300 baud = 300 bits / second = 37.5 Bytes / second
64 kB = 65535 bytes
65535 / 37.5 = 1748 Seconds = 30 Minutes
Therefore, if we do not count overhead, a 60 minutes cassette tape can hold 64 kBytes on each side.

almeida67 wrote : Conclusion: I HATE COMMAND LINES, I HATE THE VIRTUAL DOS COMMAND PROMPT IN XP, I HATE EVERYTHING THAT DOESN'T HAVE A GUI AND MOUSE INTERFACE.
I'm a user of computers, and I need work done! Perhaps this is the reason.
I am much more with coder, by a simple reason: I want to dominate the machine and not being dominated by it. And for that I need to know exactly what it does and how it does it!coder wrote : On NT I found that microsoft had extended the command prompt with 'for' as a line interpreter. I worked with a printing company then and each day I switched on the computer it automatically took the date of the last working day, created a directory yy-mm-dd and moved all the jobs we had done that day in there for backup purposes, all with a simple batch file I had written for that goal.
I admit it's more scrïpting than direct command line usage, but it was much nicer than doing it every day by clicking and dragging.
I agree entirely!coder wrote : All that said the mouse is a great invention and gui's make life much easier for normal use of the computer.
Trucla wrote : OK let's talk about how I got involved with computers, without never being a real coder.
Many many moons ago by Xmas a friend of mine offered to my children a Sinclair 1000, a very powerful machine with 16 KB (yes, I said KB, not MB, nor GB) of RAM. As a monitor it used a TV set (I helped myself with an old little black and white TV) and for storing there were those cassettes that we put in a tape reader/recorder, the cheapest the best. I've installed the puppy got some games (in cassettes) and explained the kids how to use the stuff. From time to time I've watched them playing, and they seem to enjoy it.
Some months later in one of those rainy boring days I was alone at home and decided to open the manual and started reading the parts devoted to programming (a kind of Basic).
So I turned on the computer and tried the first commands/instructions it suggested. And I was amazed how the machine obeyed to my orders! After half a dozen of commands, I decided to close the manual and try things on my own. Of course when I got stuck I checked the manual for finding the correct way of speaking to the machine.
Welcome aboard, partner!Mimailia wrote :
Only difference in my story, it was a TI-99. (Texas Instruments-bought when JC Penney decided to get out of electronics.)
And yes 16K was a ton.
M
sharkfan wrote : I know nothing about programming but I have to respond when someone mentions an amazing movie like 2001: a Space Odyssey. And of course the rumor that HAL is a reference to IBM because they didn't let them use IBM in the movie. Arthur C. Clark and Stanley Kubrick still influence Sci-Fi movies today. WOO HOO
Open the pod bay doors HAL.![]()
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