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It is my alias, a screen name that I adopted when I joined America Online. Since then, I've left AOL (1994), and I use Iowa Network Services for my Internet connection.
I am Robert Burris, a geologist and computer nerd. I live in St. Charles, Iowa, a small town 35 miles southwest of Des Moines.
I received my Bachelor of Science degree from the State University of New York, College at Brockport in 1992. After graduating, I worked in the environmental consulting business. My specialties in that business involved assessment and remediation of petroleum contaminated groundwater, as well as Clean Air Act compliance. I am now working at a civil engineering firm, where I was hired to produce finished CAD drawings and rough designs of construction site plans, housing developments, and public utilities. I still do some CAD work, but most of my time is devoted to GIS and Network Administration
My experience with computers dates back to 1982, when I bought a Commodore 64 complete with cassette tape storage. The video display was a 12-inch B/W television. I didn't have much software, because I couldn't afford it. My first word processing program came from Compute! magazine. They published the hexadecimal source code, and I typed it in. Before I replaced my C-64 with an IBM clone (1987), I had acquired a disk drive, RGB monitor, printer, and a 1200 BPS modem.
My first modem gave me 300 BPS access to the on-line world (ca 1985). I quickly became a regular visitor of several BBS's in, and around, Rochester, New York. I also joined my first on-line service, Q-Link. The cost of using those services where as high as per-hour charges that I paid to Spry Net in 1994. The difference, of course, was that the low speed made the service even more expensive.
My first PC Clone was a CBM 8086 computer with 640 KB, two 5-1/4 " floppy drives, and a green monochrome display. I eventually upgraded that machine with a 20 MB hard-disk, B/W VGA, and a 2400 BPS modem. This IBM-type computer was a big step up. I quickly became accustomed to DOS. And I learned good file-management habits, despite only having to deal with comparatively small volumes of data and programs. I still used a lot of shareware and freeware, but the applications were sophisticated enough for serious work. That computer was invaluable to me during my college years.
While I was in college, I also had an opportunity to work with the Xerox Star publishing system. Xerox invented the Graphic User Interface (GUI), so it was pretty sophisticated. A lot of people think that Apple developed the first GUI-based computer, and that everything else is a rip-off of the Macintosh. That's why Xerox sued Apple when Apple was suing Microsoft over Windows. The Star system offered the most popular applications with access to a global network (ARPAnet). Star was fun to work with, but it was unstable at times. I haven't heard of any multitasking system that isn't prone to crashes every now and then.
After landing my first professional job in 1992, I was able to upgrade to a 386-SX machine. I started using Windows. I didn't think that I'd ever use Windows, because I though it was just for wussies. I had exposure to other GUIs in the early days (GEOS & Deskview), and they were crude. Despite whatever benefits they offered to neophytes, those early GUIs were too limited. I found mainstream Windows applications to be a big improvement over similar DOS programs, however, and I liked the data sharing possibilities. Working in DOS seems so crude now.
In 1995, I upgraded to a Pentium 75 MHz computer with multimedia peripherals and Windows 95, which I used until about 3 years ago. I'm using 533 MHz Celeron Clone and Windows 2000 now. I gave the 75 MHz machine to a friend. I spend a considerable amount of time on the Internet, and my work revolves around computing.
BTW: Fossil24 is my current moniker. INS made its subscribers switch to 8 character user names in 1996.
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