No, I'm an old fart that learned ALGOL in 1967 by keypunching one statement per card. After you wrote your program you put a rubberband around the card deck and left it in the inbox where the white-coated technicians inside the glass-walled computer room would feed it to the huge Burroughs B-5500 computer. There was a row of alphabetical pigeon-holes where the technicians would leave your original cards and pages of line-printer output from your program wrapped around them with a rubber band a few hours later.
More often than not, the program aborted with some kind of syntax error so you would have to find the error, replace the bad card and repeat. It could take DAYS to get your simple little program to run. Incredibly frustrating! A year later they installed a state of the art timesharing system with teletype ASR-33 terminals in various locations around the campus. They gave you realtime access to the computer center using phone lines with modems and acoustic couplers. You could then write your programs in BASIC which was a huge advance.
Got my first computer, an Apple II in 1978, it was one of the first 5000 that Apple made. It cost $1300 - I got the 16k model instead of the cheaper 4k model. That's 16 KILOBYTES, not megabytes.

For that price, you just got the computer, you had to connect it to a TV for a screen and an audio tape deck for storage, they hadn't introduced a disk drive yet.
In 1985 I got a "Fat Mac" with 512k memory and floppy drive. A year or so later I got a Hard Disk 20, Apple's first hard drive that plugged into the RS-422 serial port. My mind boggled at the vast amount of storage! My daughter is from the "computer generation", here she is using the Mac back in 1986.
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