Re: [OT] Threads, inelegance, and Java

Richard B. Johnson (root@chaos.analogic.com)
Wed, 20 Jun 2001 17:06:14 -0400 (EDT)


On Wed, 20 Jun 2001, Daniel Phillips wrote:

> On Wednesday 20 June 2001 22:40, Richard B. Johnson wrote:
> > Interesting... Hmmm. The first Flight Simulator to run on a PC
> > ran on a 4.47 MHz PC/XT. The core state-machine ran off the BIOS
> > timer-tick at 18.206 ticks/second. It was written in MASM by me.
> > The graphics was written by many PROGRAM EXCHANGE contributors and
> > was written in Turbo Pascal. I was the "SysOp" of that BBS system
> > in the days when the Internet was nothing more than a college-to
> > -college experiment.
> >
> > It required 256k or RAM and had the flight dynamics of a real
> > Cessna 150 airplane.
>
> I could have sworn I ran it on a 64K machine.
>

Not unless you got the original version that did RS-232C "graphics"
on a CP/M Machine (Ampro Little Board). That ran with 48k usable.

The GUI using Turbo Pascal required a lot of RAM.

> Now, how did Bruce Artwick and Sublogic fit into this?
>
> --
> Daniel
>

Cheers,
Dick Johnson

Penguin : Linux version 2.4.1 on an i686 machine (799.53 BogoMips).

"Memory is like gasoline. You use it up when you are running. Of
course you get it all back when you reboot..."; Actual explanation
obtained from the Micro$oft help desk.

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