Craig Maloney ☕ ✅ is a user on octodon.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

Unrelated: I still get an unreasonable bit of joy whenever I see a picture of the manuals for Turbo Pascal and Turbo C.

(Which you can read online if you're so inclined: archive.org/details/bitsavers_)

@craigmaloney I still have the tattered TI Extended BASIC manual on my shelf that I learned to program with when I was 5-6

I don’t think I’ll ever let it go, even though the computer itself has been lost

@zigg Would you believe I have a shelf of old computer manuals, including the Atari Basic manual and tutorial from my first computer?

Something powerful about those old manuals.

@craigmaloney Oh, I would totally believe that. These are formative things, they left an outsized impression on us.

I’ve flipped the pages on occasion and am transported back to learning hex so I could create sprites…

@zigg @craigmaloney as a Brit, I similarly remember those for the BBC/Acorn computers and the ZX Spectrum (although to be fair *all*

These manuals seemed to be better written those days, often served as tutorials as well as just documentation and consider that its likely we were then all young teenagers..

Craig Maloney ☕ ✅ @craigmaloney

@zigg @vfrmedia Yeah, the manuals were really well written back then. I've picked up a lot of Sinclair manuals / books and they're still a joy to read compared with today's terse and serious manuals.

There was a sense of joy in those manuals, as though someone was about to begin teaching you something they truly enjoyed.

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@craigmaloney @zigg there was a bit missing from my toot which was supposed to say "*all* the manuals of that era" were readable and usable i.e including American ones (in spite of language differences), Although the associated machines were less common here - USA companies often put a price premium on 230V/PAL models of computers that were capable of being be used with TV-sets as display (perhaps not totally unreasonable as it often did mean significant design changes were required)