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Re: Turbo... |
Dec 4, 2012, 11:09 |
Ant |
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Beamer wrote on Dec 4, 2012, 10:53:
Ant wrote on Dec 4, 2012, 10:42: I didn't even know Turbo BASIC existed. I used Turbo Pascal in college for my first computer science course/class! And then C++ and ASM. For me it was Basic and then Turbo Pascal in high school, C then Assembly, Java and C++ in college.
Turbo Pascal was the most fun, for a few different reasons. I used BASIC on Apple 2s though. |
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Re: Turbo... |
Dec 4, 2012, 10:53 |
Beamer |
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Ant wrote on Dec 4, 2012, 10:42: I didn't even know Turbo BASIC existed. I used Turbo Pascal in college for my first computer science course/class! And then C++ and ASM. For me it was Basic and then Turbo Pascal in high school, C then Assembly, Java and C++ in college.
Turbo Pascal was the most fun, for a few different reasons. |
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Re: Turbo... |
Dec 4, 2012, 10:42 |
Ant |
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I didn't even know Turbo BASIC existed. I used Turbo Pascal in college for my first computer science course/class! And then C++ and ASM. |
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Re: Morning Tech Bits |
Dec 3, 2012, 18:52 |
eRe4s3r |
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| That's a sign of the fall of an economy.. not a sign of a shift in corporate policy. Also.. Assembled in X means 15%-20% of the thing was assembled in X, basically they put the screws in. I am sure the screws alone amount to 15% given that you could literally just have the ready components and mount them... that'd easily be above 20% of the assembly, when in reality it is still all made in china, even the screws. ;p |
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