I'll have to echo this experience. My first (I certainly didn't own it) was an IBM 1620 that my high school had to compute the students' schedules every day, as they changed from day to day. Our geometry teach knew fortran, and taught a few of us various programming languages, and we took over the machine over the weekend for a number of months. Then we were invited not continued to use the district's supercomputer, and our teacher got us in at the Long Beach State computer center during some evenings. Really cool. It was there that we heard the radio interference generated by the computer play little songs on the radio that the admins had sitting around. That was Really Really Cool, and I was pretty much hooked. /ken David Baron wrote: > Great entertaining thread filling up my mailbox :-) > > My first computer, well the first I learned to use was the first desktop, > actually the whole desk .... IBM 1620. Had a fortran compiler that was > useless. Programmed in assembler, had it translating Spanish. 1963. > > I worked on mainframes off and on. > > FIrst I owned, a PII, later replaced with a PIII found in the trash after > everyone already had PIVs. > > First sound software?Jammer and Cakewalk Express. Later graduated to Home > Studio 2002. Stuck with that in Win98. Jammer, CW Express run fine in stock > wine, Home studio might eventually work in codeweaver's version? > _______________________________________________ > Linux-audio-user mailing list > Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user