Ah yes, and when I was 11, those of us with top scores in Math were offered an opportunity to learn to use a "computer." Once per week, three of us went to the "computer lab" where made punch tapes (initially in BASIC, later learning FOTRAN) and loaded them into a reader and dialed (and I do mean DIALED) some phone number and placed the clunky hand set in the recepticle and waited while the teletype slowly printed the result of our "programming" attempts. None of us believed a word when teachers told us that soon there would a computer in every home! Those teletypes relayed data to/from complexes that took up entire rooms, and sometimes small buildings. Who would want and who could afford to build an addition on their home to house a million-dollar smart-machine? And the school was charged some exhoribitant fee per SECOND of computer time for that relay connection. Aren't we glad things have come so far in the nearly 4 decades since!