- Joined
- Sep 20, 2018
- Messages
- 11
In 1993 I built a two story garage for myself and selfish reasons (man cave). It evolved into my poker palace, hence the custom poker chip I use for a avatar.
Nice! Welcome aboard!I'm a Senior Chief in the U. S. Coast Guard.
Welcome. May I assume you are a U of FL fan? I went to U of F for many years, many years ago.I am a Star Trek fan.
I find many use the "usual" names so I use "Qapla" ... it is Klingon for "Success"
I lived in Gainesville from 1970 to 1979 (with 9 months in Tallahassee), and have lived in Florida all my life. I live in Orlando now.I live just outside of Gainesville and my FIL was a UFPD - I have lived here for nearly 60 years
I started in TV at a DuMont station 1963, and took a lot of the old DuMont gear to Texas A&M and used it to build their TV station KAMU, Few of the students knew much about vacuum tube equipment, they only knew those newfangled transistor thingies.
I became quite a student of Dr. Allen B. DuMont, and later bought the trademark "The DuMont Network" for use in my Subchapter 5 Corporation.
Made a good CB handle when I was driving TV trucks and of course when the Internet age arrove, it was a natural.
Then the Island of Tuvalu was granted the .tv domain, and promptly set it out for leasable domains. Hence dumont.tv.
More people know me as Doc DuMont than know my real name, alas.
GEnie @ 300 baud substantially predates my online experiences, but I always wondered what the later pseudo-graphical multiplayer games were like on the GEnie service. The screen shots left more questions than answers.In '79 I bought my first PC (1st Apple II sold in Nashville) and went into the internet world on a 300 baud dial-up. I got on to GEnie messenger service and they wanted a screen "handle" so it was only natural to use it.
Yeah, but did you phone home in 1982?My Initials in 2020
I did phone home, and I collected lots of Reese's Pieces during that time frameGEnie @ 300 baud substantially predates my online experiences, but I always wondered what the later pseudo-graphical multiplayer games were like on the GEnie service. The screen shots left more questions than answers.
Yeah, but did you phone home in 1982?
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