Well the laptop I was provided with did use Windows Me, but I soon moved over to 2000. I never really moved to Windows 98 and moved straight to Windows 2000 when I started a new job in 2001. We even had video now on Windows, though it was quite small. I remember the huge fanfare that was Windows 95 and what a step change it was from 3.1. It was probably Windows 3.1 that really made me appreciate the affordances that technology could bring to teaching. My first experience of Windows was some time later with Windows 3.0 and remembering the big advance that Windows 3.1 brought to computing. With Excel, Chart, and even Flight Simulator, there’s no telling where Microsoft and the power of Windows will take you this summer. I quite enjoyed the tweets this week from Microsoft celebrating the 1985 initial release of Windows. I am always impressed with how we can manipulate, edit and encode video these days.Īs for the feel good song, even after all this time I still like to play it now and again, I think like any good song it stands the test of time in terms of its listenability. How times have changed, for the better I think. I can even stream 8K quality video from the internet. Today my iMac is capable of playing multiple 8K videos at the same time as well as capturing and recording similar quality video. At least the Rainbow Runner allowed me to do what I wanted with standard definition video, even if a standard Windows PC couldn’t at that time. It always bothered me that my television and video recorder could do all this video stuff, but my (much more) expensive computer was just not capable of playing video let alone capturing video. I used that a lot for capturing video so I could play it back during Powerpoint presentations back in the latter half of the 1990s. I think it was these videos that, as they demonstrated that video could be on a computer, inspired me to buy the Matrox Rainbow Runner video card so my PC could record and playback full screen video. I remember been impressed with the two video files included with Windows and that I could play them on my PC. I first saw the Edie Brickell – Good Times video when it was included on the Windows 95 install CD as a way of showcasing the video capabilities of the new operating system.Īt the time video on a computer was something that just didn’t happen and if it did was usually as a small window showing the video, the phrase postage stamp sized video was often close to the truth.
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