| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Two, Issue 19, Phile #6 of 8 |
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| Phrack Editorial on Microbashing |
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| I was toying with the idea of writing a history of the Microcomputer |
| Revolution, viewed through the eyes of one who lived through it, perhaps with |
| some recollections of a Telecommunications Hobbyist thrown in for spice. |
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| Upon reflection however, I thought that I might use this forum to address a |
| problem that has bothered me for some time. I refer to the phenomena of |
| microbashing. |
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| This is, in my opinion, a serious problem in the MicroUnderground. |
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| For the record, I'm 36 years old, I have been screwing around with computers, |
| Mainframe, Mini and Micro since 1976/77. I built an Altair 8800 way back |
| when, and wrote what may have been the first software pirating program. |
| (Something that mass produced papertape copies of Bill Gates' Altair BASIC). |
| I also built a TV Typewriter based on Don Lancaster's designs, and a 100 baud |
| modem to go along with it. For the record, I use a Commodore 64 computer. I |
| have a 1200 baud modem, two disk drives, a spiffy printer and a color monitor. |
| For the record, I sold an Apple //e to buy the C64. I have never regretted |
| that decision. |
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| Now, there are those who will read that last sentence and say to themselves, |
| "Fuckin' Commie user! He SOLD an Apple to buy a Commie? What an asshole!" |
| Now, I could say to the Apple //e user who thinks that, "You poor boob! You |
| spent all that money for a //e! Plus all that extra cash for plug in cards so |
| it can do what my C64 has built in? Geeze! Some folks need keepers!" |
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| That, Gentle Readers, is microbashing. So, in the space of a few minutes, |
| this hypothetical exchange has engendered ill feelings, if not outright |
| hostility. What a waste of time and effort! We both have powerful computers |
| that I could not even begin to imagine could exist 12 (12!) years ago. My |
| Altair had 16k of RAM in it, and I thought that was hot stuff! Most folks |
| only had 4 to 8k in their homebrew micros. I even had a disk drive! A huge |
| monster that weighed 20 pounds, used 8 inch single sided disks that had all of |
| 120k of storage. This whole system, complete with TeleType (my |
| terminal/printer) cost about $5000 in 1977 dollars. In 1988 dollars, maybe |
| $15000. (My little C64 system, total cost less than $1000 just blows that |
| Altair/Teletype out of the water). |
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| What are the roots of microbashing? I'm not sure, but here are some thoughts. |
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| Status, I'm sure, plays a major role in microbashing. A C64/128 will always |
| cost less than an equivalent Apple //e system. "My computer cost more than |
| your computer! Therefore, my computer is better! Nyah!" By that logic, my |
| old $5000/$15000 Altair is a better computer than most Apple machines. |
| Patently ridiculous, isn't it? (I've noticed that there is now a Let's Bash |
| the //e subculture developing among the Mac Plus, SE and II crowd, along with |
| //gs users. I do take a perverse pleasure, I'm sorry to say, with all this. |
| The shoe is now on the other foot, eh?) |
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| Conformity, particularly among the teenage/young adult users, might also be a |
| factor. "Everyone important uses Apples. Only gameplayers use Kmart toy |
| computers. If you don't use an Apple, you ain't shit!" The peer pressure of |
| Conformity is a powerful thing. |
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| A mate of mine in the Computer Services department at Harvard has a Mac II on |
| his desk at work and a Mac Plus at home. Another friend has a Zenith AT clone |
| at his office at the Mitre Corporation in Maryland and an Apple ][+ at home. A |
| good friend of mine who's an editor at a major disk-based publication had a |
| //gs given to him by Apple. All these guys are high powered computer users. |
| The guy at Harvard is their UNIX wizard. The fellow in MD is a GS-13 employed |
| by the Air Force as a general purpose MS-DOS/ADA wizard, and just spent |
| $1000000 to fund distributed processing research at Los Alamos. The last |
| person is the Apple edition editor at this publication. Not a single one of |
| them wastes a second denigrating my C64. Now, if these guys consider me a |
| peer, an equal, (and they do!) and they don't care what computer I use, why do |
| some //e users waste their time and energy putting down the C64? |
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| A third factor may be the sneaking suspicion that, "Geeze! If a C64 can do |
| all that, why did I spend all that money on an Apple?" Guilt and self doubt |
| can be a powerful factor in microbashing. "If I put Commies down enough, |
| maybe other people will buy Apples and then I won't be the only one who has |
| one." Psychologists call that "Transference." Transferring the negative |
| feelings/doubt about oneself to something else and then denigrating that |
| something else. The Old Testament calls it a "Scapegoat." |
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| I suppose what I'm finally trying to say is let's all grow up and stop this |
| foolish bickering and sniping. No one profits, and we all lose. We lose |
| time, information, disk space on BBSs, companionship and fun! I don't like to |
| see some Apple user bashing Commodore. Neither do I enjoy seeing a C64 user |
| bashing a TI user, as I dislike watching that TI user make fun of someone with |
| an Adam. Don't you think we have more important things to do than make |
| mountains out of molehills when it comes to our respective computers? |
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| I do. If we can't act any better than a kindergarten kid whining over a toy, |
| then maybe we don't deserve these powerful tools we have sitting on our |
| desktops. |
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| Written by THE NIGHTSTALKER, June, 1988. |
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