No hi-tech stuff like that but they did have Van Halen Blue Angle videos playing in the bar.Dang!
So I guess you didn't have the opportunity to play Nintendo Game Boy Tetris.
You missed out!
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No hi-tech stuff like that but they did have Van Halen Blue Angle videos playing in the bar.Dang!
So I guess you didn't have the opportunity to play Nintendo Game Boy Tetris.
You missed out!
![]()
Pythagorean theorem shit? The heck with this, I getting another beer, Hugh!
Harumph a Zenith? I had a kickass AT with a math copro and two 20 meg hard drives!You kids and your Gameboys. I played my Tetris by copying it from the 5 1/4" disk onto the Zenith computer. Oh, we also had Leisure Suit Larry.
Leisure? Surely you jest.
I can't remember what it was called, but some MWR activity in Cubi was a place with banks of reel to reel taper recorders and albums just so you could copy music to take back out on cruise. First time I saw the place I thought it looked like a major recording studio. By time I got there in the early 80's everyone had cassette tape players/recorders and the first Walkmans were getting around. Only folks with reel to reels then were true audiophiles, and the condition of the LP albums in Cubi were not good enough for those types to bother with. I bet there was still a Ray Coniff album there BzB recorded for one of his Westpacs.Probably the biggest off duty diversion on cruise underway was MUSIC! Mainly LP records copied to large audio reels. The first big buy at the initial port call at Yokosuka at the NX (A-33), was a huge AKAI or TEAC reel-to-reel tape deck, a Garrard turntable w/ stereo diamond needle, stereo headphones, loads of boxes of blank tape, and numerous contemporary LP stereo music albums.
Everyone would get all their albums copied to large reels... then as the cruise progressed, we would swap tapes & copy tape-to-tape, until everyone had a great recorded tape collection at cruise end. It took a large bulk of the 'off' time' on my deployments....
C'est la guerre!![]()