Stuff I Am Finding When Cleaning
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Same here. Built quite a few applications on ASP. Don't know why Microsoft kept the name, ASP.NET is not related to ASP in any way
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@thwr said in Stuff I Am Finding When Cleaning:
Same here. Built quite a few applications on ASP. Don't know why Microsoft kept the name, ASP.NET is not related to ASP in any way
Yeah, very confusing.
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Windows DNA Exposed
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MTS Programming with Visual Basic
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SAMs Teach Yourself HTML 4 in 24 Hours
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VBScript Unleashed
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@Dominica's first college IT text book. From FLCC in New York.
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Found both 5 1/4" disks and an 8" disk!
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@scottalanmiller said in Stuff I Am Finding When Cleaning:
Found both 5 1/4" disks and an 8" disk!
8", man, those were apparently before my time. I got started when 5 1/4" floppies were the standard.
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8" were around for a while. You can see here that this one was used in 1992. 5 1/4" and cassettes were common for home use when I was young, well, tapes at least, 5 1/4" inch floppies came about a few years into me using computers. But it wasn't too long.
8" was never common for home, only for the office. It was mostly mini-computers and high end workstations that used them.
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The floppy drives started with 8" models from IBM in 1971. The 5 1/4" wasn't invented until the later half of the 1970s. The 3.5" was invented in 1982 and first adopted by Apple in 1984 and the first high density, I believe, was the Commodore Amiga in 1985.
CP/M, which preceded DOS, was designed around the 8" floppy medium.
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@scottalanmiller said in Stuff I Am Finding When Cleaning:
The floppy drives started with 8" models from IBM in 1971. The 5 1/4" wasn't invented until the later half of the 1970s. The 3.5" was invented in 1982 and first adopted by Apple in 1984 and the first high density, I believe, was the Commodore Amiga in 1985.
CP/M, which preceded DOS, was designed around the 8" floppy medium.
I was born in 1978