Uhhhhh........ can I press 2 for English?
I dropped a dinky programming elective at Drexel in 1976 (Fortran maybe?) because it was making my head explode.
Those were the days of keypunch cards.
Haha. 1976 should have been the tail end of the keypunch era... I went through the same thing in 1967 with keypunched ALGOL programs running on a Burroughs B5500 mainframe at the University of Virginia. But in the late 60's and early 70's I thought most schools had so-called "timesharing" systems with ASR-33 teletype machines connected to the mainframe. That was a big advancement because it was interactive - you got immediate feedback on programming errors instead of having to pickup your punch card deck and printout at the computer center. That was also the beginning of BASIC which was a more user-friendly programming language which was also designed to be interactive.
But to get back to the "press 2 for English" question
....
SSH stands for "secure shell". It's a way you can have a terminal session running in a window on your computer. This provides you with a way to type commands, edit programs, manage files, etc. on a remote unix or linux computer. When you buy a web hosting plan the cheapest ones typically don't allow you to have this level of control over the remote system.
Now to bring this all back on topic for the site... I am still using the
pine text-based e-mail program via ssh on a couple of linux systems. Not at all user-friendly by today's standards, but it's comforting to still have the same e-mail interface I was using 20 years ago. But mainly, it's called
pine...
:eng101: Extra credit geek question: what does PINE stand for, and why?