Frank is the man. Proper Assembler, no less I reckon.Programmed in FORTRAN, right?
Frank is the man. Proper Assembler, no less I reckon.
Fortran on punch cards. Imperial College, where I was a student, had 2 computers and only students on computing courses had use of them.Programmed in FORTRAN, right?
Assembler came later, not whilst still a student.Frank is the man. Proper Assembler, no less I reckon.
My first place of work had an IBM 1620 and they were generous enough to let me put my personal stuff on the back of the weekend deck so it ran for free if the works stuff was finished!![]()
After keying your FORTRAN program onto cards, wait your turn to load your card deck into the IBM 1620 and see if it compiled. If not, back to the card punch to try again.
Those were the days.
+1Sorry about the rant, but I am quite intolerant of Porsche apologists who defend the brand pretty much regardless of how badly they perform. I'm a firm believer in a demanding customer driving excellence in products, and this is a prime example. OK, a few deep breaths and I'm good...?
Just so you are aware, WRW1 is not a battery monitoring software update. It is an update to improve external communications of the Taycan. Some owners have received it OTA:I just brought my car in for a change to summer tires (expecting a major snowstorm in the next few weeks...?), and I got the WRW1 battery monitor installed along with a recommendation not to charge the battery to over 80%. I received a new battery in June 2024.
PDP 11 ftw!!Fortran on punch cards. Imperial College, where I was a student, had 2 computers and only students on computing courses had use of them.
I remember the PDP11 coming along.PDP 11 ftw!!
They were epic when we first started surfacing engine ports fully using UniG. Early days of fully machined heads using CNC and getting rid of the porting shop variability using hand held die grinders. Ah F1 was so simple in those days (DFR when I started).I remember the PDP11 coming along.
I remember a 5 megabyte hard drive (I think) the size of a washing machine needing 3-phase power when we installed the first CAD/CAE system at Williams in 1985. It ran on a VAX machine and cost £50k per seat.
I was system manager, in the absence of anybody else who had used computers, and remember learning to backup everything every 10 minutes or so since it crashed so often and shading part of the engine cover took 20 minutes to compute.
Those were the days (not) but it allowed me to do things I couldn't before.
Porsche have gone further by redesigning the battery for J1.2 and then making it backwardly compatible. That's a good bit of engineering insurance.Didn’t GM and Jaguar also try such monitoring software for LG pouch cell batteries? We know how that ended.