G
Guest
Guest
Archived from groups: alt.games.tombraider (More info?)
"Gary Mitchell" <wb6yru@ix.nospam.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:427B358A.6013A8BA@ix.nospam.netcom.com
> McGrandpa wrote:
>>
>> "Gary Mitchell" <wb6yru@ix.nospam.netcom.com> wrote in message
>> news:427AD7A7.5E3386E5@ix.nospam.netcom.com
>>> McGrandpa wrote:
>>>>
>>>> "King Key Dee" <tee-hee.4.free@king-key.dee> wrote in message
> [snip]
>
>>>>> O/T: <nostalgic sigh> ah, yes, PacMan ... and those 320x200 video
>>>>> screens on the Vic 20 that could load an entire TWO (2) Kilobyte
>>>>> game in 15 minutes from cassette tape <sigh> then came the
>>>>> Trash-80's ... endless Paddleboard games ... Tetris ... Duke Nukem
>>>>> v1 ...
>>>>
>>>> Timex 1000, Atari 800XL, Commie Plus4, Tandy 1000a, Atari 1040ST
>>>> and then FINALLY.... a "clone" type PC. 286-12mHz (that was the
>>>> processor, not keyboard speed!) 2 megs of chip ram, 20 meg Seagate
>>>> MFM HD, ATI VGA Wonder 1.0 512K. Used that rig for a good 5 years.
>>>
>>> Hey, I've got one of those... but without that "fancy" graphics
>>> card.
>>
>> You have an ISA slot? 16 bit?
>
> <hesitantly> Yeaaaaah...
>
> I can do even better than that... Got any S-100 cards? 😛
>
>> I have an ATI VGA Wonder 1.0 512K and an
>> ATI VGA Wonder XL24 1meg. Both 16 bit cards. Compared to any PCI
>> card, they're slower than molasses in January.
>
> Well, yes, but it depends on what you're doing with it. For most
> of the stuff I did on it, that'd be overkill.
>
> This machine I'm using here has an old Diamond Stealth 3 Xtreme,
> AGP 4X. That was a serious card not so long ago, but these days?
> ... talk about molasses. Heh.
>
>> But, they were both very
>> reliable cards. I should cobble an old rig together just to see if
>> either still work
I think I have a 486 something I could use.
>>
>>>
>>> <looks around> WHAT? 😉 It's a good machine... put it
>>> together myself... got a lot of use out of it... <sigh> Wasn't
>>> *that* many years ago too, (about 15).
>>
>> Ah, that's back to where Lara was at in Forerunner with the
>> treehouse in the world of computers Gary.
>
> <counts on fingers> Let's see... in computer years, that'd be, what,
> 134 years? 😉
>
> No, actually, Lara in her tree house would be more like the first
> machine I worked on. An IBM 360.
It was a programming class
> waaaaaaaaaay back when. And get *this*: we used punch cards!
> Granted, it was a bit dated even back then, but the school had to
> settle for what they could get. Computers were much harder to
> come by then.
>
>> It must be pretty low humidity where
>> you're at 😉 Copper traces on the pc cards usually turn really green
>> and stop working long before that down here.
>
> Shouldn't if they're coated properly.
>
>> That's what happened to my
>> 286 mobo. All kinds of stuff turned green and clumpy, unsalvageable.
>> It ran, actually, for ten years. When I stopped using it is when it
>> went to the garden
>>
>>>
>>> At this pace, I shudder to think what we'll have in the next 15
>>> or 20 years... probably something that'll argue with us. 😉
>>> Or maybe full, actual, real 3D... sans the funny glasses.
>>
>> Ha! The darn machines already argue with us!
>
> No, I mean *really* argue--a discussion--like we're doing now.
> I'm thinking machines with personalities, that behave perhaps
> a little like a butler: "Um, Geeves.... see if you can find
> anything on the internet about xyz." "yes sir, right away."
>
>> I just wonder when
>> they're gonna come up with a "3D Tank", where everything seen inside
>> is fully 3D. Or the 3D table top
Might have to have a trio of
>> vid cards for that or something.
>
> No, just one, but they'd have to invent a completely different kind
> of monitor. I imagine each pixel might have some kind of lens and
> several internal pixels. So, you'd see a different pixel depending
> on the viewing angle. That way each eye could see a different image,
> and there's your 3D.
Of course, easier said than done. 😉
>
> -- G
In the ritzy area of town here, at a huge multiplex cinema called The
River Oaks, they had a "holo game", and it was a true hologram. Some
kinda comedic type Medieval "Eric the Brave" or somesuch. The guy
battles a dragon to save the Princess, who clubs him in the head after
he wins
Though cartooney, it looked incredibly real and vivid. And
about 3" tall. I put my hand in the space and nuthin, of course.
Nobody wanted to put two dollar bills in so they'd wait around it for
its demo attract mode
Me, I put $2 in to see it once, and had my
nephew play it while I watched. Pretty cool!
McG.
"Gary Mitchell" <wb6yru@ix.nospam.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:427B358A.6013A8BA@ix.nospam.netcom.com
> McGrandpa wrote:
>>
>> "Gary Mitchell" <wb6yru@ix.nospam.netcom.com> wrote in message
>> news:427AD7A7.5E3386E5@ix.nospam.netcom.com
>>> McGrandpa wrote:
>>>>
>>>> "King Key Dee" <tee-hee.4.free@king-key.dee> wrote in message
> [snip]
>
>>>>> O/T: <nostalgic sigh> ah, yes, PacMan ... and those 320x200 video
>>>>> screens on the Vic 20 that could load an entire TWO (2) Kilobyte
>>>>> game in 15 minutes from cassette tape <sigh> then came the
>>>>> Trash-80's ... endless Paddleboard games ... Tetris ... Duke Nukem
>>>>> v1 ...
>>>>
>>>> Timex 1000, Atari 800XL, Commie Plus4, Tandy 1000a, Atari 1040ST
>>>> and then FINALLY.... a "clone" type PC. 286-12mHz (that was the
>>>> processor, not keyboard speed!) 2 megs of chip ram, 20 meg Seagate
>>>> MFM HD, ATI VGA Wonder 1.0 512K. Used that rig for a good 5 years.
>>>
>>> Hey, I've got one of those... but without that "fancy" graphics
>>> card.

>>
>> You have an ISA slot? 16 bit?
>
> <hesitantly> Yeaaaaah...

>
> I can do even better than that... Got any S-100 cards? 😛
>
>> I have an ATI VGA Wonder 1.0 512K and an
>> ATI VGA Wonder XL24 1meg. Both 16 bit cards. Compared to any PCI
>> card, they're slower than molasses in January.
>
> Well, yes, but it depends on what you're doing with it. For most
> of the stuff I did on it, that'd be overkill.
>
> This machine I'm using here has an old Diamond Stealth 3 Xtreme,
> AGP 4X. That was a serious card not so long ago, but these days?
> ... talk about molasses. Heh.

>
>> But, they were both very
>> reliable cards. I should cobble an old rig together just to see if
>> either still work

>>
>>>
>>> <looks around> WHAT? 😉 It's a good machine... put it
>>> together myself... got a lot of use out of it... <sigh> Wasn't
>>> *that* many years ago too, (about 15).

>>
>> Ah, that's back to where Lara was at in Forerunner with the
>> treehouse in the world of computers Gary.
>
> <counts on fingers> Let's see... in computer years, that'd be, what,
> 134 years? 😉
>
> No, actually, Lara in her tree house would be more like the first
> machine I worked on. An IBM 360.

> waaaaaaaaaay back when. And get *this*: we used punch cards!

> Granted, it was a bit dated even back then, but the school had to
> settle for what they could get. Computers were much harder to
> come by then.
>
>> It must be pretty low humidity where
>> you're at 😉 Copper traces on the pc cards usually turn really green
>> and stop working long before that down here.
>
> Shouldn't if they're coated properly.
>
>> That's what happened to my
>> 286 mobo. All kinds of stuff turned green and clumpy, unsalvageable.
>> It ran, actually, for ten years. When I stopped using it is when it
>> went to the garden

>>
>>>
>>> At this pace, I shudder to think what we'll have in the next 15
>>> or 20 years... probably something that'll argue with us. 😉
>>> Or maybe full, actual, real 3D... sans the funny glasses.

>>
>> Ha! The darn machines already argue with us!
>
> No, I mean *really* argue--a discussion--like we're doing now.
> I'm thinking machines with personalities, that behave perhaps
> a little like a butler: "Um, Geeves.... see if you can find
> anything on the internet about xyz." "yes sir, right away."

>
>> I just wonder when
>> they're gonna come up with a "3D Tank", where everything seen inside
>> is fully 3D. Or the 3D table top

>> vid cards for that or something.
>
> No, just one, but they'd have to invent a completely different kind
> of monitor. I imagine each pixel might have some kind of lens and
> several internal pixels. So, you'd see a different pixel depending
> on the viewing angle. That way each eye could see a different image,
> and there's your 3D.

>
> -- G
In the ritzy area of town here, at a huge multiplex cinema called The
River Oaks, they had a "holo game", and it was a true hologram. Some
kinda comedic type Medieval "Eric the Brave" or somesuch. The guy
battles a dragon to save the Princess, who clubs him in the head after
he wins

about 3" tall. I put my hand in the space and nuthin, of course.
Nobody wanted to put two dollar bills in so they'd wait around it for
its demo attract mode

nephew play it while I watched. Pretty cool!
McG.