
Perhaps somebody will shed a tear and download: https://usborne.com/browse-books/featur ... ing-books/

All these languages have now largely converged, apart from idiosyncrasies. Even Fortran (or, as you write to prove you're an old hand: FORTRAN) is now quite slick.Abdul Alhazred wrote: ↑Wed Oct 10, 2018 12:06 amFORTRAN in technical school. No nostalgia there for me.
A bit of self taught BASIC. Fun at the time but now meh.
But when I finally went to a real college ... Pascal![]()
From 2013:Abdul Alhazred wrote: ↑Wed Oct 10, 2018 12:06 amBut when I finally went to a real college ... Pascal![]()
https://www.digitalartsonline.co.uk/new ... -released/Photoshop 1.0 source code released
The Computer History Museum is offering the source code to the original version of Adobe Photoshop for download
Version 1.0.1 dates from 1990, and is written in a combination of Pascal and 68000 assembler language, the museum said in a blog post. It's identical to what originally went on sale at the time, with the exception of the MacApp applications library, which was licensed from Apple for the retail version.
The ubiquitous image editing software began life as "Display" in 1987. It was the brainchild of University of Michigan grad student Thomas Knoll, whose brother, John, worked at well-known special effects company Industrial Light and Magic. John and Thomas eventually developed "Display" into its eventual commercial "Photoshop" form. Adobe bought a distribution license in April 1989, though the first company to distribute the software was actually Barneyscan, a maker of slide scanners, the museum says.
Too late, I already have more ebooks that I want to read than I will ever have time for.
https://www.cnet.com/news/iss-astronaut ... -in-space/ISS astronaut finds NASA floppy disks in space
The International Space Station just celebrated its 20th anniversary, and European Space Agency astronaut and current ISS resident Alexander Gerst discovered one small reminder of that long history: a folder full of old floppy disks.
[…]
Gerst says he found a locker on the ISS that probably hadn't been opened for some time. One of the floppies is labeled as containing Norton Utilities for Windows 95/98. Some have NASA symbols on the labels.
A couple of the disks are titled "Crew Personal Support Data Disk" with the names Shep and Sergei on them. These were likely for NASA astronaut William Shepherd and Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev, who were both part of the Expedition 1 crew in 2000.