Am I the only one wondering: 

1) Why you have these?
2) Why they're on your thumb-drive?
3) Why you're advertising the fact that you have them?

I'll assume you work for the state, but still, what's the need to
carry these around?

-John

On 5/11/05, Richard Hoffbeck <rwh at visi.com> wrote:
> And now I have a database with 2 copies of the MN drivers license
> database and 1 copy of the WI DL database - the compressed encrypted
> backup image only takes up half of the 1GB memory key on my key chain.
> 
> --rick
> 
> Jerry Weihrauch wrote:
> 
> > Mike Miller wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> I remember sitting in a classroom in 1987 and hearing that it
> >> wouldn't be long before we'd be talking about "gigabytes."  I thought
> >> it was true, but it was still amazing to dream about it.  Now we're
> >> talking about terabytes.
> >>
> >> Back in those days an older professor told me about his work in the
> >> 1960s on an old computer that needed an HDD.  They were storing
> >> everything on cards.  Reboots took a long time but were frequently
> >> needed.  So they managed to convince the university (UW-Madison) to
> >> buy them an HDD.  It was 1966 and the HDD cost $65,000.  It held 2 MB
> >> and I think it was as big as a washing machine.  It probably seemed
> >> like a lot of storage space at the time.
> >>
> >> I bought my first HDD in 1986.  It cost me $450 and it held 30 MB
> >> because it was a true 20 MB drive with an RLL controller that added
> >> 50% to the volume.  Back then 30 MB went a long, long way.  You
> >> *could* still do your work on two 360 KB 5.25" floppies (e.g.,
> >> WordPerfect 4.2 on one floppy and your data on the other), but it was
> >> beginning to get uncomfortable.  This was before I had a "high
> >> density" floppy drive that held about 1.2 MB on a single 5.25" floppy
> >> - that was luxurious!
> >>
> >> Mike
> >>
> >>
> >>
> > The first HDD I remember was at the Minnesota Department of
> > Transportation about 1965, not sure of the storage size but the "drum"
> > was six feet long and about two feet in diameter.  The drive was in a
> > cabinet with large windows so every one could watch it spin.  It was
> > going to hold all the drivers license, vehicle license and state crime
> > records on the HDD, maybe one meg?  Would say back in 1965 the state
> > population was around two million, so one third of the population may
> > have had drivers license and half owned a vehicle and criminal records
> > one tenth?
> >
> > Jerry
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
> > tclug-list at mn-linux.org
> > http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list
> 
> _______________________________________________
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> tclug-list at mn-linux.org
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> 


-- 
John T. Hoffoss