history answered Árpád Magosányi CC BY-SA 4.0