13:57:25| < HolySmoke> :!make 13:57:28| < HolySmoke> er 13:58:49| < TrashyMG|Work> make clean 14:00:26| < sebt3> HolySmoke: vi (ab)user 14:00:44| < HolySmoke> but it's improved 14:02:26| < HolySmoke> by orders of magnitude even 14:03:01| < sebt3> Have you used the original one on older plateforms ? 14:03:29| < TrashyMG|Work> I've used vi on VAX/VMS 14:03:41| < sebt3> TrashyMG|Work: that's hardcore :P 14:04:19| < TrashyMG|Work> Museum... 14:05:41| < sebt3> The oldest plateform I used vi was sunOS 4, but I also had to on HPUX 10 and AIX4.1 :P 14:07:25| < TrashyMG|Work> I may be able to find a machine running SunOS 4 14:07:55| < sebt3> you mean "still" running that ? 14:08:04| < TrashyMG|Work> yes 14:08:35| < TrashyMG|Work> HPUX maybe on an old HP/Agilent test equipment. 14:09:04| < sebt3> this OS have been released in 1988, a good 27 years ago... 14:09:17| < sebt3> indeed a museum 14:12:16| < TrashyMG|Work> no doubt, these are unix machines inside test equipment, so it's not like they're doing anything but running the equipment. 14:12:46| < TrashyMG|Work> sending data to a server. 14:15:12| < aTc> not to mention that some server just emulate an older machine 14:16:07| < aTc> think ibm had a crapload of that stuff 14:16:33| < aTc> for their old mainframe things where they couldn't be bothered to port the software to a more modern machine 14:17:36| < TrashyMG|Work> yeah we still use a lot of old mainframe applications, some date back to the late 70's... believe it's all hosted by virtual machines now. 14:21:50| < TrashyMG|Work> aTc, I'm pretty sure when I started IBM in 1998, when an application said, need to change volume it literally controlled a robotic arm that changed a tape cassette.