►
From YouTube: CFCS Windows SIG January 10 2021
Description
The topics for the January 2021 Windows SIG meeting are:
Tips for Windows 10 Part 1
Five Microsoft technologies to watch in 2021
How to Easily Batch Rename Files on Windows 10
How to Choose Your Default Microphone on Windows 10
What is Google One and What Do I Get with It?
A New Way to Scan Using the CZUR Shine Ultra
The March 1984 Bussline
The January 1988 Bussline
The January 1990 Bussline
A
A
A
I
have
several
items
that
I
think
will
you'll
find
interesting.
At
least
I
hope
you
will
and
the
first
one
is.
A
I
did
a
recording
because
I'm
doing
a
set
of
the
windows
tips
app
and
I'm
going
to
start
with
that
today
and
then
we'll
have
some
discussion,
maybe
on
some
of
its
some
q
a
I
have
a
couple
other
items
and
then
I
want
to
show
you
how
I
used
a
scanner
that
I
did
a
a
presentation
on
I'm
not
going
to
show
that
presentation,
but
I'm
going
to
show
you
the
results
of
some
of
the
scanning.
A
I
did
by
creating
some
memories
or
not
creating
the
memories,
but
recalling
some
memories
for
those
of
you.
Who've
been
around
computers
for
some
time
and
kind
of
introduce
some
of
you
who
are
new
to
computers.
What
we
had
to
go
through
back
in
in
the
day
as
some
people
refer
to
it.
So
again,
I'm
going
to
share
my
screen.
A
A
A
So
let's
take
a
look
at
what
I'm
talking
about.
You
come
down
to
the
search
box
and
type
in
tips,
and
it
will
be
up
here.
You
just
click
on
it
and
it'll
open.
So
let's
make
it
just
a
little
bit
larger,
so
we
can
get
more
on
the
screen
and
you
can
check
out
what
the
latest
tips
are.
You
can
explore
what's
new,
but
there's
a
list
of
several
topics:
many
topics,
each
one
contains
more
tips
and
they're
called
cards.
A
A
What's
your
favorite
mode,
make
your
app
and
app
tiles
stand
out
with
light
or
dark
mode.
I
prefer
the
light
mode,
but
if
you
want
to
change
yours
to
the
dark
mode,
it's
very
easy
to
do
one.
We
can
just
click
on
this
and
it'll.
Take
us
right
to
where
we
want
to
go
or
you
can
go
to.
Let's
do
it,
let's
go
to
settings
personalization
and
colors
and
right
here
you
can
choose
your
color
light
or
dark.
If
you
change
it
to
dark.
A
A
Keep
tabs
on
your
website
tabs
when
you're
on
a
frequently
used
website
and
have
a
lot
of
tabs
open,
pin
that
site
to
your
taskbar,
then
just
hover
over
the
pin
to
see
a
preview
of
the
open
tabs
to
pin
the
website
to
the
taskbar
in
microsoft.
Edge
go
to
settings
more
then
more
tools
and
pin
to
taskbar.
A
Let's
do
it,
I'm
gonna!
I
already
have
my
microsoft
edge
open.
I
have
three
tabs
you
might
I've
had
as
many
as
20
or
30
open
at
a
time,
but
let's
say
this
particular
one
I
want
to
have
and
be
able
to
to
see
what
I
can
do.
Is
I
go
to
more
tools
and
pin
to
taskbar,
give
it
a
name
I'll
go
ahead
and
just
leave
the
one
that
was
there
and
it
pins
it
down
here.
A
A
It
doesn't
do
that,
and
so
I
probably
would
never
use
this,
but
it
is
nice
of
the
fact
that
if
I
close
my
edge
since
I
pinned
it
to
this
taskbar,
I
can
click
that
it
will
open
up
my
edge
and
it
will
be
on
the
page
that
I
wanted.
So
if
you
go
to
the
same
website
frequently,
you
can
set
that
up
as
a
link
in
your
taskbar
to
go
to
it
very
quickly.
A
The
next
item,
in
what's
new,
is
quickly
jump
between
open
web
pages,
with
alt
plus
tab,
select
the
alt
key
and
and
tap
the
tab
to
toggle
through
the
apps
and
items
you
have
opened,
including
website
tabs
in
microsoft
edge.
I've
shown
this
in
other
recordings
recently,
but
let's
take
a
look:
I'm
going
to
click
alt
tab
on
my
keyboard
and
as
I
do
it
and
when
I
let
go
of
the
keys,
it
goes
away.
A
So
I
hold
the
alt
key
down,
hit
the
tab
button
and
then
hit
the
tab
button
again
and
keep
hitting
it.
You'll
see
the
white
square
box
around
it
changes.
So
I
can
go
to
any
item
in
the
order
that
they
are
on
there
and
I
can
so.
I
can
have
a
lot
of
windows
open
and
easily
find
what
I
want
and
go
back
to
it.
A
The
fourth
card
in
the
what's
new
group
of
tips
is
have
magnifier,
read
text
aloud,
magnifier
the
screen
magnifying
feature
that
comes
with
windows.
10
can
also
read
text
aloud
to
use
it.
You
turn
on
the
magnifier
and
settings
by
pressing
the
windows,
logo
key
plus
the
plus
sign,
and
then
you
select
read
from
here
and
then
use
your
mouse
pointer
to
select
where
you
want
it
to
begin
to.
Do
that,
let's
go
ahead!
I'm
going
to
minimize
this
just
to
make
things
on
the
screen.
A
Look
a
little
bit
better
because
I
have
two
screens
to
work
with
and
I
hold
the
windows
key
down
and
the
plus
key
that
will
turn
on
the
magnifier
menu.
Now
I'm
going
to
bring
over
a
notepad
text
document,
which
is
the
my
introduction
to
what
we're
doing
with
the
tips
app.
I
am
going
to
come
here
where
it
says
read
from
here.
B
A
A
B
A
The
next
card,
in
what's
new,
is
keep
an
editor
handy
on
the
home.
Tab
choose
editor
to
focus
on
the
issues
you
care
most
about
click,
a
correction
or
refinement
type
like
grammar
or
clarity,
then
use
the
arrows
on
the
suggestion
card
to
step
through
each
issue.
Now
this
is
in
word,
but
the
editor
works
in
several
programs
and,
let's
take
a
look,
I
have
an
article
that
I
copy
and
pasted
that
has
some
errors
in
it.
I
did
it
in
a
document
from
word
and
I
did
it
in
a
gmail.
A
A
A
A
A
A
Card
number
six
in
what's
new,
is
edit
in
multiple
languages
to
check
text
in
another
language.
Select
the
text
and
go
to
review
editor
set
proofing
language
and
then
choose
your
language,
and
that
will
be
in
word.
Editor
doesn't
check
for
the
same
issues
in
every
language
when
it's
checking
for
more
than
one
language
editor
lets.
You
know
which
refinements
are
available
for
which
languages,
since
I
don't
do
multiple
languages.
I
can't
show
you
this.
A
A
The
next
card
is
fun
activities
for
you
and
your
kids
puzzles
coloring
books,
infographics
and
more
enjoy
these
free
activities
with
your
children,
family
or
friends.
And
again
it's
a
bunch
of
tam
templates
in
powerpoint
in
word
excel
and
let's
take
a
look
at
some
of
these
there's
a
suduko
game.
Geography
learn
to
draw
coloring
books
and
so
on,
some
infographics
that
you
can
deal
with
and
play
around
with
within
powerpoint
and
several
word
paint
by
numbers.
A
The
next
card
is
family
tree
generator
browse
family
history,
templates
record
your
family's
past
present
and
future
with
ancestry,
charts
photo
albums
and
newsletters
here's.
What
some
of
those
are
these
again
are
templates
for
excel
and
powerpoint
and
word
you
can
have
newsletters
family
newsletters
family
photo
albums,
some
charts,
family
tree
charts
and
so
on,
where
the
templates
are
already
done.
All
you
have
to
do
is
put
in
your
own
personal.
A
A
A
You
take
your
mouse
and
you
just
drag
it
grab,
something
that
you
want
from
the
screen.
Now
I
have
a
program
called
snagit.
That's
turned
on
that.
It
goes
to
the
editor,
but
normally
it
just
puts
it
in
the
clipboard
and
then
you
can
drop
it
and
paste
it
into
either
an
email
or
a
word
document
or
a
wordpad
document,
and
so.
A
B
A
A
A
I
record
it
and
then
I
take
the
audio
and
upload
it
to
my
word
document
to
transcribe
and
it
turns
it
all
into
text.
It
has
speaker
one
and
what
they
say
speaker,
two,
what
they
say
and
you
can
take
speaker
one
and
say:
okay,
that's
a
huey
and
then
say:
do
you
want
to
do
it
in
all
the
instances
and
it'll
replace
speaker,
one
all
the
way
down
in
the
document
to
speaker
to
huey
instead
of
speaker,
one
and
I've
talked
about
this
on
here
before
and
then
another
one
was
stan.
A
Let's
say,
stan
is
speaker
two
and
I
do
that,
and
it
picks
up
everywhere
is
where
stan
speaks.
It
puts
his
name
in
there
instead
of
speaker
two
and
then
I
save,
and
then
I
bring
it
into
my
word
document
and
then
tell
it
to
save
it,
and
then
I
send
it
as
a
word
document
to
the
secretary
and
she's
not
only
got
her
notes,
but
she
also
has
a
complete
transcription
of
everything
that
was
said.
So
she
can
check
to
see
what
was
said.
It
really
works
nicely.
B
I've
also
used
it
on
the
support
forum,
where
the
question
was
asked
in
a
foreign
language,
so
it
can
translate
it
for
me
and
then
I
can
actually
answer
it
in
english
and
transport
it
back
into
that
language.
So
I
can
actually
communicate
with
someone
in
a
different
language
that
I
don't
speak
and
I've
been
told
that
the
translation
has
been
very,
very
good.
A
A
Okay,
no,
okay.
Anybody
else
all
right!
Well,
I
hope
you
got
something
from
that.
Let's
see
okay
lee
says
she
uses
the
editor
in
three
different
languages
and
it
works
great.
So
thanks
for
that
note
as
well
I'm
going
to
move
the
chat
over
I'm
going
to
leave
it
open.
I
don't
have
to
work
on
the
screen.
So,
let's,
let's
take
a
look
at
sharing
my
screen
again.
B
B
A
I
don't
need
that
now
and
this
time
what
we're
going
to
do
is
we're
going
to
open
up
my
browser,
which
I
use
chrome
most
of
the
time.
A
Let's
see
full
screen
it
and
control
make
it
everything
bigger
and
I'm
going
to
go
to
today's
meeting
information
by
the
way.
If
you
are
not,
and
a
lot
of
you
are,
but
if
you're
not
subscribing
to
the
mailing
list,
please
fill
this
out,
and
so
I
don't
have
to
send
15
different
ways
of
of
sending
everybody
information
on
the
meetings.
I
only
send
it
out
usually
once
a
month
and
please
open
the
emails.
A
I
did
send
a
second
one
out
to
anyone
who
who
a
mailchimp
saw
as
not
opening
their
their
their
letter,
because
if
you
don't
mailchimp
knows
it
and
I
sent
out
a
second
one
to
try
to
remind
you
to
log
in
let's
see
for
today.
Let's
see
it's
winsig
and
I've
already
started
for
the
winsig
notes
and
for
today
now
I
do
want
to
tell
you
that
I
have
started
some
preliminary
work
on
a
new
website.
A
I'm
going
to
redo
my
website
take
a
lot
of
the
old
stuff
off
a
lot
of
things
that
I
don't
use
and
make
it
easier
to
navigate
and
easier
to
find
things,
and
I'm
hoping
that
I
can
also
have
ways
to
connect
to
a
lot
of
my
online
videos
much
easier
to
make
it.
So
you
don't
have
to.
I
don't
have
to
have
a
page
of
links
and
you
got
to
go
to
them
I'll,
be
able
to
embed
a
lot
of
it
in
the
in
the
new
website.
A
It's
going
to
take
me
a
few
months
because
I've
got
to
learn
the
software,
how
to
do
some
of
the
things
and
play
with
it,
and
I've
already
gotten
stopped
on
a
couple
of
things
that
I've
had
to
go
and
research
to
try
to
figure
out
how
to
use
so
that
it's
going
to
take
a
little
while
so
anyway,
we
did
the
first
item.
Tips
for
windows,
part
one.
I
have
completed
much
of
part
two,
which
is
another
grouping
within
the
windows.
A
Apps
tips,
where
I'm
showing
you
some
things
as
we
go
along
and
I'll
have
that
ready
by
next
month.
For
the
meeting-
and
the
next
item
on
here
was
five
microsoft
technologies
by
the
way,
let
me
make
this
bigger
here,
so
you
can
see
this
bigger,
I'm
just
using
control
plus
and
it
enlarges
everything
on
the
screen,
so
we're
going
to
take
the
five
microsoft
products
or
technologies
to
watch
into
2021.
A
Some
of
these-
I
don't
know
a
lot
about
by
the
way.
This
is
from
mary,
jo
foley,
who
has
a
a
column
called
all
about
microsoft
and
she
and
paul
thorat,
who
I
mentioned
quite
frequently
on
this
on
this
windows.
A
Sig
is
the
two
of
them:
do
something
called
windows
weekly
on
twit
or
this
week
in
technology
and
they're
they've
been
around
for
many
years
and
are
very
good
at
sniffing
out,
what's
coming
and
and
and
bringing
together
a
lot
of
information,
mary,
jo
foley
usually
talks
more
on
the
enterprise,
where
paul
thrott
talks
more
on
the
windows
and
the
gaming
ports.
A
So
one
of
the
things
that
they
were
talking
about
is
the
meta
os
for
mobile
masses.
Microsoft
has
an
evolving
strategy
and
fundamental
layer
in
the
microsoft
365
cloud
space,
which
is
somewhat
better
known
internally
than
in
externally,
and
that
initiative
is
known
as
meta
os,
sometimes
known
as
taos.
A
It's
meant
to
be
a
single
mobile
platform
that
provides
a
constant
set
of
work
and
play
services
across
devices.
It's
not
an
os.
The
way
windows
is
in
os
or
operating
system,
but
it
does
consist
of
a
number
of
layers
or
tiers,
including
office
substrata
and
microsoft
graph,
and
an
application
model
that
includes
microsoft,
work.
Microsoft
is
doing
around
the
fluid
framework.
A
It's
fast
co-authoring
and
object,
embedding
tech
power,
apps
and
visual
studio,
dev
tools.
So
she
thinks
in
2021,
we'll
hear
more
about
how
microsoft
is
looking
at
apps
as
a
single
task,
product
and
services.
Think
planner
stream
tasks,
lists
files,
whiteboard
notes
and
so
on.
Fluid
flame
framework
say
that
10
times
quickly
plays
a
big
role
here.
This
strategy
and
its
rollout
could
have
big
implications
for
developers,
consumers
and
first-line
workers,
so
we're
seeing
more
and
more
of
microsoft
going
to
the
cloud
and
cross-platform
their
their
services.
A
A
Decades
later
microsoft
is
finally
getting
closer
to
make
this
idea
a
reality
via
its
universal
search
technology
and
there's
some
more
information
on
that.
Let's
see
I'm
just
looking
so
that
was
the
second
of
the
five
it's
a
universal
search,
intelligent
edge
just
more
than
iot.
A
This
is
the
third
item
that
we
need
to
be
watching.
The
microsoft
was
first,
the
major
cloud
vendors
to
embrace
hybrid.
Although
some
officials
call
out
pcs
and
servers
as
examples
of
intelligent
edge
devices,
microsoft
embrace
of
that
definition
will
likely
become
more
prominent
in
2021
and
beyond
when
many
think
of
edge
devices,
they
immediately
think
of
internet
of
things
or
iot
products,
but
microsoft
has
been
growing
its
portfolio
of
what
constitutes
an
edge
device
over
the
past
couple
of
years.
A
A
Even
the
recently
announced
azure
modular
data
centers,
which
are
data
centers
inside
shipping,
containers
which
can
operate
without
internet
connections
intermittently
connected
and
or
permanently
connected
via
satellite
are
also
edge
devices,
so
you're
seeing
a
lot
of
new
technology
behind
the
scenes
that
that
you
don't
directly
participate
in
but
will
affect
your
computing
in
the
coming
years.
A
So
a
lot
of
exciting
things
coming
microsoft
has
yet
to
announce
its
aws,
which
is
the
amazon
work
outpost
competitor,
which
it's
code
named
fiji
she's
expecting
this
could
be
a
21
2021
announcement.
Fiji
is
meant
to
provide
users
with
the
ability
to
run
azure
as
a
local
cloud,
managed
by
public
azure
and
delivered
in
the
form
of
racks
of
servers
provided
by
microsoft
directly
to
users.
Obviously,
that's
not
going
to
be
you
and
I,
but
it's
going
to
be
big
companies.
A
A
A
It
may
debut
along
windows,
10
x,
providing
the
first
batch
of
10x
windows,
1x
users
a
way
to
run
their
existing
windows.
32
apps,
since
the
first
version
of
10x
won't
include
windows,
3,
32,
container
support
resources,
say
depending
upon
how
the
various
cloud
pc
plans
are
priced.
This
service
potentially
could
become
a
strong
member
of
the
microsoft
365
and
commercial
cloud
stable
of
services.
That's
what
we
talked
about
and
had
a
discussion
on
last
month.
A
If
you
did
not
see
that
you
want
to
go
back
and
look
at
the
recording
of
last
month's
winsig
meeting
the
the
fifth
item
on
here
to
watch
in
2021-
and
I
really
haven't
checked
into
this,
so
I
don't
have
a
pretty
good
understanding
of
it.
Yet
is
windows
10
x
now
it
was
mentioned
earlier.
Windows
10
s,
10x
is
something
different.
A
A
10x
is
another
run
at
chromebooks
complete
since
chief
device
officer,
panos
panet
took
over
more
of
windows
the
more
of
a
windows
team
earlier
this
year.
Microsoft's
message
is
windows
is
back
baby
in
2021,
penne
and
team
are
hoping
to
prove.
The
company
has
decided
to
invest
more
in
the
making
of
windows
great
again
with
a
variety
of
efforts,
including
the
21
h2
sun
valley,
ui,
refresh
I'm
going
to
talk
more
about
that,
a
little
bit
more
work
to
make
windows
10
on
arm
viable
and
the
launch
of
the
windows.
A
10
x,
a
new
windows
10
variant
meant
to
be
simpler,
cleaner
and
more
manageable.
Microsoft
original
plan
for
10x
was
to
debut
as
the
os
for
dual
screen
and
formidable
windows
devices.
The
new
postcovet
plan
calls
for
windows
10x
to
debut
on
a
new
single
screen:
pcs,
including
clamshell
laptops
and
two
and
ones.
Among
other
form
factors.
A
Microsoft,
officials
publicly
deny
the
10x
is
the
company's
latest
attempt
to
compete
with
chromebooks,
but
sources
say
this
is
definitely
the
sweet
spot
for
the
10x
devices.
Their
initial
target
markets
include
education
and
first-time
workers.
The
same
customer
groups
on
which
microsoft
focused
with
windows
10
in
s
mode,
which
officials
also
refused
to
say
publicly,
was
a
chromebook
compete
effort.
A
Microsoft
officials
have
not
made
10x
available
externally
to
windows,
insiders
testers
window.
A
word
is
windows.
10X
will
only
be
available
on
brand
new,
not
for
existing
pcs
and
could
begin
shipping
on
those
devices
starting
this
spring
windows,
10x
is
expected
to
run
on
intel
based
pcs
at
launch,
but
microsoft
has
been
testing
10x
internally
on
armed
devices,
sources
say
so,
maybe
it
will
be
available
on
new
arm
based
devices
at
some
point
in
the
future.
So
those
are
the
five
items,
according
to
mary,
jo
foley,
for
people
to
keep
an
eye
on.
A
So
let's
make
this
so
it's
not
full
screen.
So
I
can
see
my
tabs
and
I'm
going
to
close
this,
and
the
next
item
is
how
to
easily
batch
rename.
How
am
I
doing
on
time?
I
may
just
go
ahead:
I'm
going
to
skip
that
I'll.
Just
quickly
show
you
that
it
is
an
article,
let's
make
it
full
screen
and
make
it
larger.
A
And
it
just
tells
you
how
and
it
shows
you
in
the
article
how
to
power,
rename
and
rename
articles
rename
photos
and
so
on,
very
easily
from
within
within
windows
in
a
batch
mode.
A
A
So
it's
a
good
article
to
take
a
look
at
and
to
follow
the
instructions
to
try
to
use
it.
I'm
not
going
to
demonstrate
it
today.
A
I
do
have
a
program
that
I
use
to
rename
files
and
and
so
on
that
that
I
use
how
to
choose
your
default
microphone
and
what
microphone
in
windows
10,
how
to
speed
up.
That's
a
video!
That's
part
of
this.
Let
me
go
ahead
and
use
this
and
we'll
screen
it.
So
we're
going
to
be
in
this
mode,
and
so
you
just
see
the
article,
so
you
can
also
set
the
default
microphone
in
some
apps
just
go
into
into
the
settings.
A
I'm
going
to
go
here
and
then
I'm
going
to
go
to
system
and
I'm
going
to
go
to
sound
and
then
you'll
see
your
input,
your
microphone
you'll
notice.
Here
I
have
many
items
that
I
can
use
as
my
microphone
within
windows,
because
I
have
a
lot
of
microphones
and
microphone
software
set
up
within
my
computer.
You
may
not
have
all
of
those
choices.
A
The
other
place
was
to
come
down
here.
Let's
go
ahead
and
close
this
and
we'll
minimize
this,
so
you
can
see.
If
I
come
down
here
and
you'll
see
my
sound
is
here
my
right.
Mouse
click
my
little
sound.
Hopefully
you
can
see
that
I'll
get
this
and
I
can
then
open
up
sounds
here
and
I
get
this
I
wish
I
could
make
this
bigger.
I
don't
believe,
there's
a
way
to
do
that.
A
I
could
probably
open
up
the
the
magnifier,
but
just
to
show
you
go
to
recording
and
there
is
the
same
choices
you
go
to
microphone
and
you'll
see
that
there
are
many
microphones
there
and
you
can
choose
what
your
default
one
is
by
clicking
on
setting
default.
There's
a
couple
of
different
ways
to
get
there,
so
let's
come
back
here
close
this
out.
A
The
next
item
is:
what
is
google
one,
and
what
do
I
get
with
it?
I'm
going
to
skip
that
today
as
well.
I
do
want
to
mention
to
you
that
there
is
a
new
way
to
scan.
I
did
a
video
on
this,
I'm
just
going
to
open
it
and
show
it
to
you.
It's
they're
like
just
go
to
the
link
you'll,
see
that
I
I'm
showing
how
to
scan
how
I
use
the
scanner
see
if
I
can
find
a
picture
of
it
here.
This
was
the
scanner
itself.
A
I
did
a
whole
session
on
using
this
for
tech
for
seniors.
Please
either
watch
the
video
of
this
or
watch
the
tech
for
seniors
video
and
and
see
how
I
did
what
I'm
going
to
show
you
next.
What
I'm
going
to
show
you
next
is.
I
don't
need
this
come
back
here.
I
do
have
links
to
the
1984
bus
line,
the
1988
bus
line
in
the
1990
by
clicking
on
that
website,
but
I'm
going
to
actually
show
you
those
documents,
because
I
want
to
do
that.
A
For
this
session,
let's
first
take
a
look
at
the
bus
line
from
1984
in
march
and
I'll
open
it,
and
then
I'm
going
to
make
it
well.
I've
got
it
right
now,
where
you
can
see
the
whole
page,
and
you
can
see
over
here
on
the
left
that
I'm
in
acrobat
pro,
which
is
not
acrobat
reader,
it's
the
the
a
full
version,
but
microsoft
or
I'm
sorry,
acrobat
acrobat,
the
adobe
acrobat
reader,
will
do
much
the
same.
I
didn't
just
do
some
some
other
things
with
it.
A
This
happens
to
be
the
default.
I
have
I'll
open
the
next
one
in
just
acrobat,
so
you
can
see
how
you
can
do
what
I'm
doing,
but
you
can
take
this
page
and
then
you
can
zoom
in
on
any
part
of
it,
and
you
can
see
it
so
I'll
do
that
for
here
now
this
is
march
of
1984
for
bus
line.
For
those
of
you
who
are
not
cfcs.
Members
is
our
newsletter
which
we
haven't
published.
A
It
only
goes
out
as
a
reminder
of
meetings
and
so
on.
It's
not
a
publication
anymore.
Only
because
we
don't
have
anyone
to
do
it.
Our
one
volunteer
does
it
through
a
mailchimp
publication,
but
at
this
back
in
1984
it
was
all
done
with
desktop
publishing.
A
Now,
if
you
remember
back
in
those
days
for
those
of
you
who
were
around
with
computers
in
those
days
when
somebody
did
a
newsletter,
they
did
it
with
desktop
publishing.
There
was
all
this
page
maker
and
there
were
several
others
which
were
very
expensive
programs,
and
it
only
produced
the
newsletter
to
be
printed
and
then
sent
to
a
printer.
A
You
could
not
save
it
as
a
digital
document
and
share
it
with
others.
Unless
they
had
the
expensive
program,
there
wasn't
a
way
to
convert
it
and
have
it
available.
There
was
no
adobe
acrobat
at
those
at
that
time,
so
I
have
a
collection
of
some
old
bus
lines
and
I
scanned
them
using
this
new
scanner
and
that's
what
I'm
sharing
with
you
today
back
in
1984,
I
was
not
even
a
member,
I
wasn't
even
living
in
the
orlando
area
1984.
A
I
was
a
member
of
the
tampa
bay
osborne
users
group
and
then
the
tampa
bay
pc
computer
system,
which
became
the
ibm
pc
users
group
and
then
the
tampa
bay
computer
society,
and
now
it's
the
tampa
bay.
They
have
a
different
name
to
it
now:
training
center.
I
believe
they
call
it
anyway.
A
Thank
you
and
that's
one
of
the
members
of
that
group.
This
is
the
bus
line
from
back
then
bill.
Wellman
was
president.
Some
of
you
know
or
knew
some
of
these
people.
A
lot
of
them
are
aren't
with
us
anymore,
but
you'll
see.
But
the
thing
about
this
particular
issue
that
I
want
to
show
you
is
back
here.
A
Is
they
had
a
page
of
history
of
10
years
earlier?
Cfcs
was
one
year
old.
You
can
see
as
of
this
month,
we're
one
year
old,
so
that
was
december
1977.,
so
cfcs
was
started
in
december
of
1967.,
we've
been
around
a
long
time
and
they
were
meeting
and
this
they
didn't.
There
wasn't
a
lot
of
mission
information
in
their
newsletter
back
then,
but
mostly
about
the
meetings
and
to
bring
to
bring
things
to
the
meeting
to
discuss.
A
But
it's
just
nice
seeing
that
there
was
even
a
newsletter
back
in
77,
but
this
is-
and
you
can
see
through
this
article-
here's
our
an
ad
for
a
zenith
1000
I
just
want
to
just
and
at
that
time
we
were
using
dot
matrix
printers
and
you
had
to
have
a
ribbon
and
those
ribbons.
You
could
buy
them
from
this
particular
company
and
they
were
that
was
pretty
cheap.
A
But
if
you
had
a
daisy
wheel,
printer
you
could
get
the
wheels
the
the
ribbons
for
the
daisy
wheel,
printer
the
wheels
were
expensive,
but
but
you
could
buy
the
ribbons
and
you
had
to
replace
the
ribbons
and
at
that
time
the
security
wasn't
very
strong,
because
if
you
looked
at
a
ribbon
you
could
see
where
each
letter
was
punched
out
on
the
ribbon
and
you
could
actually
read
what
somebody
typed.
So
there
was
not
a
lot
of
security
back
in
those
days.
A
So,
there's
not
a
lot
in
this
newsletter
that
to
show
let's
see
they
were
talking
about
the
meetings
and
where
they
were
and
again
you
can
go
through
this
and
take
a
look
at
these,
but
they
were
talking.
Bob
introduced,
the
speaker
for
that
particular
meeting
and
he
was
demonstrating
the
app.
Let
me
make
this
a
little
bit
bigger,
so
we
can
all
read
it
the
speaker
who
talked
about
the
apple
macintosh
computer.
A
It's
a
compact
unit
weighing
less
than
23
pounds,
and
it
comes
with
128k
bytes
of
ram
and
64k
bytes
of
rom
a
sony
three
and
a
half
inch
disk
drive
which
holds
400k
bytes
and
uses
a
disc
of
rigid
plastic
housing.
It
has
a
micro,
a
microchrome,
nine
inch,
monitor
and
non-interlaced,
and
it's
512
by
342
pixel
resolution.
A
It
has
a
detached
58.
Key
keyboard
comes
with
two
programs:
mac
paint
a
drawing
program
and
and
mac
right.
A
simple
word
processor:
it's
possible
to
select
various
type
fonts
in
different
type,
fonts
sizes.
These
can
be
varied
at
will.
Throughout
the
document,
a
mating
printer
will
print
whatever
is
presented
on
the
screen.
A
Many
other
programs
are
in
the
preparation
stage
and
will
soon
be
realist
released
in
the
future.
The
meeting
broke
at
this
point
for
a
coffee,
break
and
reconvene
in
about
45
minutes.
Can
you
those
of
us
who
are
working
with
computers?
Now?
This
is
hard
to
remember
back
in
those
days
there
wasn't
software
there
weren't
printers
there
wasn't
a,
and
it
was
very
difficult
to
work
with
and
to
see
what
you
were
working
with
and
bill.
A
Wellman
spoke
of
a
new
line
printer
that
he
saw
at
a
recent
show
which
would
do
just
about
anything
in
the
way
of
formatting.
He
had
samples
of
the
printouts.
He
didn't
have
the
printer,
and
he
mentioned
two
new
books
on
on
dbase
2
and
the
sig
chairman
who
were
present
gave
reports
on
what's
happening
with
them.
So
certainly
a
lot
different
back
in
those
days
than
we
have
today,
I'm
going
to
take
a
break
right
now
and
see.
A
If
there's
any
comments,
let's
see,
stop
sharing
my
screen
any
comments
for
people
who
remember
about
those
days
or
people
who
don't
and
and
any
questions
about
how
we
lived
in
those
days.
B
Way
back
in
the
70s
on
my
commodore
vic
20,
I
wrote
a
word
processing
program
called
tiny
word
and
it
had
all
the
features
it
was
able
to
detect
the
end
of
the
80
characters
and
automatically
do
a
hyphen.
So
you
could
go
and
continue.
It
was
lots
of
fun.
I
wrote
it
in
commodore
basic
and
then
I
used
the
compiler
so
that
it
was
actually
functionable
and
did
quite
a
bit
of
work
with
it.
B
A
Yeah,
my
first
computer
was
a
commodore
pet,
but
my
second
one
was
a
radio
shack
trs-80
and
I
I
bought
a
magazine
that
had
programs
that
you
could
type
in
and
save
them
and
then
use
them,
and
one
was
a
word
processor,
but
once
I
typed
it
all
in
and
saved
it
to
to
use
the
program,
I
had
to
start
it.
It
took
20
minutes
to
load.
A
A
So
I
could
continue
with
the
document
and
then
continue
writing
the
document,
and
so
it
it
was
it.
It
was
hard
to
do,
but
I
was
never
a
touch
typist
so
for
me
to
type
anything
and
be
able
to
correct
it.
It
still
was
very
nice
to
be
able
to
do,
and
my
first
printer
was
a
an
okie
data.
Microline
80..
It
was
the
first
dot
matrix
printer
for
under
a
thousand
dollars.
I
paid
999
dollars
and
it
didn't
even
have
a
knob
on
it
to
advance
it.
A
You
had
to
advance
it
using
software.
It
was
those
days
were
a
challenge
at
best,
but
let's
continue
and
let's
look
at
1988
unless
somebody
else
has
any
comments
or
questions
about
that
yeah.
I.
C
Was
going
to
say
something
about
the
the
back
in
the
attack
back
in
the
days
my
club
started
as
a
target
back
in
83
and
I'm
the
founder
and
started
producing
a
newsletter
on
my
atari
computer,
but
basically
back
in
those
days,
we
only
had
40
column
display
on
the
monitors
until
atari
came
out
with
atari
writer.
A
few
years
later
gave
me
eight
of
80
columns,
but
I
also
had
the
okie
died
of
printer
for
printing
out
and
it
was.
A
And
that's
why
a
lot
of
us
joined
user
groups
back
in
those
days
because
the
only
place
to
get
any
help
and
there
were
a
lot
of
other
people
and
that's
one
thing
I
liked
about
the
the
osborne
group
we
all
had
osborne's
that
all
came
with
software,
so
we
were
all
we
all
had
the
same
software,
so
we
were
able
to
help
each
other
with
different
software.
Walter
wood.
You
had
a
question.
B
B
and
I
had
a
payroll
program
that
I
got
from
radioshack.
That
needed
two
tape
drives
regular
cassette.
Tapes
in
last
month's
payroll
was
on
one.
It
would
read
the
one
off
the
old
tape,
then
it
would
have
to
write
any
new
information
to
the
new
tape
and
eventually
end
up
rewriting
that
to
do
disk
import,
but
it
was
a
fun
time.
A
Yes,
it
certainly
was
so.
Can
you
add
something.
B
Yeah
I
had
one
here
just
kind
of
along
the
same
lines.
It
was
I
did
trs-80
stuff
and
on
color
computers
too,
but
I
at
the
time
I
was
teaching,
I
was
doing
the
same
language
programming
and
I
was
teaching
the
z80,
which
is
the
trs-80
processor
in
junior
college.
At
the
time
assembly
language
started
out
with
about
25
people
in
the
class
wind
up
with
about
10.
B
and
people
come
in
and
say
I
want
to
learn
a
little
about
my
computer
and
I
would
tell
them
best
way
to
do
that.
Speak
on
the
books,
because
you'll
learn
a
lot
about
your
computer.
If
you
learned
to
be
an
assignment
language
programmer.
A
A
Weren't
books,
there,
weren't
magazines
and
so
user
groups
were
a
big
benefit
to
all
to
to
many
of
us
to
get
together
and
to
be
able
to
ask
questions
like
we're
doing
here,
we
were
able
to
do
in
person,
but
there
was
no
other
place
to
go
to
get.
There
was
no
internet.
There
was
no
other
place
to
go
dave,
montgomery,
unmute
yourself
and
come
on
in.
B
Hey,
thank
you
yeah.
I
remember
my
my
first
computer
was
a.
I
was
really
forward
thinking,
so
I
bought
an
h
heath
kit
h11,
which
were
being
sold
as
kits
at
the
time.
B
The
operating
system
was
loaded
from
a
taper
from
a
paper
tape
reader
which
took
about
half
an
hour
to
run
through
so
about
1976
or
or
maybe
even
late
as
eight.
I
I
approached
the
computer
club
and
was
just
in
joining
but
discovered
that,
of
course,
at
that
time
everybody
was
running
eight
bit
machines
and
my
h11
was
a
way
out
of
this
world
16-bit
machine.
B
So
I
didn't
have
much
help
at
the
computer
club,
so
I
put
off
joining
for
a
couple
years
and
finally,
the
rest
of
the
world
seemed
to
catch
up
with
me,
but
I
was
on
to
other
things
anyway,
but
I
was
in
the
computer
club
for
almost
I
don't
know,
20
years.
B
Yeah,
actually
it
did
yeah,
it
was
yeah.
It
was
more
of
the
mailing
list
for
the
newsletter
at
the
time
I
was
my
my
role
with
the
the
bus
line
was
basically
advertising,
but
I
worked
with
gordon
finley
a
lot.
He
did
the
newsletter
on
ventura
publisher
at
the
time.
B
A
A
And
we're
still
here
so
let's
go
I'm
going
to
close
that
and
what
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
open
this
one
1988.01,
I'm
going
to
open
it
with
not
a
adobe
acrylic,
but
an
adobe
acrobat
reader,
which
is
what
you
would
probably
look
at.
You
can
see
it's
quite
quite
similar
to
what
I
was
just
showing
you
how
full,
let's
see,
I'm
not
going
to
full
screen
it,
because
I
have
something
at
the
top
that
you
don't
have
in
your
screen.
A
So
I'm
going
to
make,
I
am
going
to
make
it
bigger
it's
right
here.
Let's
make
it
about
two
hundred
percent
and
I
better
first
make
it
wider
see
if
I
can
get
it
all
in,
and
I
don't
know
how
to
close
this
out.
Oh
yeah,
I
do
right
here
there
we
go,
and
I
probably
can
close
this
right
now.
There
we
go
okay.
This
is
the
bus
line
from
from
january
1988
this.
A
A
I
ended
up
is
vice
president,
my
first
year
as
a
member
and
here's
get
gordon
finley's
column
on
the
editor's
desk.
You'll,
see,
let's
see
was
it
here,
it'll
be
farther
down,
but
sonic
was
president
terry
shockley.
Vice
president
charlie
burge,
who
a
lot
of
us
knew
he
was
he
passed
away
a
few
years
ago,
joe
polly,
he
and
his
wife
were
very
active
in
the
group.
They
were
killed
in
a
plane
crash
in
an
alaska
tourist
plane.
A
John
neal
bob
tate,
jim
smith,
might
be
some
names
that
some
of
you
may
recall
from
back.
In
those
days
that
were
here,
joe
polly
talked
about
the
december
meeting.
There
were
60
people
that
attended
the
regular
monthly
meeting
and
you'll
see
that
I,
the
nomination
for
the
1988
included
me
and
I
became
vice
president
in
this
january
meeting.
A
Let's
see
what
else
have
they
talked
about
review
tentative
agenda,
and
I
really
didn't
talk
about
lectures
prepared
by
many
of
our
members
mike
peterson.
I
I
did
a
sometime
in
stan
walner,
this
meeting
bill
hart
reviewed
the
tip
the
merits
of
software
catalog
program.
If
you
remember,
we
had
shareware
libraries
in
those
days,
and
so
we
talked
a
lot
about
that
and
and
talked
about
programs
that
were
in
our
library
special
interest
groups.
There
was
a
compupro
sig
copy.
Pro
was
a
type
of
computer
bill.
A
Vermillion
led
that
bill
was
a
local,
disc,
jockey
and
very
active
in
computers.
Back
in
those
days
there
was
a
database
user
group
dbase,
I
should
say:
rich
sias
ran
that
and
dbase
came
with
the
osborne's
and
that's
how
I
learned
how
to
use
dbase,
but
then
people
were
buying
it.
They,
it
became
a
program
that
you
could
use
with
pcs
later
on
and
became
one
of
the
major
database
programs.
A
A
And,
let's
see
again,
you
can
take
a
look
at
the
at
the
newsletter
itself
and
then,
let's
see
dave
mentioned
the
heath.
There
was
actually
a
heath
users
group
and
they
met
once
a
month
as
well
and
they
were
a
sig
as
part
of
cfcs.
A
There
was
the
ps
pc,
ms-dos
sig,
which
turned
into
the
windows
sig
and
which
is
what
we've
got
now
it's
still
around
mike
at
one
time.
I
think
you
took
it
over
as
the
I
think
it
was
still
pc,
and
then
there
were
a
couple
other
people
did
and
then
I
ended
up
taking
it
back
as
a
windows
sig
from
somebody
and
I've
been
running
it
ever
since,
and
I
and
I
enjoyed
doing
it
so
I
it's.
B
A
Yep,
absolutely,
let's
see
they
talked
to
stan
waller
commented
on
the
tsr
management
program,
flush
stan.
I
wonder
if
you
even
remember
that
myself
and
terry
ray
filled
us
in
on
the
latest
enhancements
to
their
respective
bulletin
boards,
and
I
discussed
the
new
shareware
utility
called.
I
convert
and
I
think
there's
an
article
here
about
that
there
was
a
tandy
trs-80
sig
and
that
was
rich
corbett's
group.
I
would
later
work
work
with
rich
corbett
or
maybe
was
about
this
time.
A
I
guess
I
would
think
I
might
have
brought
him
into
cfcs,
and
so
there
were
sigs
back
in
those
days,
but
they
were
a
lot
different
than
ones.
We
have
today
a
nice
newsletter
that
gordon
put
together.
A
He
did
a
really
good
job
back
in
those
days
and
he
was
very,
very
thorough
and
made
sure
that
we
had
lots
of
articles
now
this
was
1988,
so
this
was
going
back
to
1978.
he's
talking.
There
were
50
members
that
that
attended,
a
meeting
in
1978
and
the
bike
shop
of
coco
conducted
a
demonstration
of
their
speech,
lab
board
running
in
their
mc
computer
and
at
a
door
prize
consisting
of
an
88
programming
course
donated
by
the
bite.
A
Shop,
wow
and
data
entry
engineering
had
a
display
showing
their
swtp
6800
computer
operating
as
a
multiple
terminal
time
sharing
system
way
way
beyond
me
and
then
ron
willoughby
brought
in
his
pet
computer
and
demonstrated
it
that
was
in
1978,
and
this
is
just
a
a
memory
column
within
this
1988
newsletter.
Those
days
the
president
was
urging
members
to
bring
in
their
projects
for
the
group
to
admire
during
the
informal
part
of
the
program
during
which
those
with
similar
systems
could
have
a
chance
to
exchange
thoughts
and
ideas.
A
A
We
do
it
every
month
and
all
of
you
are
invited
to
join
that
if
at
any
month
and
just
contact
me
and
I'll
get
you
the
information
on
how
to
join
this
and
again
it's
you,
don't
have
to
be
a
member
of
the
group
to
to
attend
and
you
don't
there's
no
payment
for
it.
The
sigs,
of
course,
are
devoted
to
the
type
of
activity
we
have
more
or
less.
Jim
coppins
was
an
officer
at
one
time
at
cfcs.
There's
his
business
card
members
make
news.
A
So
we
were
in
the
under
300
range
back
in
those
days,
there's
a
calendar
of
events
for
the
month
and
and
these
were
mailed,
and
that
was
a
mailing
label.
So
that's
the
1988..
A
He's
showing
a
five
and
a
five
and
a
half
inch
five
and
a
half
inch
disc
flop.
Those
were
truly
floppy
discs
show
how
floppy
it
is.
It
actually.
A
C
I'm
gonna
say
the
same
thing:
my
club
had
a
shareware
library
and
we
had
them
on
five
inch
floppies
and
then
we
went
to
the
16-bit
atari.
They
went
down
to
the
three-inch
disc,
but
we
had
to
type
in
the
programs
and
to
compile
them
to
run
them
out
of
a
couple
atari
magazines
that
were
available.
C
As
far
as
my
newsletter
that
I
created,
I
took
all
the
old
copies
before
we
can
pdf
and
when
I
pdf
them
and
right
now,
we
have
them
all
online
back
to
1983
in
pdf
format
and
as
far
as
the
ms,
this
dos
is
concerned.
Atari
had
the
emulator
that
we
used
to
play
with
the
ms-dos
and
there
was
a
user
group
at
well.
C
It
wasn't
called
the
sig
at
the
time,
but
basically
that's
what
it
was,
but
up
in
the
up
in
milwaukee
that
I
used
to
go
to
we
used
to
play
around
with
ms-dos,
and
I
remember
back
in
the
days
we
also
when
pcs
came
about.
We
used
to
build
a
pc
during
the
meetings
which
was
fun
also.
A
Yeah,
I
have
some
words
here:
an
8-inch
floppy
disk
that
were
used
on
ibm
machines
long
before
pcs,
so
they
were
even
bigger
and
they
held
less
information.
C
About
the
five
and
a
quarters
when
we
were
doing
the
ms,
the
microsoft
with
the
emulator
up
in
milwaukee,
we
had
the
big
eight
inch
or
eight
inch
or
tennis
drives
that
we
were
using
and
we
had
a
couple
of
built
into
an
emulator
for
atari
for
the
ms-dos
sigs,
but
yeah.
It
was
all
fun
right.
C
Now
I
have
the
our
shareware
collection
somewhere
in
my
basement
of
the
floppies
or
the
five
inch
and
a
three-inch
floppies
well
over
a
couple
hundred
discs
down
there,
someday
I'll,
put
them
out
and
have
them
melt
it
down
or
whatever
or
something.
C
B
180.
and
then,
if
you,
if
you
clipped
it,
then
you
had,
you
turned
your
floppy
to
a
flippy
and
it
was
360.
there.
You
go,
buy.
C
B
If
any
excuse
me,
if
anybody
knows
where
I
can
get
a
five
and
a
quarter,
inch
portable
disc
drive,
I
would
appreciate
knowing
about
it.
A
Yeah,
I
have
a
three
and
a
three
and
a
quarter
inch
three
and
a
half
inch
usb,
but
I
don't
have
a
five
and
a
quarter
and
I
wish
I
did.
C
B
I
haven't
got
any
drives,
but
I
have
copy
of
the
five
and
a
quarters
for
windows,
286
and
windows
386.
yeah.
Well
I
do
I
do
have
several.
I
have
the
the
large
floppies
and
I
have
the
drives
so
contact
me
if
you
like
and
I'll
see,
if
I
can
dig
them
out
for
you.
Let
me
swell
anybody.
B
A
Part
part
of
my
job
description
when
I
worked
at
abc
liquors
in
their
main
office
for
for
a
while.
They
had
me
in
the
computer
department,
and
one
of
my
jobs
was
to
take
a
they
had
a
machine
dedicated.
I
would
take
the
cards
and
I'd
run
them
through
this
machine
and
it
would
put
the
information
on
a
floppy
disk
and
that
was,
and
I'd
spent
all
day
long
just
putting
cards
through
and
writing
it
to
a
floppy
disk.
So
they
could
use
them
in
the
newer
machines
they
use.
Floppies
punch
cars
were.
A
A
Them
let's
go
ahead
and
share
my
screen
again
and
do
this
last
bus
line
here
and
I
didn't
realize
when
and
people
say
yeah.
Of
course
you
didn't,
but
you'll
notice,
there's
one
article
and
a
second
article
on
the
front
page
of
it
by
me.
A
So
I
didn't
notice
that
when
I
scanned
it
until
after
I
scanned
it,
but
this
is
from
january
1990,
two
years
later
than
the
one
I
just
showed
you
and
things
had
had
improved.
I
don't
know
whether
improved,
but
it
had
progressed
quite
a
bit
and
the
meeting
for
this
particular
one
was:
let's
see
for
the
it
was
a
shareware
author
that
was
going
to
it
was
a
member
of
the
associated
shareware
professionals
and
author
of
lotto
profit.
He
would
speak
on
the
lotto
program.
A
It
was
a
program
that
could
you
could
keep
track
of
of
your
lotto
numbers
and
would
give
you
you
know
spew
out,
based
on
previous
lottos,
some
possibilities
of
of
choices
and
also
it
would
also
I'll
give
you
some
random
numbers
to
choose
if
you
wanted
to
that
was,
and
then
I
also
an
article
about
word,
perfect
5.1,
which
was
used
by
a
lot
of
people
back
in
those
days.
A
Let's
see
and
from
the
desk
of
the
president,
this
was
the
meeting
we
were
changing.
I
believe
we
started
now.
It
was
later
on
that
we
moved
places
to
the
high
school,
and
I
don't
remember
the
name
of
the
high
school
that
we
met
at.
But
here
are
the
officers
you
can
see
the
membership
numbers
back
then
was
412.
A
mike.
I
was
looking
for
the
issue
of
bus
line
and
I
don't
believe
I
have
it
of
the
time
period
where
bill
gates
came
and
spoke
to
cfcs,
and
I
don't
even
remember
the
exact
date
whenever
it
was.
Microsoft
was
afraid
they
wouldn't
fill
the
auditorium,
and
so
they
offered
anyone
who
joined
cfcs
that
night
that
they
would
pay
half
of
their
membership
dues,
and
we
not
only
filled
the
hall.
The
fire
marshal
came
closed
down
the
hotel.
A
It
was
at
the
sheridan
hotel
right
off
of
I-4
and
and
the
backup
the
car
backup
was
up
on
to
I-4
to
get
off
and
go
to
the
hotel
and
they
weren't
allowing
anyone
else
in.
B
It
they
shut
down
the
the
the
going-home
traffic
on
I-4
yeah.
They
had
to
bring
in
a
police
escort
and
escort
him
along
the
side
of
the
road
to
get
him
to
the
hotel.
A
A
And-
and
I'm
part
of
my
duty
was
to
escort
him
up
to
the
dias,
and
I
can
one
of
the
things
I
remember
him
speaking
about
at
that
at
that
meeting
was
he
he
envisioned
everyone
having
a
a
pc
computer
on
their
desk.
Everyone
would
have
their
own
computer.
A
Yup
and
his,
and
you
would
have
memory
in
it
as
large
as
what
their
hard
drives
were
in
that
day,
and
I
think
that
in
those
days
I
think
was
40
megabytes
was
a
huge,
hard
drive,
and
so
he
was
saying.
Yeah
you'll
have
at
least
40
megabytes
of
ram
on
your
computer,
so
he
was,
he
really
did
think
in
advan
ahead
of
his
time,
and
it
was.
It
was
very
interesting
talking
to
him
and
meeting
him
on
top
of
it
and
mike,
and
I
won
him
yeah.
B
A
B
A
I'm
going
to
show
you
a
picture
of
that
very
briefly
here
in
a
few
minutes,
but
mike
and
I
won
him,
we
were
both
at
the
apc
ug
convention
at
comdex
and
I
again
don't
remember.
A
The
year
was
probably
around
93
or
94
and
they
were
giving
away
as
a
drawing
at
a
microsoft,
apc
ug
event
where
he
he
was
there
mingling
with
us
all
to
to
have
him,
come
to
your
user
group
to
speak
and
the
boston
computer
society
won
the
drawing
and
he
had
just
spoken
there.
So
they
said
well
we're
not
going
to
use
that
we'll
draw
another
name
and
it
was
a
central
florida,
computer
society
and
mike
went
up
and
accepted
the
the
offer
that
night.
B
It
significantly
changed
our
operation.
We
went
as
you
can
see,
412
members
in
in
this
particular
bus
line
and
and
we
would
probably
get
around
200
or
so
at
a
meeting.
So
you
know
we
had
we
had
to
hunt
around
for
high
school
auditoriums.
We
we
went
to
rollins
college
and
went
to
their
auditorium,
but
jumping
up
to
1500
members
cost
us.
You
know
a
gigantic
paradigm
shift
and
how
you
support
now
that
dropped
back
down
again,
but
but
for
a
long
time
we
were
in
that
800
to
900
member
range.
A
And
you
can
see
the
special
interest
groups
back
in
and
now-
and
this
was
in
1990
and
by
the
way,
if
you
look
at
the,
let
me
go.
Let
me
look
at
the
next
page
notice.
It
says
january
1989,
copy
and
pasting
back
in
those
days
didn't
work.
We
all
had
problems
with
it
as
well.
This
was
the
1990
january
edition,
but
all
of
the
pages
except
the
cover
page-
and
I
think
the
back
page
said
1989..
A
So
we
had
the
copper
pro
sig
was
still
around
the
database
sig
the
desktop
publishing
sig
fox
based
sig,
the
instructional
sig,
the
investment
sig,
the
pa,
pc
ms-dos
sig
and
the
tandy
sigs
were
all
sigs
back
in
those
days.
B
A
Yeah
that
was
much
later
than
this,
this
edition
of
the
bus
line,
but
you
can
see
the
library
news,
they
did
a
survey,
let's
see
what
else
is
here.
We've
got
a
few
more
minutes
here
and
then
I'll
look
at
those
pictures
and
then
we
can
have
some
discussion
on
anything.
Let's
see,
I'm
just
kind
of
going
through
this
quickly.
A
B
Yeah
I
was
at
that
I
was
at
the
comdex
with
y'all,
and
that
was
with
bill
gates
and
when
he
was
here
I
had
some.
I
did
some
photographs
that
never
got
published
in
the
bus
line
that
I
still
hang
on
to
and
if
you
ever
need
them,
I've
got
every
bus
line
back
to
about
1985.
A
A
Of
them,
but
I
don't
have,
I
would
like
to
find
a
copy
of
of
the
one
from
let's
see,
I'm
going
to
stop
the
shirt,
because
who
was
that
dave?
What
was
talking
yeah?
A
I
would
like
to
find
the
one
where
it
talks
about
bill,
there's
probably
one
before
he
came
and
then
one
after
he
came
and
to
show
the
membership
numbers
or
find
one.
That's
got
the
membership
numbers
and
so
on.
A
All
right.
I'd
appreciate
it
and
if
you
wish,
if
you
don't
have
the
ability
to
scan
them
easily,
if
you'll
just
put
them
in
an
envelope
I'll
scan
them
and
send
them
back
to
you.
A
Okay,
but
I
do
want
to
show
those
pictures
now.
Let
me,
let's
see,
share
the
screen
it's
in
the
video,
but
I,
let's
he's
probably
the
best
way
to
find
him.
I
think
I
stopped
that
video.
A
Let's
see,
I
don't
need
this,
I
don't
think
I
hope
and
then
oh
wouldn't
you
know
what
I
do
need
this
sorry
about
this
folks.
But
let's
see.
A
And
let's
see
I'm
trying
to
think
where
I
put
that
video
it's
in
here.
So
if
I
go
to
your
channel,
these
are
all
in
my
channel
and
a
new
way
to
scan.
I've
already
had
400
views
by
the
way.
I
do
want
to
show
something,
because
I'm
proud
of
this,
I
did
one
three
weeks
ago,
a
video
I've
already
had
769
views
this
one
I've
had
400.,
but
let
me
click
this
and
I
think
an
entire
document:
okay,
right
right,
late,
80s,
early
90s
going
to
stop
and
what.
A
There's
jim
daley,
who
was
my
business
partner
mike
there's
a
fellow
out
of
out
of
north
florida,
and
this
fellow
was
a
and
I
can't
remember
his
name
off
the
top
of
my
head.
He
was
in
the
sarasota
group
marshall.
You
probably
can
recognize
him.
A
I
think
he
was
president
of
your
group
where
he
was
very
active
in
your
group
and
there's
jim
daly
mike
and
myself
back
in
at
this
comdex
meeting,
and
this
was
one
of
the
one
of
the
breakfasts
or
lunches
or
dinners
that
we
had
that
they
would.
A
One
of
the
companies
would
sponsor
and
we'd
all
have
our
meal
and
then
they
would
speak
and
a
lot
of
times,
they'd
give
us
a
whole
copy
of
microsoft,
office
or
they'd,
give
us
a
copy
of
of
dbase
or
or
they
do
drawings,
and
somebody
would
want
a
a
computer
with
a
intel
motherboard,
because
intel
was
giving
it
away
and
so
on.
So
I
thought
you'd
get
a
kick
out
of
those
pictures
and
by
the
way,
this,
what
this
scanner
is
that
I
have.
A
I
put
these
four
things
underneath
it
I
took
a
picture
of
it
and
then
it
made
four
separate
jpegs
from
the
scanner.
It's
a
really
neat
scanner
and
you
might
want
to
take
a
look
on
my
website
if
you
did
not
see
that
program
to
you
to
see
how
to
use
that
particular
scanner,
that
was
mark
coslow,
bart
coslow,
yes,
and
he
was
instrumental
in
in
along
with
mike
and
several
others
that
put
together
the
florida
association
computer
user
groups.
A
That
first
met
at
a
golden
corral
in
sarasota
many
years
ago,
when
mike
got
elected
president
that
year
of
fac
ug-
and
he
was
first
president
of
the
florida
association
which
I
believe
is
in
limbo.
I
don't
believe
they
have
officers
anymore.
I
believe
it's
still
there,
but
I
think
everybody's
pretty
much
gone,
although
they're
still,
if
groups
haven't
stopped
sending
them
money,
they're
still
accepting
jews,
but
anyway
any
questions,
don't
believe
our
speaker
has
shown
up
stan.
A
I
sure
hope
I
think
he
said
three
o'clock,
so
I'm
hanging
in
there
till
three.
I
have
not
yet
heard
from
him.
No,
he
did
register
and
he
does
have
the
link
to
the
meeting
bob
g.
B
Huey,
let's
compute
was
the
name
of
the
magazine
that
I
got
on
a
regular
basis
and
if
you
go
on
the
internet
and
do
a
search,
they
have
in
the
archives
still
copies
of
all
of
their
magazines.
That
was
one
of
those
magazines
that
was
loaded
with
dos
programs
that
you
could
type
in
and
use.
A
And
there
was
also
a
bite
magazine,
which
was
a
little
bit
more
advanced,
and
I
I
saw
recently
esther
schindler,
who
was
a
very
active
in
apc
ug
in
her
user
groups
and
so
on.
She
is
a
professional
writer,
mostly
a
lot
of
its
technology
stuff,
and
I
I
follow
her
we're
friends
on
facebook
and
she
shared
a
link
to
the
bite
magazine.
A
All
of
their
magazines
are
online
and-
and
I
came
across
somewheres,
I
saw
an
ad
for
godfather's
godfather
computers,
which
was
in
which
was
an
orlando
company
and
they
advertised
heavily
in
computer
shopper,
and
that
was
a
huge
thick
magazine.
Oh
yeah
of
it
was
bigger
than
nine
by
eleven,
it
was
a
huge
magazine
and,
and
that
thick
and
mostly
ads
and
some
articles
of
all
kinds
of
computer
stuff.
That
was
a
lot
of
fun
browsing
every
month.
B
B
My
my
original
computer,
since
people
were
talking
about
it.
I
was
an
apple
ii
guy
and
I
can
you
know,
and
it
used
to
be
an
audio
tape
before
before
it
was
floppy
disk.
But
I
can
remember,
I
was
stationed
in
key
west
with
the
navy
and
I
heard
that
an
apple
store
had
opened
in
miami
one
of
the
first
apple
stores
in
the
united
states,
and
I
I
drove
up
for
the
day
just
to
go
to
the
store
to
buy
something
that
was
called
lotus.
B
A
We've
changed
yes,
and-
and
my
first
computer,
as
I
said,
was
a
commodore
pet
and
how
I
happened
to
buy
it.
I
was
in
an
olsen
electronics
store
in
tampa
and
there
was
a
nine-year-old
kid
playing
with
his
with
one
on
the
shelf
and
he
was
typing
in
stuff
and
something
was
happening
on
the
screen.
I
said
he
can.
I
can't
so.
I
bought
one,
but
I
was
I
was
torn
between
a
crate
across
the
street.
A
Was
an
apple
store
or
an
apple
tooth
store
a
store,
it
sold
apple
twos
and
I
went
back
and
forth
and
I
looked
at
them,
but
I
wanted
something
that
would
be
apple
at
that
time
was
not
as
business-minded
and
I
decided
well,
I'd,
probably
use
it
in
business
or
for
business
eventually,
and
so
I
bought
the
commodore
pet
instead
of
the
apple,
and
that's
only
reason
why
I
didn't
have
an
apple.
A
B
A
And
when
I
was
in
the
tampa
bay
osborne
group,
one
of
the
fellows
that
was
had
an
osborne
bought
a
lisa
and
he
brought
it
in
and
we
were
in
a
different
room
with
all
those
that
were
interested
in
seeing
that.
And
so
we
got
to
see
the
apple
lisa,
which
was
the
forerunner
of
the
macintosh.
B
A
B
B
A
C
Here,
yeah
from
19
excuse
me
1985
to
1991
on
atari,
of
course,
I'll
start
out
with
floppy
drives
and
I
went
to
the
hard
drives
or
excuse
me
yeah
hard
drives
and
we
had
three
of
them
in
in
the
area
up
here
in
waukegan
illinois
we
called
ourselves
tri-city
systems,
but
yeah
matter
of
fact.
I
would
just
talk
to
one
of
our
members
the
other
day
yeah.
He
had
moved
from
here
down
to
virginia
and
he
used
to
log
into
my
bbs
at
about
three
o'clock
in
the
morning.
A
There
are
several
people
on
here
that
were
members
of
my
bbs
and
I
think
I
I
switched
from
bbs
to
to
the
internet.
I
think
it
was
around
1995.,
so
this
was
pre-95.
I
see
norm.
Griffin
stan,
of
course
I
think
was
on.
I
don't
remember.
A
B
A
So
so,
back
in
those
days
it
was
a
lot
of
fun
running
those
bbs's.
I
had
four
phone
lines
coming
into
a
rented
apartment
that
I
had
and
and
eventually
when
I
got
into
the
computer
business,
opened
up
a
store.
I
moved
it
there
and
my
business
partner
had
a
bulletin
board
and
they
were
both
in
the
same
in
the
same
room
together
and
then
our
technician
was
a
real
techie
and
he
got
a
satellite
dish
and
was
doing
fido
feeds.
Phyto
network
feeds
from
the
satellites.
A
So
we
we,
we
not
only
had
servers
with
cd-rom
drives,
which
sure
were
on
them,
but
we
were
getting
downloads
every
day
of
hundreds
of
shareware
programs
from
the
satellite.
So
it
was.
It
was
a
lot
of
fun
in
those
days
and
and
of
course
you
couldn't
download
much
it
took
so
long
and
so
on.
I
think
I
did
a
session
on
timing
and
and
how
long
it
took,
but
it
was.
It
was
a
lot
of
fun
in
those
days,
yeah.
C
A
Yeah
300
300,
you
could
see
each
letter
as
somebody
was
if
somebody
was
typing,
if
you,
if
you
watch
somebody
who
was
a
slow
typer
like
me,
that's
how
fast
the
letters
would
so
you
didn't
get
words
on
the
screen
or
paragraphs
or
pages.
You
got
one
letter
at
a
time
coming
up
on
the
screen
it
was
it
was.
It
was
painstaking.
B
The
bill
vermillion
ran
the
first
one
of
the
first,
what
communications
thing
they
weren't
called
bbs
in
back
then,
but
before
I
even
had
a
computer,
I
got
a
terminal
right.
C
B
Monitor
with
a
keyboard,
but
I
logged
into
that
thing,
probably
a
year
or
two
before
I
even
bought
a
computer,
we
thought
it
was
great
just
to
type
messages
back
and
forth
and
that's
all
he
did.
He
was
just
getting
started
himself,
but
he
he
was
a
pioneer
in
the
central
florida
for
having
a
a
network
that
you
can.
B
We
were
able
to
take
the
apple
bbs,
which
ran
a
linux
emulator
that
was
written
in
machine
language
and
was
added
in
as
a
as
an
app
in
apple
basic
and
somebody
had
written
an
apple
vbs
system
using
that
and
we
could
tie
into
bill
vermillion's
system
and
that
linked
apple
bulletin
boards
from
around
the
country.
So
they
could
exchange
message,
structures
or
messages.