The Computer Chronicles - Easy to Use Databases (1992)

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2024

Комментарии • 47

  • @arne8780
    @arne8780 4 года назад +11

    flat file vs. relational databases:
    1:22 dBase IV
    2:42 4th Dimension (Macintosh)
    5:45 Provue - Panorama 2 (Macintosh)
    8:55 Claris - FileMaker Pro (Macintosh)
    13:11Ace Software - AceFile (Windows)
    16:30 Borland - Paradox (Windows)
    20:06 Fox Software - FoxPro (Windows)

    • @SeaJay_Oceans
      @SeaJay_Oceans 8 месяцев назад

      dbXL by WordTech Systems was my favorite ! :-)

  • @HuggieBear39
    @HuggieBear39 6 лет назад +13

    I went to school to learn dBase IV and Lotus 123 and WordPerfect 5.1. This was almost 30 years ago...DAMN!

    • @llothar68
      @llothar68 6 лет назад +1

      I ordered books a week ago to learn them today ... for a computer software history article i want to write.

    • @firstlast9198
      @firstlast9198 4 года назад

      You must have great patience.
      Those kind of classes are so dry and progress soooooooo slowly.
      Just watching a sales person teach a costumer email is mind blowingly frustrating.

    • @HuggieBear39
      @HuggieBear39 4 года назад +1

      @@firstlast9198 No not at all. Back then this was new and exciting stuff. Just being on a PC was a new experience.

    • @rooneye
      @rooneye 3 года назад +1

      Did you not learn any programming back then? I was at school in the mid to late 90's so I learned Microsoft office lol Word, Excel and Access. Lame af. It was more like learning office admin tbh. But before that people used to learn to program on BBC Micro's. I was so jealous that just as I got at the right age they switched from learning programming to learning MS Office.

    • @HuggieBear39
      @HuggieBear39 3 года назад +1

      @@rooneye I did learn BASIC back in high school in the mid 80s. When I got off my butt and when back to school at the start of the 90s, that is when I learned the other "office" type of programs.

  • @АлексейГриднев-и7р
    @АлексейГриднев-и7р 4 года назад +5

    30 years past, and good old SQL is still king. All those graphical tools never took off.

    • @magnetic_aviator9578
      @magnetic_aviator9578 2 года назад +2

      SQL will always work with any application since you can execute scripts to it or even use a graphical interface on it

    • @dealloc
      @dealloc 7 месяцев назад

      Microsoft Access certainly took off. You probably wouldn't believe it's still used to this day.

    • @hstrinzel
      @hstrinzel 5 месяцев назад

      FoxPRO DOES have SQL available as language option. But LATER Microsoft found that it was way too powerful and all FoxPRO users DID NOT BUY or need their cash cow SQL Server, and so then they sidelined it.

  • @rededwards3479
    @rededwards3479 Месяц назад

    Lotus APPROACH was King of Database when it launched...It won MANY Awards..

  • @graytonw5238
    @graytonw5238 3 года назад +3

    I wasn't quite deep enough into desktop databases when these programs were big-time, but even without too much familiarity you could see that FoxPro just walked all over these other ones when it came to speed and user-friendly interface. By the time I really started playing with FoxPro and a couple others, Microsoft was snapping it up and preparing to sideline it because they were getting ready to push Access.

    • @captainkeyboard1007
      @captainkeyboard1007 2 года назад

      I missed employment opportunities that may have led me to gain exposure to the microcomputer. After numerous rejections of employment opportunities, I missed working intensely with programs that ran under DOS. Now I am working under Microsoft Windows since 2002 when I bought my own computer, color laser printer and scanner. The database program, Microsoft Access is my favorite program to use, above Microsoft Word, that was my springboard. Since 2002, I am mastering some techniques in using Access 2019 that I would not possibly learn in a job.

  • @llothar68
    @llothar68 6 лет назад +2

    Amazing that Panorama is still alive with it's original company and kicking arse.

    • @quadgon
      @quadgon 4 года назад

      Looks like Filemaker is as well.

  • @lunarpenguin5468
    @lunarpenguin5468 5 лет назад +10

    Seeing plaintext passwords makes me nervous even when it's just a demonstration from almost 30 years go

  • @markmonroe7330
    @markmonroe7330 Год назад

    I have a couple of personal projects that still use dbase files with Alpha4 version 7 - the MS-DOS version. I run them on Win-XP as a virtual machine. They work perfect and do exactly what I want and I have not felt so inclined to move them to anything newer.

  • @KabelkowyJoe
    @KabelkowyJoe Год назад

    8:00 EXACTLY and ABSOLUTELY are most favorite word of every burocrat manager, every single show, it hurts my ears exactly! eaxctly! Maybe not in this show, was used just once, maybe its just me, but i noticed usage of exactly and absolutely instead of yes not hearing that often unless i watch Computer Chronicles.

  • @wallacelang1374
    @wallacelang1374 10 месяцев назад

    I understand the need for using database software, it is just that I had not the need for using it back in the 1990s.

  • @lindaoffenbach
    @lindaoffenbach 3 года назад +3

    Ugh, we had to learn dBase at school... A horrid experience. At home we used Superbase on Amiga all the way up to the Windows version when we changed all over to W3.1. Superbase was way cushier to use (very intuitive Wyiswyg), extremely powerful and easily on par with dBase; the latter was really nightmarish with constant niggles from a user point of view.

  • @Eyetrauma
    @Eyetrauma 2 года назад

    The UI in that Panorama demo is weird, it has the titlebar style you get when a Mac’s in B&W mode but the scrollbars are the color kind. I noticed they have icons in the title (similar to how proxies look in OSX), makes me wonder if 4th Dimension custom handles titlebars but not scrolling.

  • @tangentradio7272
    @tangentradio7272 Год назад +1

    Boy, I miss Fox Pro for DOS!

  • @ukranaut
    @ukranaut Год назад +1

    Heh, programming drag and drop in the text interface must've took a lot of effort.

  • @Rizimar
    @Rizimar 6 лет назад +2

    Take a shot any time someone says the word "exactly"

  • @jimmcconville
    @jimmcconville 3 года назад +1

    Was that "Easy to use" and "FoxPro" in the same sentence?!

  • @jackilynpyzocha662
    @jackilynpyzocha662 2 года назад +1

    ACCESS is easy to use! (Microsoft Office)

  • @davidcolantuono3622
    @davidcolantuono3622 Год назад

    *DON VON ROTZ*
    *DVR CONSULTING*
    They had DVRs back in 1992?!

  • @Vaso-p1f
    @Vaso-p1f 4 месяца назад +1

    I love USA!

  • @morphoist
    @morphoist 3 года назад +2

    I'm Maria Gab...

  • @SeaJay_Oceans
    @SeaJay_Oceans 8 месяцев назад

    1992 still doesn't seem that long ago to me :-)

    • @griff404
      @griff404 6 месяцев назад

      I don't think it is either but it does look 50 years ago in terms of what people looked like. but the gap itself '92 to where we are now don't seem that much

  • @endsleighplace
    @endsleighplace 7 лет назад +3

    ...and incidently where Teslas are built...

  • @erichkohl9317
    @erichkohl9317 6 лет назад +1

    Toe monster ... a little morbid there.

    • @exil3dlivecom
      @exil3dlivecom Год назад +1

      Did you see the trail of blood it left behind when it crawled into her little bros bed? Yikes! 😮

  • @robpeters2296
    @robpeters2296 5 лет назад +1

    Wow they had AI then

  • @rooneye
    @rooneye 3 года назад

    Compared to the rest those DOS databases looked so shit lol

  • @BimBims
    @BimBims 6 лет назад

    1992, gw masih main yoyo sama kelereng, lol

    • @rogehmarbi
      @rogehmarbi 6 лет назад +1

      Bim Bims wah ada orang indo disinj

  • @exil3dlivecom
    @exil3dlivecom Год назад

    Lol @ dos.