On Sat, 24 Apr 1999, Richard Erlacher wrote:
Well, Sellam, it's a question of statistics. The
population was about 225
Million back then +/- some number, and the people in the US or even the
world who had any notion of what a digital computer was was probably around
a hundred, well, maybe a thousand. Now, you started out with an "average"
American. Of the thousand or so to whom owning a computer didn't amount to
slavery, how many do you think could afford to spend the equivalent of a
half-year's groceries, during the period when the word "recession" was
invented, on something the maximal function of which was strictly limited in
purpose to some form of mental masturbation? They couldn't use the excuse
that "we could use it to manage our checking account . . ." or some such,
because it wouldn't do that. Do you think the average American could afford
to spend that kind of dough on something he didn't need? Do you think he'd
have spent the dough on something it probably would have benefitted him NOT
to have? . . . like a digital computer toy?
Yes.
Sellam Alternate e-mail: dastar(a)siconic.com
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