Article 41431 of comp.sys.cbm: Xref: undergrad.math.uwaterloo.ca comp.sys.cbm:41431 Newsgroups: comp.sys.cbm Path: undergrad.math.uwaterloo.ca!csbruce From: csbruce@ccnga.uwaterloo.ca (Craig Bruce) Subject: Re: Commodore 64/128 and Microsoft Windows Message-ID: Sender: news@undergrad.math.uwaterloo.ca (news spool owner) Nntp-Posting-Host: ccnga.uwaterloo.ca Organization: University of Waterloo, Canada (eh!) References: <41dref$725@newsbf02.news.aol.com> <41eihm$ai@news.acns.nwu.edu> Date: Wed, 23 Aug 1995 15:56:10 GMT In article <41eihm$ai@news.acns.nwu.edu>, Stephen Judd wrote: > There has been a fundamental shift in attitude regarding >computing, and in particular, programming. > "Back in our day" the hardware was fixed for long periods of >time. The C64 production run was what, 10-12 years? And in that time >there was essentially zero modification to the hardware. What that >means is that software people are forced to think of more clever and >efficient ways of doing things. >[...lots of dead-on stuff deleted...] > (I also think a 100MHz Pentium is overkill for just about everything ;). > >>Thank God we still have our Commodores. I summarize this phenomenon as follows: "Bruce's Law: If computing capacity is doubling every year, then software bloat is tripling." Just imagine ACE running on a 100MHz Pentium... or even a 20MHz 65816. Keep on Hackin'! -Craig Bruce csbruce@ccnga.uwaterloo.ca