Arlo and Janis by Jimmy Johnson for March 28, 2022

  1. Ava2
    C  over 2 years ago

    Some punch line

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    alasko  over 2 years ago

    Punch cards had sharp edges, unless the computer room flooded from a leak from the cooling system, then they turn to mush. Don’t aske me how I know.

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    SpacedInvader Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Don’t worry, computer punch cards won’t be around that long. They will go the way of the platter disk drives and FORTRAN.

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    Tyge Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Looks like the relationship has decided to go public. And why not! Our girl is looking pretty hot!

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    Robin Harwood  over 2 years ago

    If you want something practical, forget about education and business.

    Try engineering (structural, mechanical, electrical, chemical) , architecture, medicine, veterinary medicine, or pharmaceutics. (IT didn’t really exist then.) Or law, if you must.

    Teaching requires you to first know something to teach. That’s what you major in. Learning how to teach needs just a one-year course.

    Business you learn on the job. Pretending it is an academic subject is just a way for universities to get paying sucke … er … students.

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    drogers30  over 2 years ago

    Her father sounds like my daughter in law’s dad he didn’t want her going to graphic arts school She is now an excellent graphic artist.

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    DorothyGlenn Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Oh, I forgot the joys of punch cards.

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    Jesy Bertz Premium Member over 2 years ago

    And debugging your Fortran program and creating flowcharts.

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    greyolddave  over 2 years ago

    I’m not sure I can keep track of yet another strip that has taken up a timeline into the past.

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    Rhetorical_Question   over 2 years ago

    Art requires Talent.

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    Alias1600  over 2 years ago

    Same. I got the business degree my parents preferred, but after a layoff, ended up building a career as a graphic designer anyway.

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    Ermine Notyours  over 2 years ago

    On my second visit to Washington DC and my second visit to the C&O Canal, I noticed a plaque that noticed the computer punch card system was invented in a building by the canal in Georgetown, to help complete a census. That was an unexpected historical reference.

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    tgroomsdraws  over 2 years ago

    Those familiar with the strip, are these repeats of earlier strips, or new? I know via Wikipedia how they got together was covered in an earlier series of strips, but these are the first I’ve seen showing them in the ’70s. Thanks!

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    TCA1799 Premium Member over 2 years ago

    What is Arlo’s post graduation occupation, or don’t we know?

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    dschaeff505 Premium Member over 2 years ago

    My dad advised me not to go into something I enjoyed (like paleontology); he said it would ruin it for me. So I started in engineering but ended up with a career in IT which was interesting enough and paid the bills.

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    cabalonrye  over 2 years ago

    Business for women at that time: punching cards all your life.

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    trainnut1956  over 2 years ago

    I am old enough that yes, in high school, we had a class where we actually punched cards for early IBM computers.

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    NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Woe be onto you if you didn’t number your punch cards!! And no, you couldn’t correct a mistake, just repunch the darned thing.

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    ScullyUFO  over 2 years ago

    This means that at a minimum Arlo and Janis are now in their late sixties.

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    Jeannine Brown  over 2 years ago

    I don’t remember…what do Arlo and Janis do for a living?

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    DawnQuinn1  over 2 years ago

    Punching computer cards? Been there. My first year in university, I used punch cards when programming in Fortran on a mainframe. My first foray into an endless loop. The Dean Of Engineering was NOT impressed…but I was. lol

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    1BlackLivesMatter Premium Member over 2 years ago

    As a guy who punched cards as a summer job, I can say Janis is right.

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    MuddyUSA  Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Arlo laying back just agrees………….

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    FassEddie  over 2 years ago

    Those cards went away so quickly. They were gone by 85.

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    360guy Premium Member over 2 years ago

    So far, the line “bummer man!” still has not been uttered.

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    raybarb44  over 2 years ago

    Or keyboards….

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    CynthiaLeigh  over 2 years ago

    What did Janis do when she worked?

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    Tetonbil Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Thank you JJ. I am glad you decided to roll with this arc another week. Very nice!

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    mchittom  over 2 years ago

    HEY…Fortran was a dynamic programing language.

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    Flossie Mud Duck  over 2 years ago

    Lordy, Lordy. I remember when key-punch operator was a prestigious job for young women (naturally); considered higher than secretary. That didn’t last too long.

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    Fontessa  over 2 years ago

    I remember being encouraged to learn key-punch when my high school offered it. I snorted. I’d had three drafting classes and I was going to be a draftsman. And I was, for a long time.

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    Bill D. Kat Premium Member over 2 years ago

    For younger readers [if there are any] who don’t know what a computer punch card is, it was how programs and data were input to a mainframe computer prior to the development and deployment of terminals. They were 7 3/8" long by 3 1/4" high and created on a machine that literally punched little holes into them corresponding to the keyboard characters. Each card represented one line of code or data. Thus a complete program would be in the form of a stack of those cards which would then be fed into the computer with a hopper. The computer would run the program and produce a printout of the desired result or, in many cases, an error report. Using the report, the user would need to find the cards with the errors and re-punch them being very careful to keep them all in the correct sequence. A complex program could involve a very large deck of cards and inevitably, someone would drop one and have to deal with the onerous task of putting them back in the correct order.

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  33. Joho69
    JoHo Premium Member over 2 years ago

    As a Computer Science major in 1978 I worked in the computer lab at Western Ky. Univ. “Our” mainframe was at U of K so my job was to take students card deck, read it in then wait for results to print, then wrap around the card deck and place in the out tray. The first year it was only minutes then second year (computer science was taking off!) it took hours for results to come back. I could place all jobs on hold then release just mine and get it back quickly. The perks of working in the lab.

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    donwestonmysteries  over 2 years ago

    Things have progressed quickly.

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    Enoi  over 2 years ago

    How old do you have to be to get the punch card reference? ☺

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    David Huie Green ForceIsAUsefulFiction  over 2 years ago

    It was more fun that you would think. Ah, those good old Hollerith cards….

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    Brent Rosenthal Premium Member over 2 years ago

    The computer fad won’t last anyway.

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    Dr_Fogg  over 2 years ago

    oh yes, the IBM 5081 card. LOL

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    Malcome1  over 2 years ago

    By 1975 the hospital system I worked at had already done away with punch cards. They did have those big reel to reel tapes though.

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  over 2 years ago

    That is the body that Janis misses having.

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    ddowns Premium Member over 2 years ago

    My career was in IT also. My 1st computer for training was an old Univac. No monitor or keyboard. Rotary dials and switches. Used a Basic type language. You created a source code deck on a keypunch machine then fed it into the Univac with a compiler deck. Out would come an object deck that you would include with your data deck. Your results would come out on the dot matrix printer.

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    jbcuster  over 2 years ago

    How old are Arlo and Janis supposed to be now? If they were in college in 1975 and say, 18 or 20, they would be early 60’s now.

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    jbcuster  over 2 years ago

    So they’re in their 60’s now?

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    DaBump Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Ah, punch cards and paper tape programming… wow, I’m old.

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    amaryllis2 Premium Member over 2 years ago

    I keyed punch cards as a summer job in the late ’70’s! Thank you for the flashback.

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    gopogogo Premium Member over 2 years ago

    My high school library used punch cards for the “due date” slips in books that were checked out. I still have an un-returned book with a punch card in it.

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    klapre  over 2 years ago

    Wow. All these comments by computer nerds. You’re missing the social commentary here. This is a dig at the jobs that were available for women with a business major in the late 70s and 80s. It has nothing to do with programming languages.

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    tcviii Premium Member about 2 years ago

    No comments about JJ telling us the college was in California?

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