In the dark ages of the mid 1980s, when IBM compatible PCs had 4 color screens, beeps that barely passed as sound and an operating system that looked like a '>' symbol, out came a computer with preemptive multi-tasking (in layman terms, real multi-tasking, which Macs didn't have until years later), thousands of colors, stereo sound and a graphical user interface - the Amiga 1000. To reminisce in case you're an Amiga fan or to learn more about the Amiga tumultuous life, PCWorld provides a very nice walk down memory lane in this article.
What does the Amiga computer have to do with space?
Woman: "Aren't you astronauts?"
Buzz Aldrin: "Yes, Mam. We'd like to compare notes with Stevie on the new space station."
Here is the full commercial for your enjoyment:
Standing next to Buzz are two of the original Mercury-7 astronauts Scott Carpenter and Leroy Gordon Cooper (thanks for your help figuring this out, @flyingjenny and @iammdsquared).
Yes, back in those days (1986) the planned space station wasn't international, it was called "Freedom" and had a centrifuge module for artificial gravity research. Neither Freedom nor the centrifuge ever materialized, just like the Amiga never took the world by storm and about ten years later became all but a thing of the past.
2 comments:
LOL, that is an AWESOME commercial, I remember that now! And how funny they got Carpenter and Gordo, too. Caught that Xerox comment... what, are you trying to start a nerd war?? ;)
No, I am secular in the midst of the 3 major religions - Windows, OS-X and Linux ;-)
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