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Comment Re:TRS 80 Model I (Score 1) 623

Sorry if I threw you for a loop on this one... I remember hardcards going into expansion slots, of which the Tandy 1000 series had (early ISA bus). My uncle had me put a 40MB hardcard in his Tandy 1000 back in the day. I thought they were the greatest thing to be invented because the entire hard drive system resided on a single card and not spread around the innards of the computer in a mass of cabling.

The Model IV didn't have conventional expansion slots. Nearly everything data I/O related, other than floppies, was done externally. Starting with page 23 of this online copy of a TRS-80 catalog, you'll see what was made for Model IVs

http://www.radioshackcatalogs.com/catalogs_extra/1985_rsc-12/

Comment Re:C64 (Score 1) 623

My parents bought me one of those new VIC-20 computing machines back when they were newly released.

Having never really been exposed to BASIC programming, except for many long sessions in front of TRS-80's, much to the chagrin of Radio Shack managers, I found the VIC-20 user manual rather... "light"... in its content.

Later, I bought the Programmer's Reference Guide, which was an explosion of useful details and information about the VIC-20!!! There was an entire section on memory maps and detailed 6502 assembler codes. Using just that book, I started learning to write and hand compile machine language routines. I would enter the programs via PEEK commands and DATA statements.

Comment Re:Timex Sinclair 1000 (Score 1) 623

you could use the inbuilt PI value to express 0 as PI - PI or 1 as PI / PI which only took 3 bytes.

Awesome trick!!! I never even realized that until now and I had access to a TS1000 when they first came out. However, I would think it's only a speed for space tradeoff. At 1MHz, I wouldn't have relied on that too much for repeated use in loops!

Then again, I used a VIC-20. At least I had 75%-250% more RAM to work with, depending on the stock Sinclair variant.

Comment Re:as opposed to the 300 trillion (Score 1) 205

but they give the US their cut so it is OK. I work in various countries and have had to get used to the simple fact that money laundering just means not giving a cut to the US. I can shift as much money as I like from any country to any country without question as long as I pay 6% but if I take too much of my hard eant money in cash from one country to another I am called a money launderer. All the guff about criminals is just guff. Criminals can use any system, but good people and bad people want to save money by using the best and the cheapest. Liberty Reserve was cheaper because it was not paying the US and that is what this is about. There is more crime going on on Paypal but they pay the US their cut. People like HSBC are helping corrupt governments to shift their money but the US gets its cut so that is OK.

Comment Re:And doesn't this already exist? (Score 1) 365

My bank does not have photo ID and I would be extremely shocked if they did anything as stupid as you are suggesting. I cannot get anything out of the account without using the card and PIN number and if I want to say that I have lost that I would be required to produce photo ID. So if someone opens a fake account the bank is more likely to make all the money when they lose or break their card :-)

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