stock photo of old computer monitor When I was 10 or 11, I remember sitting next to my dad in our living room and reading computer code to him as he entered it into an Apple computer. We would finish the exercise and he would hit enter (or was it "run"?) and wait expectantly for the green type to appear on the screen. If we were lucky, the whole conversation would occur. Most often, there would be an error either in my dictation of the code, or in the typing of the code. We would then go painstakingly back through the lines, character by character, to find and correct the error. After what seemed like hours (and might have been), we would succeed and the computer would finally run the entire program. It was magical! My dad designed and built an earth-sheltered, passive solar home decades before solar panels were commonplace. He also was on a 9-month waiting list for a Prius, when hybrids were not seen on every street. While my dad is definitely on the cutting edge of technol...
Priceless treasures - every one of them!
ReplyDeleteWonderful photos. Putting faces to the men who actually fought in the wars makes learning history so much more emotional and overwhelming for me. The things they saw and did...it really was a sacrifice.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous photos... they make me feel so grateful for all of those precious men and women who serve. I love this tribute so very much Kristi!!
ReplyDeleteLove those old pictures. Without brave men and women like your family our country - the Netherlands - would not have been the same and I might have been talking German now...
ReplyDeleteEven though it's been a long time ago, it's still very much alive here and we're forever gratefull.
I am thankful that my Dad, my grandpa and my uncles all made it back safely. Not everyone did. Love your pictures.
ReplyDeleteYour grandfather was a baby in WWII, wasn't he? My uncle was 19 when he trained to fly airplanes in WWII. And the one of your great grandpa in his WWI uniform is amazing!
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