I first got interested in computers back in the 80's. Windows wasn't even
around back then. You could get a computer from Radio Shack with the keyboard attached to the
console with a monochrome screen. All this with a printer for around $2000-3000.00.
For an operating system, you had your choice of TRS-DOS, MS-DOS, IBM-DOs
or any number of DOS depending on whether you were working with ... Tandy (Radio Shack), Microsoft,
or IBM ... etc...
The trick was to find a platform that worked in businesses that
didn't require a Main Frame or Mini computer ... which were thousands and thousands of $$$.
The Micro computer was just beginning. For businesses, they tied a bunch of micros together
with a server acting as the brain with a Unix language platform ... of
course everyone had their own names for their version of the software
and I used the "Xenix" edition from Tandy.
For home use, the micros allowed everyday people to have something in their homes that they could
use for word processing and simple spreadsheets.
For business, the new micro networks allowed a number of users to access a
central computer brain from a "dumb" terminal ... in other words, the terminal couldn't do anything
on its own without the main computer being turned on.
My job back then was to accompany the Tandy (Radio Shack) salespeople as a
private consultant when they did a presentation to a small company that wanted to get computerized.
They had me do a simple program design based on the reports that the prospective company needed ...
I would create screens that allowed them to input the data needed for the reports and then show
them how to get what they needed from it.
The prospects loved the fact that multiple terminals could be used to
create a database that everyone could access in different departments. Even back then the concept
of a paperless business was being pushed ... what a joke!!!! We generated more paper reports than
they ever had before. The difference was that now the data made sense when it was put
together!
With the sale of the equipment from Radio Shack, I would be hired to do
the programming for them at a hourly rate of $25 an hour. Less than my competition, but enough to
provide me with what I needed as a one man consultant company. The list of companies grew as the
systems were sold until I was supporting 17 companies in the South Puget Sound area.
I did this for quite a few years using a program called Profile, (Tandy
version of filePro), a 4th generation database program. I became the go to guy in the area. I found
this out when I had a problem and called the Tandy help desk and they referred me to the local
expert ... me!
With the advent of windows from Microsoft, the TRUE home pc arrived, with
Compaq, IBM and Microsoft battling it out with Tandy ... the prices were unbelievable. A good
system was around $10K ... I got a deal from Radio Shack and purchased a 486 machine with a color
screen for $4K ... about all I could afford. At least the keyboard wasn't attached to the monitor
anymore! Unfortunately the day finally
arrived in the early 90's when the filePro software designers gave up trying to keep up to date
with the new windows platforms. They did at first, but eventually after I had converted most of the
companies I supported to windows networks, the support for the software died. I could no longer in
good faith recommend the writing of programs using that software.
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