Spyke

Now that’s a name I haven’t heard in a looong time…

29

Lotus was so intent on protecting their revenue stream from software piracy that they built copy protection into the program. If the program was copied from one drive to another, it would not run. So if one bought a new computer or if the hard drive failed, the program could not be transferred to a new drive. The first versions of the software were pretty buggy too. I always visualized a Lotus company with a few programmers and many lawyers. They finally included a floppy disk that would allow a very limited number of copies, but still a PITA.

7
Kangiereply
lemmy.srcfiles.zip

Boomer spreadsheet program.

Not literally, it came out in 83 - it was the original 'killer app', and was behind the widespread adoption of microcomputers into business in the pre-network and internet days.

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t0m5k1reply
lemmy.world

Sorry but it's a blatant gen x spreadsheet program!

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diggerreply
lemmy.ca

The last release was in 2002. It's not limited to Gen X. As an older millennial, I leaned Lotus 1-2-3 and Lotus Word Pro before I was introduced to Microsoft's Suite.

12

I miss Wordperfect, although I don't miss the templates everyone had on their keyboards.

I mostly wish Word had "show codes."

3
gregorumreply
lemm.ee

As a younger Gen-Xer, we were still using Lotus Notes for logging calls when I worked at Dell Tech support in 98-99. It sucked.

2

Hahahahaha.

I was still using Notes in 2013. Most functions had moved on, but for the government department that I was working for at the time it was essential for IM, group mailboxes, and... a specific type of diplomatic communication.

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t0m5k1reply
lemmy.world

Right but we don't age things from it's last release do we!

First released in 83 when I was 9 and I played with my ZX81.

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_cnt0reply
unilem.org

Huh. I played with my penis. And an Atari 1040ST (a few years later).

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t0m5k1reply
lemmy.world

Well then, Thanks for sharing! I moved on from a ZX81 to a BBC Master (128k+dbl sided 40/80T dual disk drive) and then to a Falcon 030 in late '92. Games sounded sooo much better on the Falcon 030

2

That hardware is so fascinating (in hindsight): I love that it had a hardware jpeg decoder. Fun times.

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Lotus 1-2-3 For Linux | Spyke