The first computer I ever used was a Quadritek 1200. I wonder if that could even be described as a computer! It did only one thing - typesetting. The software was hard-wired into the system. This, by the way, was in Rhodesia (now that beacon of democracy that goes by the name of Zimbabwe), and as we had been suffering from 10 years of sanctions by that time, I guess that it must have been fairly primitive even then. It was huge - the size of your average sideboard - yet had a paltry 16K of RAM and two tape drives that stored typeset copy on C60 cassettes! Its one product was bromide paper, upon which it exposed text line by line - as soon as you hit return, it exposed that line of text. If you noticed that you had made a mistake, you fed in a blank line and retyped the line. Whoever was pasting up the text had to cut the erroneous line and the blank line.
Zimbabwe wasn't a nice place to be, so I moved to Sweden, where I graduated onto the Compugraphic EditWriter 7200. Same principle - it typeset text - but was slightly more advance in that it had 28K of RAM and two 12" floppy drives, each containing 56K of data.
Then I got
really high tech and moved on to the first machine that could be described as a computer as we know it today. It was a long time ago, so I can't remember the exact model of the hardware, but it was made by Bull and had 128K of RAM and a 16-colour EGA graphics card. It ran the CP/M operation system, the precursor to MS DOS, upon which I used Ibis vector graphics generation software.
The "desktop publishing" started happening with the invention of Aldus Pagemaker. I got in on the ground floor of that bandwagon ('scuse the mixture of analogies). I ran Pagemaker 1.0 on Windows 1.03. When we bought the Wang 33MHz 386 to run it on and specced it up with 2.5Mb RAM, the salesman told us categorically that we were wasting our money 'cos we would NEVER need to have that much RAM! ::ha:: Nor would we ever need a 40Mb hard disk.
In 1989 I moved to the UK. I had lived all my life abroad, so coming to the UK was like moving to any other 'new' country, but with the added advantage of being able to speak the language. That was when I had my first encounter with the Mac.
My first Mac was a IIcx. It had a 40Mb hard disk, 8Mb RAM and ran the very latest Mac OS - System 7. It was also my first encounter with my namesake - QuarkXPress. v2.0 was a complete dog! Although it was by far the best program of its kind on the market, it was so unstable as to be virtually useless. I had many an argument with the boss on that score. I wanted to use Pagemaker, but the boss insited that I design my books in QXP.
At this time, I would have classed myself as an 'advanced user' of PeeCees. Aldus in Sweden got in touch with me on a regular basis as I knew more about Pagemaker and its foibles than they did, so they used me for troubleshooting. The one thing I disliked about the Mac was that there was no command line. I liked having that kind of low-level control of the hardware. I soon realised, of course, that you have just as much control of the Mac and that it was much,
much easier!
Since then, of course, Macs and QuarkXPress have moved on, and ol' CQ has grown with 'em.
I have a PeeCee at home (I'm hacking this in on a PeeCee) - NASTY. It's just so illogical! For example, if I want to adjust the volume on my headset, I don't go to the Volume Control CP... that would be the sensible thing to do. No, I have to go to Windows Messenger.
WTF! Talk about STUPID!
Gimme a Mac any day! And if I ever had doubts, well OS X has laid those firmly to rest: what a great system.
I hope this qualifies as a switcher's story. ::angel::