ccrain Posted May 5, 2018 #1 Share Posted May 5, 2018 (edited) As is my habit, I like to turn my Live Froms into an illustrated travel log. In this case we did a 4 day pre-cruise in Sydney, an 8 day Tasmanian Cruise, a 12 day New Zealand Cruise and then a 22 day re positioning cruise from Sydney to Tokyo - capped off by 5 days in Tokyo. We started for Sydney on the 24 of February 2018 and got home on the 18th of April. So we spent 42 on the Diamond. Not our longest cruise, but we got to see so many new ports. Only one was a complete repeat (Hong Kong) and even then we did something new and exciting. So here's the link to the PDF - please enjoy: https://1drv.ms/b/s!AnklLO6ZVH8FsHB5mApHpnGYIVwj Which you have to cut and paste for some reason into the URL address... Edited May 5, 2018 by ccrain Link not automatically clickable Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marybeshaw Posted May 5, 2018 #2 Share Posted May 5, 2018 Very nice travelog! I am inspired to do something similar on my 7-day cruise! What did you use to make it, before turning it into a PDF and uploading it to OneDrive? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ccrain Posted May 5, 2018 Author #3 Share Posted May 5, 2018 Very nice travelog! I am inspired to do something similar on my 7-day cruise! What did you use to make it, before turning it into a PDF and uploading it to OneDrive? Just microsoft word. It's page layout is pretty simple to use now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marybeshaw Posted May 5, 2018 #4 Share Posted May 5, 2018 That is awesome. Not everyone realizes how powerful MS Word can be. I had an internship way back in college, programming Word and Excel to automatically produce scientific documents. There is some awesome power in there. And you put it to good use on that travelog! I have only read through about a third of it so far, but I love your writing style and the way you portray the places you went and the people you met. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
diane.in.ny Posted May 5, 2018 #5 Share Posted May 5, 2018 WOW. Thanks for posting! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
srpilo Posted May 5, 2018 #6 Share Posted May 5, 2018 Thanks Charles Good Work once again !! Srpilo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ccrain Posted May 5, 2018 Author #7 Share Posted May 5, 2018 That is awesome. Not everyone realizes how powerful MS Word can be. I had an internship way back in college, programming Word and Excel to automatically produce scientific documents. There is some awesome power in there. And you put it to good use on that travelog! I have only read through about a third of it so far, but I love your writing style and the way you portray the places you went and the people you met. I cut my teeth on page layout on a timeshare system in 1981 with an electrostatic printer. Don't remember the actual program, but it did TWO COLUMNS! then it was some kind of word processing software on a stand alone machine the admin used and had 8" floppy disks. Then we graduated to personal/desktop word processing on Atari 128XLs, IBM 8086 to 80286 processors using early Wordperfect, then to Apple Macs/Lisas and Apple Write, back to the dark side of IBM and MS Word (in less than 5MB chunks) to Framemaker and then when Word grew up about 10 years ago we did heavy duty document layout on Word from then on... You cannot begin to appreciate today's software and hardware without experiencing swapping 82kB 5 1/4" floppies when you print out your technical report from the word processor in order to manually insert IBM selectric equations printed on white stickyback correction tape...only to find out one entire paragraph is missing from the 3rd page...and having to start all over again! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marybeshaw Posted May 5, 2018 #8 Share Posted May 5, 2018 I cut my teeth on page layout on a timeshare system in 1981 with an electrostatic printer. Don't remember the actual program, but it did TWO COLUMNS! then it was some kind of word processing software on a stand alone machine the admin used and had 8" floppy disks. Then we graduated to personal/desktop word processing on Atari 128XLs, IBM 8086 to 80286 processors using early Wordperfect, then to Apple Macs/Lisas and Apple Write, back to the dark side of IBM and MS Word (in less than 5MB chunks) to Framemaker and then when Word grew up about 10 years ago we did heavy duty document layout on Word from then on... You cannot begin to appreciate today's software and hardware without experiencing swapping 82kB 5 1/4" floppies when you print out your technical report from the word processor in order to manually insert IBM selectric equations printed on white stickyback correction tape...only to find out one entire paragraph is missing from the 3rd page...and having to start all over again! Wow, I bet that was quite the chore! I actually had email at that first internship, and in the CS department at school. So it wasn’t quite that bad! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ccrain Posted May 5, 2018 Author #9 Share Posted May 5, 2018 Wow, I bet that was quite the chore! I actually had email at that first internship, and in the CS department at school. So it wasn’t quite that bad! Yep, when the 3.5" 1.2MB floppy was introduced we thought we could rule the world! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
voljeep Posted May 5, 2018 #10 Share Posted May 5, 2018 talk to me about programing in cobol and fortran using punch cards...;p yeah, i'm old(er) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thrak Posted May 5, 2018 #11 Share Posted May 5, 2018 Yep, when the 3.5" 1.2MB floppy was introduced we thought we could rule the world! But... Do you remember when the new "huge" hard disks came out? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marybeshaw Posted May 5, 2018 #12 Share Posted May 5, 2018 talk to me about programing in cobol and fortran using punch cards...;p yeah, i'm old(er) That is so awesome! My dad did that in his school days. He isn’t even retired yet, so it isn’t that much older. He always says, if he weren’t already a senior at the time (and married with kids), he would have changed majors to CS. He eventually had two kids go through the Computer Science BS program. Me in the nineties, and my little brother more recently. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thrak Posted May 5, 2018 #13 Share Posted May 5, 2018 talk to me about programing in cobol and fortran using punch cards...;p yeah, i'm old(er) Heh... Did you ever drop the stack? Disaster!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ccrain Posted May 5, 2018 Author #14 Share Posted May 5, 2018 talk to me about programing in cobol and fortran using punch cards...;p yeah, i'm old(er) Fortran IV punch cards, 1st year of college...oh if I knew then what I know now... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
voljeep Posted May 5, 2018 #15 Share Posted May 5, 2018 sometimes the garbage cans in the CS lab would contain a wealth of information...if you knew what you were looking for...;p Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
diane.in.ny Posted May 5, 2018 #16 Share Posted May 5, 2018 talk to me about programing in cobol and fortran using punch cards...;p yeah, i'm old(er) Oh ... ME TOO! lol I took the very first programming course offered at my college. And did spend my career in computer science. Some important things to always remember ... like the period at the end of the line of code! And, no, fortunately never dropped the stack But I remember doing backups on punched paper tape. Anyone remember the rolls of carefully labeled and stored tape, held with a rubber band? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bootman4U Posted June 9, 2018 #17 Share Posted June 9, 2018 I'm waiting fort someone to ask "What's a selectric?" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
caribill Posted June 10, 2018 #18 Share Posted June 10, 2018 I'm waiting fort someone to ask "What's a selectric?" I remember one joker who watched two hardware technicians take apart a Selectric to repair it. As he walked by, he threw an extra screw into their pile of parts. Of course when they reassembled the Selectric there was one screw left over. Figuring they had reassembled it incorrectly, they took it all apart a second time and then put it back together with the same result of an extra screw. Since it worked, they did not take it apart again. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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