hpr4606 :: My Nerdy Childhood: From Floppy Disks to Dial-Up Dreams

Trollercoaster talks about his childhood and first years of nerdlyhood

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Hosted by Trollercoaster on Monday, 2026-03-30 is flagged as Explicit and is released under a CC-BY-SA license.
childhood, humor, nostalgia. 1.

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Duration: 00:15:30
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general.

It all started at Flanders Technology International in 1987... a tech expo where an eleven-year-old watched a wooden block move across a desk and an arrow follow it on screen. That was it. That was the moment. He had to have a computer with a mouse.

What followed was a story of after-school showroom squatting, summer jobs, game piracy, a modem bill that nearly gave his parents a heart attack, and an education in computing that no school could have provided.

From the Amstrad PC1512 and the GEM windowing system, to the Schneider Euro PC with its infamous Turbo button that turned Ms. Pac-Man into a half-second blur — this episode is a love letter to the glorious chaos of home computing in the late 1980s.

Along the way: the satisfying clatter of a matrix printer , the dark arts of config.sys and autoexec.bat , Digger , the allure of the Commodore 64 , forbidden floppy disks at computer club, a 2400-baud modem, and the very first taste of online community — long before anyone called it the internet.

The computers

Play the games


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Comment #1 posted on 2026-03-30 14:24:54 by Trey

Trip down memory lane...

Thank you for the trip down memory lane. It very much reminded me of my own experiences during that time.

I believe that we developed a certain set of skills, for troubleshooting, for experimenting, and for learning because we did not have an internet to lookup everything.

This is what made us hackers! Not in the criminal sense, but like MIT and HackerOne have defined it.

Hacker: "One who enjoys the intellectual challenge of creatively overcoming limitations" HackerOne. What's in a Name. Retrieved from HackerOne: https://www.hackerone.com/blog/whats-in-a-name

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