▲ | downsplat 3 days ago | |||||||
My first computer was one of those cheap Amstrad pc clones, and it came with GEM on top of MS-DOS. GEM looked good but took a while to load from 5"1/4 floppy, and once loaded there were no useful graphical applications to speak of. I quickly stopped loading it and learned the DOS command line... Which came useful later to transition to Linux! | ||||||||
▲ | cbdevidal 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Im glad to hear that. An Amstrad also was my first computer. I accidentally wiped out the GEM floppy almost immediately after receiving the computer, not being aware what the format command actually did. So I was bummed for never having access to the cool GUI. Only the “dumb old DOS prompt”; Which, like you, forced me to learn DOS commands and eventually, Linux. I am a UNIX sysadmin today, and knowing DOS well was the key to getting my first IT job. So I’m glad to hear I didn’t miss out on much :-) | ||||||||
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▲ | stevoski 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
That would be either the Amstrad PC1512 or the PC1640, I guess. I had a holiday job/Saturday job at a computer shop that sold these. I’m surprised to realise I still remember the model numbers and specs. |