How SCHOOL COMPUTER classes looked in 1969 | Tomorrow's World | Retro Tech | BBC Archive

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  • Опубликовано: 24 янв 2022
  • Computing comes easy to the boys at Forest Grammar School in Berkshire, who are lucky enough to have access to their very own school computer. Nellie - for this is what the giant mechanical machine has been dubbed - is able to play games, solve mathematical problems, and even play music from programs stored on punched tape - but only after she has been turned on, a complex routine that involves the co-ordination of several students spread throughout the school.
    This clip is from Tomorrow's World, originally broadcast 5 February 1969.
    You have now entered the BBC Archive, an audiovisual time machine that will transport you back to the golden age of TV. Let us educate, entertain and enlighten you with classic clips from the BBC vaults.
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Комментарии • 325

  • @spacemonkey9257
    @spacemonkey9257 2 года назад +473

    Everything always goes wrong when I don't check the oil level on my computer

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 года назад +24

      synthetic oils were very expensive back then

    • @richardsawyer5428
      @richardsawyer5428 2 года назад +29

      I put more coal in mine.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK Год назад +24

      Grey Screen of Death: "Insufficient Oil Level"

    • @heathertruskinger6214
      @heathertruskinger6214 Год назад +12

      Lol....I do recall my son in the mid-2010's did have a water-cooled computer , which caused all sorts of problems when it overheated and leaked !🤣

    • @froggy8030
      @froggy8030 Год назад +1

      🤣🤣

  • @UncleFeedle
    @UncleFeedle Год назад +55

    The computer is a National-Elliott ('Nellie') 405, built in 1957. In 1969 when this was filmed, it was completely obsolete and on its last legs.
    The machine had 3000 valves, drew 10,000 watts of power and required constant maintenance. Apparently, it was donated to the school by Nestlé. It was dismantled and scrapped two years later.

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Год назад +2

      Nellie was replaced by a DEC PDP8/e.

    • @wisteela
      @wisteela 6 месяцев назад

      I always wondered what happened to it. It would be nice if even part of it still exists somewhere.

    • @colinluckens9591
      @colinluckens9591 3 месяца назад

      Now tell me do you actually understand what they were doing in the first 56 seconds??..…

    • @jagmarc
      @jagmarc 2 месяца назад

      @@cdl0 that's the one I wrote my first programme noughts crosses had 8 inch FDD

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 2 месяца назад +1

      @@jagmarc Offline storage was paper tape for both Nellie and the PDP8/e. Floppies were not in common use until the late seventies.

  • @huddie71
    @huddie71 Год назад +213

    Amazed that a school could afford a computer in 1969, albeit an old one.

    • @daffyduk77
      @daffyduk77 Год назад +32

      Probably a hand-me-down from higher academia or industry. Still have to afford the 3-phase supply/elec bill plus air conditioning which would be an expensive thing in those days, Perhaps the computer was delivered with its hand-me-down air con

    • @lioncurlew
      @lioncurlew Год назад +14

      The Posh Voices give it away

    • @daffyduk77
      @daffyduk77 Год назад +5

      yeah, no secondary modern on a council-estate

    • @ens8502
      @ens8502 Год назад +2

      Glad you used "albeit" and not "although"

    • @icecycles859
      @icecycles859 Год назад

      albeit? you mean arbeit macht frei?

  • @ManunKanava
    @ManunKanava Год назад +20

    This is how the best computer engineers were made from very young age!

  • @precumming
    @precumming Год назад +47

    6:40 for those curious, that is a memory unit. Memory is not stored electronically but stored accoustically on a coil of wire

    • @mikcnmvedmsfonoteka
      @mikcnmvedmsfonoteka Год назад +2

      Ahh, good times were you could make your own RAM, almost like "downloading" ram nowadays lol :D

  • @PAJAMALAND
    @PAJAMALAND Год назад +76

    Kid of about 15 here who's written their own programming language for use on this massive beast of an antiquated PC, I hope he went on to do something great in the field

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +16

      He became Terry Davis and wrote TempleOS

    • @PAJAMALAND
      @PAJAMALAND Год назад +1

      ​@@kishascape Well, he's definitely not a glowie so... you might be onto something here

    • @precumming
      @precumming Год назад +6

      I wasn't able to find out who the kid was but the language was still being used in the early 80s in the US Navy. Just to burst the bubble a little, they didn't technically write their "own" programming language, I don't know MINIGOL or ALGOL but from what examples I have found I can't actually find a difference so it's probably polishing ALGOL and removing complexities. It could also be that MINIGOL compiles to something simpler
      Considering it was still used outside of that school and it was in that year I would assume they did go on to do great things. I just wish I could find their name somewhere. The only mention of the creator is a second person account of this video.

    • @feraudyh
      @feraudyh Год назад +4

      It was NOT a PC.

    • @Aerojet01
      @Aerojet01 Год назад

      He probably ended up as an accountant.

  • @patrickswan4537
    @patrickswan4537 Год назад +107

    The high school I was at in the 1980s had one computer, kept locked away in the physics lab as I think hardly anyone knew what to do with it. If my school had been even half as interesting as this one I might have done rather more there..

    • @thedave7760
      @thedave7760 Год назад +7

      The High School I was at th the mid 80's had about 6 Apple II's and no one knew what to do with them except load and play Galaxian, the teachers had no idea how to teach it to us.
      It was an early morning club which you could play free Galaxian and Pac man if you could convince someone to load it for you, so it wasn't all bad.

    • @petevan8942
      @petevan8942 Год назад +3

      We had to watch the maths boffins playing on the school BBC computers through the window...we were all too pudding brained to go near one ..this was early 80's...

    • @carkod
      @carkod Год назад +1

      Looks like an all-boys school. I guess they didn't have any distractions...

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn 2 года назад +109

    This is what everyone expects when they operate a computer at school, but in reality they get a sad half broken ThinkPad or a Dell Inspiron with half its keys knobbed on.
    Gone are the days when computers were operated like it was a Battlestation on a ship.

    • @tedjohansen1634
      @tedjohansen1634 2 года назад +12

      like a battlestation.. lmao!

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +10

      Thinkpads are cooler than this anyways. Poor comparison.

  • @Zack-mp6ys
    @Zack-mp6ys Год назад +5

    It looks like the boys are running a spaceship

  • @endless031
    @endless031 Год назад +19

    Imagine going back to 1969 and showing them a modern desktop or your smartphone.

    • @jessihawkins9116
      @jessihawkins9116 7 месяцев назад +1

      oh wow they would poop thenselfs 😲

  • @TransCanadaPhil
    @TransCanadaPhil Год назад +47

    What smart kids. That would be way over my head when I was that age.

    • @jillybe1873
      @jillybe1873 Год назад +3

      We were cleverer then

    • @soundseeker63
      @soundseeker63 Год назад +8

      A lot of it is down to aptitude. Some people are "wired" for working on computers, others are great at designing things, some people are very mathematically minded. Some people are sporty, or musical, or visually creative etc. Kids can grasp surprisingly complex principles if they have the aptitude for it.

    • @CavesAreIrrelevant
      @CavesAreIrrelevant Год назад +4

      @@soundseeker63 Couldn't have said it better. It's very hard to qualify an average dip in intelligence over time. What we're seeing at play is aptitude. Those children would have likely marvelled at the skill of modern youngsters in some fields. That teenagers as young as 15 could manage entire social media identities, generating interest and income on a global market.

    • @malcolmpottinger5511
      @malcolmpottinger5511 Год назад +1

      I didn't really understand it. It took many years to understand them.

    • @user_user1337
      @user_user1337 Год назад

      It would be over the heads of A LOT of kids today...

  • @robofin117
    @robofin117 2 года назад +35

    This will probably play DOOM with tickertape.

  • @wanderingfool6312
    @wanderingfool6312 2 года назад +62

    Unfortunately the schools I went to didn’t get computers until the 80’s, calculators were treated with suspicion.

    • @merlinmediagroup
      @merlinmediagroup 2 года назад +11

      I finished primary school in 2005, by which time the school had just about two computers (bought under the Tesco Computers for Schools programme) and the first interactive whiteboard was being installed, which by the time I finished secondary school were practically in every classroom. Even 17 years ago computers were still seldom integrated into everyday learning, now they’re an integral part.

    • @wanderingfool6312
      @wanderingfool6312 2 года назад +1

      @@merlinmediagroup Well I did get the attitude from many adults of the time that computers were just for games. Ironically having to help these generations later with the basics.
      But, what exactly is an interactive whiteboard, is it a screen?

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 2 года назад +2

      I think all schools in the UK got computers some time in the 80s. Unfortunately, the BBC-B Micro lasted in schools well into the 90s, in some cases until Windows 95 came put, far past the point you'd see anything like the BBC-B and its limited capabilities in the outside world.

    • @wanderingfool6312
      @wanderingfool6312 2 года назад +1

      @@anonUK The video is from the 1960’s, so obviously some schools I suspect private ones, got computers a lot earlier.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 2 года назад +1

      @@wanderingfool6312
      OK, all schools that didn't already have computers.
      I think US schools got Apple IIs in the late 70s- early 80s, with the TRS-80 and VIC-20 the main home computers of the time. The BBC B just followed that pattern- while BBC computers were available for the home, they were far too expensive and the cut-down version, the Electron, not a real competitor to the dominant C64. The C64 also put paid to the ZX Spectrum- but there was no excuse for the Electron, as its specs were way below where they should have been in late '83. Acorn learned and brought out the BBC Master and later, the Archimedes- but they had lost their footing in all their markets by 1986. Amstrad took over the low end, including buying out the Spectrum, and diversifying into office apps with the PCW range. Commodore dominated the middle, bringing out the C64 and C128, followed by the Amiga.
      Archimedes, based on a 186 processor and ARM chips, lasted much better in schools, though, as a bridge between the BBC and the 32-bit PCs of the 90s, probably due to brand loyalty. When IBM and its clones started bringing out 286-based machines and up, there went the corporate Archimedes market as well, although the concept of ARM has lasted much longer and it took until Windows 95 to finally knock Archimedes out of schools.

  • @donbon4204
    @donbon4204 2 года назад +47

    their computer stats up faster than mine damn it thank you ACER

    • @taffy4672
      @taffy4672 Год назад +2

      "stats up" ? Maybe someone whose spelling and punctuation is this bad shouldn't be using a computer. :P

    • @iooosef6006
      @iooosef6006 Год назад

      might need to reformat it or change the probably damaged disk drive

    • @roberto8650
      @roberto8650 Год назад +11

      You might need an oil change.

    • @miguelelgueta5830
      @miguelelgueta5830 Год назад +4

      Joke is on you I had the same model as in the video and put an SSD on it, now boots in 1 hour instead of 3

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela 2 года назад +46

    I've seen this a number of times, and I absolutely love it.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +5

      To the very raw basics of the computes core, things which run automated and preinstalled/prebuilt on nearly everything today that we barely think about it.

  • @heresjohnny602
    @heresjohnny602 2 года назад +23

    These people walked so that we could run.

  • @chestercopperpot729
    @chestercopperpot729 Год назад +8

    Teacher: come now children there is much work to be done so people in the future can share tiktok videos and argue about politics.

  • @megchisp87
    @megchisp87 2 года назад +34

    Watching that computer from an iPhone that a million time more powerful… mind blowing!!

    • @ASChambers
      @ASChambers Год назад +1

      I was thinking exactly the same. An incredible evolution in technology.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +3

      @@ASChambers not really as it will stop working after a few years and become useless where as this would still be serviceable and useable since it isn't fad oriented. Infact plenty of people have 40s-60s era computers they still run and show off at VFC every few years.

    • @dolbyprologicii
      @dolbyprologicii Год назад +1

      @@kishascape it is no doubt an evolution.

    • @t1000v20
      @t1000v20 Год назад

      @@kishascape But what the f are still gonna do with those in practical terms? Lol

  • @ZiaRDS
    @ZiaRDS Год назад +12

    I lost three computers in the span of a year, from neglecting to check the oil 😔 be careful out there

  • @johnmiller0000
    @johnmiller0000 2 года назад +27

    Reminds me of my computer lessons at the local comprehensive in 1978.

    • @DavidPaulMorgan
      @DavidPaulMorgan Год назад +1

      Sept '77 for me. ICL CESIL (computer education schools instructional language),
      FORTRAN & BASIC - coding sheets & punch paper tape on ICL-1904, Allt-Yr-Yn CHE
      (I was starting lower 6th, so we did this on Wed afternoon for 4 hours).

  • @drsyn9616
    @drsyn9616 2 года назад +41

    Bloody hell!,nerds looked the same then as they do now😱😱

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn 2 года назад +1

      Yeah and chavs still look and act the same back then as now it seems.

    • @carlyounger6262
      @carlyounger6262 2 года назад +5

      They're just regular kids (of the era).

  • @spidyman8853
    @spidyman8853 Год назад +15

    Blimey, a steam machine, you had to have a team of people to start the damn thing up.
    Thank God for Micro Chips

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +1

      That's just because of lack of power at the time, even when this footage was shot that was a very old computer. Replacing with a proper power supply room for the modern electric grid they now had would've fixed that.

  • @thelemonadeboy
    @thelemonadeboy Год назад +2

    imagine bringing one of those boys today, and showing them all the wonders computers do now?

  • @1sonyzz
    @1sonyzz Год назад +7

    Imagine same game played now, lifting hands 5 billion times per second...

  • @mouseminer2978
    @mouseminer2978 Год назад +4

    Now we all are standing on their shoulders.

  • @mimikurtz2162
    @mimikurtz2162 Год назад +6

    I went to a highly-rated grammar school and wrote 0-levels in 1969. Around March that year the school obtained a computer which took 5 to 10 minutes to load the screen and crashed frequently. Only the four most nerdy pupils were given very basic instruction by our maths teacher (probably because that was his limit) and its use was a voluntary extra-curricular activity. Those four formed an elite clique and effectively excluded everyone else, and even when someone got to it first, they haughtily scoffed at any request for explanations. As a class, we had absolutely no lessons concerning computers.

  • @ridbensdale
    @ridbensdale 2 года назад +13

    SHALL WE PLAY A GAME?

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b 2 года назад +11

    I like how the juniors get ALGOL because they're not quite up to Assembler yet.

    • @steveosborne2297
      @steveosborne2297 Год назад +3

      I remember in about 1966/67 we were programming in ALGOL or FORTRAN on punchcards

  • @markgreen2170
    @markgreen2170 2 года назад +8

    "What will we do with a drunken sailor?
    What will we do with a drunken sailor?
    What will we do with a drunken sailor?
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning!
    Shave his belly with a rusty razor
    Shave his belly with a rusty razor
    Shave his belly with a rusty razor
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning!
    Put him in a long boat till his sober
    Put him in a long boat till his sober
    Put him in a long boat till his sober
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning!
    Stick him in a barrel with a hosepipe on him
    Stick him in a barrel with a hosepipe on him
    Stick him in a barrel with a hosepipe on him
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning!
    Put him in the bed with the captains daughter
    Put him in the bed with the captains daughter
    Put him in the bed with the captains daughter
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning!
    Thats what we do with a drunken sailor
    Thats what we do with a drunken sailor
    Thats what we do with a drunken sailor
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning!
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Way hay and up she rises
    Early in the morning! "

  • @buxvan
    @buxvan Год назад +3

    I was waiting for one of the boys to shout “contact” when the dynamo kicked in.

  • @banditalley9592
    @banditalley9592 Год назад +2

    "Have you tried turning it off and back on again?"

  • @jillosler9353
    @jillosler9353 Год назад +8

    Computers in schools really started with the BBC Master developed by Acorn Computers. They were so robust that years later when Acorn RISC Computers were the in thing so many BBC Masters were still being used - and abused.

    • @macronencer
      @macronencer 11 месяцев назад

      I used to use those a lot! They're called "BBC Micro", though.

  • @michaelturner4457
    @michaelturner4457 Год назад +1

    "Check the oil level." I've never done that with a computer.

  • @Mayo501
    @Mayo501 Год назад +5

    Literally how the computer technicians make it out to do their job at high school.

  • @user-xn8hk4je4i
    @user-xn8hk4je4i 10 месяцев назад

    good work. thank you very much.

  • @todayisokay4075
    @todayisokay4075 2 года назад +4

    "aaaaaand take off!!!! these kids, now in orbit, will not be seen again for up to three months. Godspeed kids, godspeed."

  • @southwestshelly
    @southwestshelly Год назад +4

    my senior school got their first computer in 1995 with fittingly windows 95.... yeah.. we were not ready for the IT age there

  • @garryferrington811
    @garryferrington811 Год назад +1

    Not only is the computer rather cumbersome, all of the splices in the 16mm film are clearly visible. Watch for a white horizontal line every time the shot changes. That's where the film was cemented together by hand. Ah, the good old days.

  • @Geffers58
    @Geffers58 Год назад +4

    We had two teletypes that connected to the town hall mainframe. It ran a quite limited operating system and we mostly ran BASIC on it.

  • @NeoMorphUK
    @NeoMorphUK Год назад +1

    My first computer course was just theory in 1977. We also played lunar lander on computer BY MAIL. We gave the burn time and angles and then sent the info from our Grammar School to the mainframe at the university. A week later we all got our results in a printout that showed descent rates after our commands. Obviously we all crashed lol.
    Then I went to college and did an AO Level course and I was the only one in the class given the keys to the computer room (other than the teacher that is). The computer was a really loud Elliott 803 and the teletypes that made the punched tapes were driven by compressed air.
    The memory in the Elliott was a massive 1K of core memory… and when I say massive I mean physical size and not memory. But it let us run an ALGOL compiler really nicely. Those were the days… 😂

  • @Channel567-7
    @Channel567-7 2 года назад +3

    The first TV ‘detector’ van prototype, only this genuinely worked.

  • @Brimenting
    @Brimenting Год назад +2

    The commentator was Raymond Baxter, I think. Looking at those 1969 schoolboys, and as computing has advanced since those days, do we think that the structure of society has advanced or declined in tandem? Has the current generation of "computers in your pocket", enabling instant mass commentary on any and every subject, strengthened or fractured the cohesion of society? "When everybody is somebody, nobody is anybody".

  • @charliev906
    @charliev906 Год назад +3

    Next time someone talks about having computer problems I'll tell them to double check it's oil level

  • @comedywriter8408
    @comedywriter8408 2 года назад +8

    Somethings haven't changed, our keyboards on our smart phones, laptops and desktops still operate using the binary system, albeit at much faster speeds.

    • @taffy4672
      @taffy4672 Год назад +1

      "Some things". not "somethings"...

  • @urinater
    @urinater Год назад +2

    You needed 6 people to play Tetris

  • @angelacooper2661
    @angelacooper2661 8 месяцев назад

    This episode Tomorrow's World was broadcast the year before I was born. My first experience with computers came in 1980 at junior school. I was ten and remember the BBC Micro in the corner of my classroom, playing games on it! My brother Anthony, who is less than three years older than me, got involved with computers at senior school and is very good with technology.

  • @jagmarc
    @jagmarc 2 месяца назад

    Wow I remember in 70s I actually wrote programme and typed it all in noughts & crosses on a computer with a teleprinter. To play each move of game print out

  • @beaudidlyno1
    @beaudidlyno1 2 года назад +12

    Whato chaps.. I've devised a new game for Nellie It's called Grand Theft Auto... I say Carstairs isn't it awfully violent with terribly bad words like Blast and Damb... Yes it is rather, but it's jolly good fun and you get to do things with girls! Blimey you'll get us in all sorts of trouble with the Head..

    • @ridcom
      @ridcom 2 года назад +3

      Funny that. The BBC actually went on to interview DMA Design during their final leg in the production of the first Grand Theft Auto.

  • @Bertie_Ahern
    @Bertie_Ahern Год назад +15

    We had a computer quite a bit like that back in the late '30s when I was at school. Took several of us at a time to get it working and was the size of a room!

  • @cometochristtoday
    @cometochristtoday 10 месяцев назад

    Makes you wonder how Apollo flights worked so flawlessly to the moon and back

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer 11 месяцев назад

    This is astonishing! When I started at my secondary school in 1976 we had no computers, but a few years later we did get four Commodore PETs. I remember getting a complete hex printout of the Space Invaders game and reverse engineering how it worked, then adding a "boss key" so we could suddenly look as if we were working on a serious project a second after the teacher entered the room! I can still remember a couple of those 6502 instructions in hex form :)

  • @spidyman8853
    @spidyman8853 Год назад +6

    We did not have computers in our school (Comprehensive) till early 80s with the BBC micros

    • @AlisonBryen
      @AlisonBryen Год назад +2

      Our primary school still had a BBC computer in the late 1980s.

    • @colinluckens9591
      @colinluckens9591 3 месяца назад +1

      Oh tell me about it the BBC computers at school at that time (circa 1985 onwards) where you had to write out programs in BASIC 😃😃😃 I still remember fantasising about creating a simple role-playing Dungeons & Dragons type of game that way!!! Felt very exciting 🙂🙂🙂
      (Game never actually came to fruition btw😔)

  • @italocarvalho1030
    @italocarvalho1030 2 года назад +6

    This seems cool ASF!

  • @vinwhyte6549
    @vinwhyte6549 Год назад +3

    Directed by Wes Anderson.

  • @matturban9103
    @matturban9103 Год назад +2

    I graduated high school in 1982. We had 6 Commodore Pet computers. 1 had 48k of memory,the other 5 had 16k of memory each. The phone you are using has more capabilities than those 6 computers combined.

  • @eedobee
    @eedobee Год назад +2

    Back when I was in school, Prince George was quarreling with Pitt the Elder

  • @psycoticbastard
    @psycoticbastard Год назад +3

    After switching the computer on, the computer says "The answer to Life the Universe and everything is 42."

  • @museonfilm8919
    @museonfilm8919 Год назад +4

    Back when computers, like this one, were of absolutely no practical real-world use.

    • @OudeisEimi
      @OudeisEimi Год назад

      That computer came from a factory, where it controlled other machines and processes, before it became obsolete and got donated to the school. I’d say that qualifies as “practical real-world use” for pretty much any *practical* meaning of the term.

    • @colinluckens9591
      @colinluckens9591 3 месяца назад

      ​​@@OudeisEimi Wow you have a point!!👍👍👍
      (didn't know that background info)

  • @Foebane72
    @Foebane72 Год назад +1

    There's 1980s Computer Science in school, and then there's this HARDCORE Computer Science!

  • @ftumschk
    @ftumschk Год назад +24

    Ah, the 1960s, when men were men and boys looked middle-aged.

    • @dronespace
      @dronespace Год назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @roberto8650
      @roberto8650 Год назад +1

      Exactly what I was thinking.

    • @BJack1983
      @BJack1983 Год назад

      How things have changed. In 2022 middle-aged men want to look like teenage boys 😆

  • @OzzysRadioHalfHour
    @OzzysRadioHalfHour 2 года назад +9

    Looks like we've come a long way..👀

  • @stevezpj
    @stevezpj Год назад +2

    Playing Chuckie Egg on this was a nightmare

  • @aaronberns8485
    @aaronberns8485 Год назад

    These old computer classes seemed very complicated at the time. It was more like a mathematics class than anything else. Just goes to show we came a long ways. Computers and computer classes today couldn't get any more simpler.

  • @nathancox6249
    @nathancox6249 2 года назад +11

    Would you like some toast

  • @ChrisPollitt
    @ChrisPollitt 2 года назад +5

    WOW!

  • @Question3verything
    @Question3verything 4 месяца назад

    The first 60 seconds is the 60’s equivalent of the spinning wheel on startup today

  • @sterlingtimes
    @sterlingtimes Год назад

    We used to write programs in 1969 in the classroom at school. Periodically, the whole class would be driven to the technical college on a coach to visit the computer. We would type our programs onto punch tape and run them on the computer. The computer would print the results onto punch tape. The punch tape was run on a teleprinter, which would print out the answer.

  • @lucapook2
    @lucapook2 2 года назад +7

    But can it run crysis?

  • @Nightweaver1
    @Nightweaver1 Год назад +4

    Ah, back when computers were indistinguishable from the power plants that it took to run them.

  • @danielm5838
    @danielm5838 Год назад +1

    The nerdiest rendition of "drunken sailor", perhaps ever.

  • @j.d.4697
    @j.d.4697 Год назад

    I still start my computer this way.

    • @maverickhistorian6488
      @maverickhistorian6488 Год назад

      I 've got a little bloke in the back of mine, who stokes the boiler. His name is Gerald and he's well paid and looked after.

  • @richardtwyning
    @richardtwyning 17 дней назад

    Wow, it's amazing they encouraged anyone to be interested in a career in computing after all that 😂
    Luckily I was born in 1970 and my first computer was a Texas Instruments TI-99/4A. I never once had to check the thermostat 🤣

  • @nothereforit.605
    @nothereforit.605 2 года назад +12

    This was probably one of the most expensive private schools around. I wouldn’t be surprised if some of the kids shown grew up to be in places of power.

    • @bryonybates897
      @bryonybates897 2 года назад +12

      It was actually a grammar school, so it was and remains state-funded. The computer was a donation from Nestle.

    • @nothereforit.605
      @nothereforit.605 2 года назад +4

      @@bryonybates897 could have figured that one out by reading the description.

  • @yalezhang8831
    @yalezhang8831 Год назад +4

    How can the human adder calculating the most significant bit produce their result almost at the same time as the person calculating the least significant bit? There should be a large propagation delay.

  • @NathanChisholm041
    @NathanChisholm041 2 года назад +2

    Now insert key and turn together! Ok chaps well done...

  • @msain427
    @msain427 Год назад

    These are the young men that grow up and needed help with using a remote

  • @SIXXVS
    @SIXXVS Год назад

    Ok now I wanna see how all of that is built

  • @dean6816
    @dean6816 Год назад

    6:03 "Air Attack Warning!!"

  • @H76Pro
    @H76Pro Год назад +2

    LOL check the oil! this was like a car!

  • @PlanetImo
    @PlanetImo Год назад

    Wowee!

  • @Michael_Smith-Red_No.5
    @Michael_Smith-Red_No.5 Год назад +1

    I have never appreciated The Oregon Trail game as much as I do right now. I have died of dysentery.

  • @johnas2004
    @johnas2004 Год назад +4

    So what model of computer was Nellie, and where is she now? Hopefully in a museum, but I doubt health and safety would ever let kids anywhere near!

    • @georgeh-w5041
      @georgeh-w5041 Год назад +1

      The computer was a National Elliot 405 and no longer exists. But there are some surviving versions in museums

  • @blissy1
    @blissy1 Год назад +1

    Those boys must be close to or already retired

  • @miguelelgueta5830
    @miguelelgueta5830 Год назад +7

    I wish my math teacher and school had been half this fun and interesting

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Год назад

      He was my maths teacher! His name was Mr A T Pomeroy. All the boys called him "Spud".

  • @lazychemistry
    @lazychemistry Год назад +3

    That's gotta be the first game for good graphics 🤪

  • @jillybe1873
    @jillybe1873 Год назад

    I did this at school

  • @3D4Ureel
    @3D4Ureel Год назад +2

    Someone should come up with a simulator of this. Including random failures and such 🤪🤪

  • @wobblybobengland
    @wobblybobengland Год назад

    You must have had some wild times in the sixties Grandad.

  • @psychedelicprawncrumpets9479
    @psychedelicprawncrumpets9479 2 года назад +6

    Must be an elite school.. No computers at my school in the 70s and early 80s

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 года назад +4

      i only had abacus computing in school back then

    • @carlyounger6262
      @carlyounger6262 2 года назад +1

      @@fidelcatsro6948 - I went to a Catholic primary, and we had a BBC Micro by '83, with a little robot turtle that drew on the floor. We learnt to program it in BBC BASIC. Religious schools were a lot better, but weren't elite schools. We just had better students and teachers (less chavs).

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 года назад

      @@carlyounger6262 you lucky cat🐱👍🏿

    • @carlyounger6262
      @carlyounger6262 2 года назад +2

      @@fidelcatsro6948 :) I became a software developer, so it worked out for me at least.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 года назад +1

      @@carlyounger6262 congratulations happy for you, best wishes in your future endeavours 🐱👍🏿

  • @kiethblack3870
    @kiethblack3870 11 месяцев назад

    Wow, the year I was born. This makes even ME feel like a dinosaur. Ha ha!

  • @Thebustermann
    @Thebustermann Год назад

    6:04 attack warning red, attack warning red

  • @____0____
    @____0____ Год назад

    0:50 I wonder if it was 720p or 1080p lol

  • @tamizhvanank5264
    @tamizhvanank5264 Год назад

    It looks like they preparing main engine for voyage

  • @chrisellis1232
    @chrisellis1232 Год назад +2

    And thus Ye Skye Nette was born 😲😊

  • @aternias
    @aternias Год назад

    funny to think the density of modern circuits is rediculous, that whole computer is probably the size of a grain of sand for a chip.

  • @fmphotooffice5513
    @fmphotooffice5513 Год назад +1

    Close to "bare metal" programming study today. Give a smartass teen fluent in python, etc a chart of the processor's registers, etc and tell him/her to make it hum Mary Had A Little Lamb from the mobo speaker...

  • @paulhunter123
    @paulhunter123 Год назад

    wow i thought kids around this period were just sniffing glue i guess its a public school

  • @oliveryt7168
    @oliveryt7168 Год назад

    - Peetah, check the thermostat
    - Okay, Lois.

  • @markszawlowski867
    @markszawlowski867 Год назад

    That's how you foster necessary talent for the local economy.

  • @mr6johnclark
    @mr6johnclark Год назад +1

    Is that a computer?
    Or a Submarine?