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Ron
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I started programming in 1967 in Fortran. A friend of my father had a Honeywell 200 at his factory, invited me down one Saturday, and got me started with punch cards and Fortran. He then gave me a job that summer. Their professionals were using Cobol, so I managed to learn that, along with a little assembler. (The "200" was basically an IBM 1401 clone.)

In the fall I started college at Dartmouth. Soon as my parents had left, I marched into the computer center and asked the woman in charge how I could get permission to use the computer. She pointed to the terminal room (Model 35 teletypes) and said, "Take any empty terminal. Your student ID is your login."

When I asked HOW to use it, she handed me a thin green book titled, "Dartmouth BASIC." I still treasure it.

Long story short, Dartmouth Time-Sharing, which was almost entirely written by undergraduates led by Professors Kemeny and Kurtz, made BASIC, and computing, ubiquitous on campus. Classes from physics and engineering (obviously) to sociology used it. Not to mention various primitive text-oriented games. It was free, and there were terminals all around the campus.

I learned assembly for the GE 635 from Professor Kemeny, joined the system staff, and learned enough by the time I graduated to keep learning.

If you're at all interested in the history of BASIC and Time-sharing, they made this movie for the 50th anniversary in 2014:

Beginning of BASIC

History

Several of the programmers in the video had returned to teach by the time I arrived.

I started programming in 1967 in Fortran. A friend of my father had a Honeywell 200 at his factory, invited me down one Saturday, and got me started with punch cards and Fortran. He then gave me a job that summer. Their professionals were using Cobol, so I managed to learn that, along with a little assembler. (The "200" was basically an IBM 1401 clone.)

In the fall I started college at Dartmouth. Soon as my parents had left, I marched into the computer center and asked the woman in charge how I could get permission to use the computer. She pointed to the terminal room (Model 35 teletypes) and said, "Take any empty terminal. Your student ID is your login."

When I asked HOW to use it, she handed me a thin green book titled, "Dartmouth BASIC." I still treasure it.

Long story short, Dartmouth Time-Sharing, which was almost entirely written by undergraduates led by Professors Kemeny and Kurtz, made BASIC, and computing, ubiquitous on campus. Classes from physics and engineering (obviously) to sociology used it. Not to mention various primitive text-oriented games. It was free, and there were terminals all around the campus.

I learned assembly for the GE 635 from Professor Kemeny, joined the system staff, and learned enough by the time I graduated to keep learning.

If you're at all interested in the history of BASIC and Time-sharing, they made this movie for the 50th anniversary in 2014:

Beginning of BASIC

Several of the programmers in the video had returned to teach by the time I arrived.

I started programming in 1967 in Fortran. A friend of my father had a Honeywell 200 at his factory, invited me down one Saturday, and got me started with punch cards and Fortran. He then gave me a job that summer. Their professionals were using Cobol, so I managed to learn that, along with a little assembler. (The "200" was basically an IBM 1401 clone.)

In the fall I started college at Dartmouth. Soon as my parents had left, I marched into the computer center and asked the woman in charge how I could get permission to use the computer. She pointed to the terminal room (Model 35 teletypes) and said, "Take any empty terminal. Your student ID is your login."

When I asked HOW to use it, she handed me a thin green book titled, "Dartmouth BASIC." I still treasure it.

Long story short, Dartmouth Time-Sharing, which was almost entirely written by undergraduates led by Professors Kemeny and Kurtz, made BASIC, and computing, ubiquitous on campus. Classes from physics and engineering (obviously) to sociology used it. Not to mention various primitive text-oriented games. It was free, and there were terminals all around the campus.

I learned assembly for the GE 635 from Professor Kemeny, joined the system staff, and learned enough by the time I graduated to keep learning.

If you're at all interested in the history of BASIC and Time-sharing, they made this movie for the 50th anniversary in 2014:

Beginning of BASIC

History

Several of the programmers in the video had returned to teach by the time I arrived.

Source Link
Ron
  • 748
  • 3
  • 3

I started programming in 1967 in Fortran. A friend of my father had a Honeywell 200 at his factory, invited me down one Saturday, and got me started with punch cards and Fortran. He then gave me a job that summer. Their professionals were using Cobol, so I managed to learn that, along with a little assembler. (The "200" was basically an IBM 1401 clone.)

In the fall I started college at Dartmouth. Soon as my parents had left, I marched into the computer center and asked the woman in charge how I could get permission to use the computer. She pointed to the terminal room (Model 35 teletypes) and said, "Take any empty terminal. Your student ID is your login."

When I asked HOW to use it, she handed me a thin green book titled, "Dartmouth BASIC." I still treasure it.

Long story short, Dartmouth Time-Sharing, which was almost entirely written by undergraduates led by Professors Kemeny and Kurtz, made BASIC, and computing, ubiquitous on campus. Classes from physics and engineering (obviously) to sociology used it. Not to mention various primitive text-oriented games. It was free, and there were terminals all around the campus.

I learned assembly for the GE 635 from Professor Kemeny, joined the system staff, and learned enough by the time I graduated to keep learning.

If you're at all interested in the history of BASIC and Time-sharing, they made this movie for the 50th anniversary in 2014:

Beginning of BASIC

Several of the programmers in the video had returned to teach by the time I arrived.