posted to rec.boats
|
external usenet poster
|
|
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Dec 2011
Posts: 120
|
|
Why I Like Apple Products, continued
On 12/16/2011 1:57 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 16/12/2011 6:09 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 12/16/11 6:38 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 12/15/11 9:10 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 15/12/2011 12:26 PM, North Star wrote:
I remember when we got our first office pc...
Only designated people were allowed near it and no one was allowed to
eat, drink or smoke in it's vicinity.
Back then they were union North American made and cost $8000 in old
1980
dollars, which according to the government inflation calculator is $22K
today.
Back then was 1982 or 1983 for IBM's first PC, and they weren't anywhere
near $8000 in US or Canadian dollars. They were less than a quarter of
that amount, and only some parts in them were "American-made." Further,
IBM wasn't unionized. In fact, about the only large-scale supplier of
PC's who was unionized back in the early to middle "PC" days was AT&T
and even those boxes were merely assembled from parts made outside the
USA.
I bought one of the first IBM PC's sold to consumers in our area, from a
dealer in Northern Virginia.
So, as usual, you are full of crap. Like your shower buddy, iSnotty, you
have no real knowledge of actual history in any area.
Addendum...bought my first IBM PC in 1982, apparently, a few months
after they were introduced in 1981. Paid $1650 in 1982 dollars, not
$8000 or anything near that.
http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/ex...c25_birth.html
Says $1,565 as list for striped bare. However everything else is extra.
Monitor, software, hard drive storage, second floppy, memory, modem,
printer, even shipping with Canadian pricing it was $8000. Even the
"Basic" and assembler packages cost extra. Even the ST506 hard drive
controller was extra. As was the power supply upgrade if you wanted hard
drives.
So $1,565 is like buying a car without the windshield, seats, steering
wheel and wheels. For Canadians, taxes and duties extra.
So blow it out your ass there harryk fleabagger. The real cost of a
usable system was $8000.
Apparently Harry the K has been caught in yet another lie. A surprise to
no one, I might add.
--
1-20-13 The end of an error
|