What a great story. It reminded me of my own father, who's been gone for 8 years now.
I still vividly remember the first time we played 20 Questions. I must have been about 8 years old. I figured it out in 5 questions. I was so proud.
"That's not the way you're supposed to play the game!" he told me, "You're supposed to figure it out as soon as possible, then ask dumber and dumber questions to make the other person think you don't know. Then on Question 20, you just pop out, 'Is it a razor?'"
I've played that game (and many other real life games) like that ever since. It's amazing how empowering it is for an introverted nerd to enable his adversaries to underestimate him so easily.
Thanks OP for the memories and thanks, Dad, for all the lessons. I can still smell the Old Spice.
Jef Raskin's BASIC Programming Manual [1] for the original Apple II is truly delightful. That is was written in 1978, for such a arcane little machine like the original Apple II, is all the more amazing.
It demonstrates as well as anything his ambitions to bring computers to the average person, at a time when very few people understood the potential of the home computing market.
Thank you for the link! "First, there are no lower case letters. You can only get capital letters on the APPLE II. This is all you need for programming."
A beautiful thing. My father passed away about six years ago as well, far too young. But cancer doesn't really care, does it? This very much reminded me of him. Our final days were not as apt for stories but I'm sending him an extra thought today.
This feels a little serendipitous considering that (spoiler alert if you haven't read the story yet...) safety razor shaving has seen somewhat of a resurgence in recent years.
New (albeit small) companies have sprung up offering a new spin on an old tradition, old products are available new again, people are scouring yard sales, pawn shops, and antique stores and replating very old razors, etc. There are many variations on that simple razor design, all to some extent alter the shave quite a bit.
Safety razor shaving actually looks to be a decent hobby, provided you're willing to spend the extra time each morning.
I still vividly remember the first time we played 20 Questions. I must have been about 8 years old. I figured it out in 5 questions. I was so proud.
"That's not the way you're supposed to play the game!" he told me, "You're supposed to figure it out as soon as possible, then ask dumber and dumber questions to make the other person think you don't know. Then on Question 20, you just pop out, 'Is it a razor?'"
I've played that game (and many other real life games) like that ever since. It's amazing how empowering it is for an introverted nerd to enable his adversaries to underestimate him so easily.
Thanks OP for the memories and thanks, Dad, for all the lessons. I can still smell the Old Spice.