Back in the 1980s I used to hand-assemble code for the 6809E microprocessor.
Lel man old
Don't laugh. Tomahawk cruise missiles use 6809E assembled machine code.
Er... the code is olddated

Back in the 1980s I used to hand-assemble code for the 6809E microprocessor.
Lel man old
Don't laugh. Tomahawk cruise missiles use 6809E assembled machine code.
Er... the code is olddated

Back in the 1980s I used to hand-assemble code for the 6809E microprocessor.
Lel man old
Don't laugh. Tomahawk cruise missiles use 6809E assembled machine code.
Er... the code is olddated
anticlimactic =)
Oh I remember using C# years ago in game design in highschool! Hah lel they only had 2 semeters I think..
I know java and html till now, will learn python next =)
what about css and js?
I'm only 15, I have a lot of my life left =)
And I'm 13 and I know html css and js so the age doesn't mean anything
How many do I know now? Probably none, but I've forgotten a few. I learned 8085 assembly language and Fortran IV in college. Teaching myself Basic was easy because it was just Fortran IV without all the syntax headaches. In my first job out of college I learned 68000 assembly, a wiz-bang new OS called MS-DOS, and the languages for a couple test machines. Back then I developed programs and equipment to test circuit cards when they came out of production or back from the field for repair. Through various jobs over the years I picked up another couple proprietary test languages, a little of Pascal, and became expert (IMHO) in VAX/VMS.
Those days are over. I sometimes miss playing with my toys (servers, routers, switches, etc.) but I don't miss the pressure or the hours. When you're the lead IT guy and the network goes down you don't count hours. You're there until the job is done.
Are did they upgrade em... cuz 1978 seems aify