• palordrolap@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    512KB? At the risk of going all Four Yorkshiremen, that sounds luxurious.

    Floppy disks held 170KB if you were lucky to have a drive. The PET line, like many 8-bit computers, used a cassette tape drive (yes, those things that preceded CDs for holding and playing music). Capacity depended on the length of the tape. And it took ages to load.

    The PET was fancy because it had a built-in cassette drive. That’s what you can see to the left of the keyboard in the picture.

    • Telorand@reddthat.com
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      8 months ago

      The main machines at work still do upgrades via tapes. The main program can communicate with lots of online services, but it still updates via tape. Probably too hard to spend the time to figure out how to implement OTA upgrades, since it was first created back in the 80s.

      But the 512KB was more of a vague gesture towards the limitations back then. We had a separate floppy drive, with which I would load up a big black rectangle that had 1-5 very basic games on it. There’s something special about locking down the disk which you can’t get even with its smaller successor…

      • palordrolap@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Comparing audio cassettes to modern high-density tape storage is pretty much the same comparison as an 8-bit computer with a modern 64-bit server, or, say, a hamster with a human.

        Basically the same thing, but the differences are somewhat notable.

    • mihor@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      Yes, the tape really took ages to load and then you’d just get that damned SYNTAX ERROR just to have to reload everything. 😂