home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!olivea!mintaka.lcs.mit.edu!ai-lab!case!dmb
- From: dmb@case.ai.mit.edu (David Baggett)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st
- Subject: Re: a blurb
- Message-ID: <1is0uuINN3ie@life.ai.mit.edu>
- Date: 11 Jan 93 14:41:34 GMT
- References: <1iobpvINN79q@golem.wcc.govt.nz> <1iojg0INNjna@life.ai.mit.edu> <1993Jan11.015110.13461@bsu-ucs>
- Organization: MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
- Lines: 89
- NNTP-Posting-Host: case.ai.mit.edu
-
- In article <1993Jan11.015110.13461@bsu-ucs> 01mbmccabe@leo.bsuvc.bsu.edu writes:
- >>>And doesn't NEED a Hard Drive to run!!
- >>
- >> Big deal. Get a hard drive anyway. They're cheap.
- >
- >Say bud...if they're so cheap, why donl;t you mail me the money order for a new
- >one? I don't happen to have the cash, nor, I would bet, do a lot of other
- >people. I may guess this may be even more so in a smaller, foreign country.
- >I'll keep my eye on the mail and continue to run my software from the RAMdisk
- >so I won't be holding my breath.
-
- Beggars can't be choosers. If you have no money, you really can't
- afford to decide between computers, now, can you? That's my point.
- The only previous reason to buy a new Atari system was "Power without
- the Price." (Snicker.) These days, of course, as we all know from
- having paid careful attention to the mail order prices for clones
- posted here over the past two months, clones are the cheapest machines
- available. Therefore, for people in your situation, the choice is
- clear.
-
- >> That's a GOOD one. $50 is *real* tough to manage for an OS, yeah.
- >
- >Up the amount of the money order, please.
-
- If you can't afford to buy any software at all, then you shouldn't have
- bought the computer in the first place. Do you simply pirate all the
- software you want? Buying a $1000 machine and then saying you don't
- have $50 for a software pacakge is like buying a Ferrari but then not
- being able to cough up money for wiper blades.
-
- >> Right, and consequently you have to pay $75 to upgrade the OS. That
- >> is, every 3 years when they fix the pending 100 bugs in TOS.
- >
- >I'm still using very old version of TOS (1.2 I think) and have no plans for
- >spending money to upgrade it. BTW, I see you suddenly got a little tight with
- >the purse-strings....hmm.
-
- It's not the money, it's the inconvenience, mainly. If you still use
- TOS 1.2, watch out for bugs. Since I use(d) my Atari for serious
- programming that taxed the machine, I was forced to upgrade to 1.4.
- I had to go to a dealer and buy the chipset (once they got them in).
- Isn't compeltely obvious that it wouldn't have been much easier and
- cheaper to provide OS updates on disk?
-
- (BTW, just because I say you should be able to afford wiper blades
- for you Ferrari doesn't mean I advocate spending 10 times as much
- as is required for the wiper blades!)
-
- >What's the point to trying to get a PC put together the right way to do what
- >I want it to do, for less cost than my MEGA ST4? Too bad more people didn't
- >find out about ST's when I did. There'd probably be less people hell-bent on
- >a hard drive/the latest-greatest 'x86 PC/super-workhorse/more-than-they-
- >need/1000. And I have no qualms with GEM.
-
- Well, you're satisfied with mediocrity then. Once you have a hard
- drive and a faster machine, you'll never believe you WASTED so much
- time waiting for things to happen. Computers are STILL not fast enough
- so that everything I want to do is instantaneous; therefore, I will
- always be trying to get faster machines. Time spent waiting for a
- compile, unarchive, etc. is time WASTED, especialy under GEM where you
- can only run one process at once. At least under Unix or OS/2 you can
- edit a docuemnt or fix more bugs in your program while you're waiting.
-
- >Oh well, you and the Jones' have fun competing with each other. I'm gonna see
- >if I can get something done here.
-
- Again, I hope you're happy being less productive than you could be.
- I'm not.
-
- >P.S. Why are the only people who actively promote the clones _I know_, the
- >ones who are able to hook up with _pirate copies_ of the hard-drive munching,
- >processing-time gobbling software they rave about?
-
- You know the wrong people?
-
- >I reckon a large number of people would sing a different song if they
- >_had_ to play by the rules. Not to mention they wouldn't be able to
- >afford to fill those bulging hard-drives their shiney new system
- >sports.
-
- The main thing I spend time with nowadays on my PC is TADS 2, which is
- shareware and registered, thank you. (And yes, I did buy my copy of
- Microsoft C, which was $139, and Ultima Underworld, which was $50.)
-
- Dave Baggett
- --
- dmb@ai.mit.edu MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
- ADVENTIONS: interactive fiction (text adventures) for the 90's!
- dmb@ai.mit.edu *** Compu$erve: 76440,2671 *** GEnie: ADVENTIONS
-