What is your age? (Part 2)


View Poll Results: What is your age?
born 1976 - 1985 (21 to 30 when poll started) 83 52.53%
born 1966 - 1975 (31 to 40 when poll started) 35 22.15%
born 1956 - 1965 (41 to 50 when poll started) 18 11.39%
born 1986 - 1995 (11 to 20 when poll started) 15 9.49%
born 1936 - 1945 (61 to 70 when poll started) 4 2.53%
born 1946 - 1955 (51 to 60 when poll started) 3 1.90%
born 1915 or earlier (91 or older when poll started) 0 0%
born 1916 - 1925 (81 to 90 when poll started) 0 0%
born 1926 - 1935 (71 to 80 when poll started) 0 0%
born 1996 or later (10 or younger when poll started) 0 0%
Voters: 158. This poll is closed

 
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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What is your age? (Part 2)
# 22  
Old 12-22-2006
HP-UX File System

Hi guys,

I am new to HP-UX system, and would like to find out what file/process that load all the devices when the system boot up.

Cheers,
# 23  
Old 12-22-2006
The thing that I have noticed over the years is that people learned either the Big Blue (IBM) environment, OR the Unix one... never was there a convergence until recently (last 10 to 15 years).

I've 'dabbled' with varous *nixes since the late eighties... and it has been fun knowing both worlds. It is coming in handy now.
# 24  
Old 12-22-2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
And I see no reason that I could not be a contributing member of this forum past age 100 (umm, well, ...assuming the forum survives that long).
Tooo funnny Smilie

I've never been much with programming. The syntax crap just drives me up the wall. Machine language was interesting. I can do it, and will write what I need to but don't really enjoy it. First job (while going to school) in late 70's was with E-Systems working with EE's building/testing antenna in the GHZ range. Cool stuff, really black box. I always enjoyed working with my hands so I ended up in the customer support end of the field. Liked working with people and helping them. Sun in the late eights build a box called 386i. When you pulled off the side cover everyone who worked on the project had their names signed on the inside cover (Won't see any of that now days). When PC's started entering the market I moved over to networking. Did a lot of backbone taps for TI's network. Finally ended up in the automated data transfer arena. Interesting, pays the bills and lets me do my hobby....
# 25  
Old 12-22-2006
Wow, jimmyc, that's some beautiful woodworking you've done!

Well, I'm 42, but I tell ppl I feel like my brain thinks I'm somewhere between 24-32. The jobs I had all involved computers, and I was "The Guy" in the office to help a user or fix a hardware problem, so I decided that is really what I enjoy doing so I made it my career choice. I'm a Apple/Macintosh person way back from the Apple ][ days, but I'm not a Mac biggot. I live and work comfortably in MacOSX, WinXP/2000, and Linuxeseses. I now work for a large global company as an in-house Mac devloper for their Graphics dept.

My hobby/addiction since 3/18/2005 is Second Life (http://secondlife.com). It's an online 3D community where everything inworld is made by the residents who live there. It has a real economy where many people make their living creating items they sell or by being virtual real estate brokers. Many Univerities (Harvard) and companies (IBM, Adidas, Reebok, Amazon) do real life training inworld. I'd love to show you around if you decide to visit. My avatar name is "Cazzj Brearly". I own 2 private islands, Enchanted & Escape.
# 26  
Old 01-20-2007
MySQL still young me :)

I'm probably the smallest here in this thread, I just turned 19, and pretty much as u guys, I first sat in front of a pc (my cousin's) I was 8 years old, maybe 9 I can't remember... it was a Pentium I 100 MHZ, Windows 95.

At that time computers were very rare when I live (Lebanon - Middle East) I didn't know anything about programming nor internet, everyday I used to dig in the files, try stuff I have no idea what they are... when I bought my own PII 400 MHZ win98SE, I had to reinstall windows every week, due to missing files and corrupted stuff...( It's in the name of science Smilie ) I started learning programming last year; I'm majoring in Computer Science (2nd year now), I learned a little assembly language, lots of C++, VB.NET & SQL, this year I started C programming under UNIX, and I'm using Mandrake on a virtual machine! Right now I'm teaching myself sockets and networking, I barely find time for them but I'm struggling.

I hope someday I'll work as a system administrator or something BIG in the computer field! I'm now working as a middle man between my university and an institute, we're designing them a database system that may evolve into a server later, and I'm running the system there...

This forum is great, I'm learning a lot from it, and I just wish I had more time to read every thread!

One last thing, sorry for the big paragraph, I got carried away Smilie
# 27  
Old 01-23-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by blowtorch
I noticed one thing, the 'old' guys (pardon the usage of the term), have been working on computers since their high school or something like that. The newer guys (that probably includes most of the people below 30) have probably done their bachelor's degrees in some engineering, maths or comp. sci. related fields and then moved into this field (a natural progression, I think).
I suppose I'm an exception then. I'm 26, and I've been working on computer hardware since I was about 12 or so, but stuck to DOS and Windows software and didn't worry about it much. One day, when my Windows 98 computer self-destructed for the 178239057123th time, I finally admitted to myself that having to use an external parallel port CDROM to install Windows 98 to get around driver incompatibilities was not normal procedure, and I should probably get a newer OS. But when I saw Windows XP's completely outrageous price, sheer cheapness compelled me to get a Mandrake Linux boxed set instead. I've never regretted that, it was difficult but I learned a ton, and the price of Microsoft software has only skyrocketed since...
# 28  
Old 01-24-2007
Computer

I started learning programming in high school (rpg) as this was thought to be more of a vocational trade at that time.
After 2 years of college in 1980 you could land a job almost anyplace and get the company to pay for the rest of college.

The first luggable computer they gave me to bring home ran off two 5 inch floppy disks and had a 5 inch monitor. This is how we did remote support or you had to drive into the office at 3am. Even in 1982, we were still using punch cards to run programs and enter data. We've come a long way.

26 years later I have programmed in most languages, worked on mainframes, midrange, desktops, intel, unix, vms, ims, cics, db2, oracle, informix, os2, cobol, fortran, assembler, scripting and some stuff that is no longer around.
There is always someplace "to go" in this industry.
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