In the beginning there is darkness. The screen erupts in blue, then a cascade of thick, white hexadecimal numbers and cracked language, "UnusedStk" and "AllocMem." Black screen cedes to blue to white and a pair of scales appear, crossed by a sword, both images drawn in the jagged, bitmapped graphics of Windows 1.0-era clip-art—light grey and yellow on a background of light cyan. Blue text proclaims, "God on tap!"

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  This is TempleOS V2.17, the welcome screen explains, a "Public Domain Operating System" produced by Trivial Solutions of Las Vegas, Nevada. It greets the user with a riot of 16-color, scrolling, blinking text; depending on your frame of reference, it might recall <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DESQview" target="_blank" style="color:rgb(121,116,189);text-decoration:none">​DESQview</a>, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodore_64" target="_blank" style="color:rgb(121,116,189);text-decoration:none">​Commodore 64</a>, or a host of early DOS-based graphical user interfaces. In style if not in specifics, it evokes a particular era, a time when the then-new concept of "personal computing" necessarily meant programming and tinkering and breaking things.
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http://motherboard.vice.com/read/gods-lonely-programmer?utm_source=mbfb

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