heheheh ... Right, Saaby! One of the very first desktop UNIX boxes, and the absolute first with a Graphical User Interface.
I wanted on of those things a whole lot when Steve Jobs and company came out with them. Cost too much though. I ended up just keeping my old 1984 UNIX machine (command line only).
What amazed me was what those neXt boxes could do with video. I wasn't surprised when Steve came up with Pixar and the stacked UNIX boxes there.
Budlight, it was about 1969 when DARPA came out with the first network while researching survivable communications (atomic attack survival). That network turned into ARPAnet in about '71 or '72 IIRC. I didn't get onto ARPAnet until 03JUN82 from my terminal at Bell Labs, and I didn't put a personal machine on the 'net until '84.
It's still listed in the old archives as either 'boris' or 'tijil' (renamed when there was a naming conflict with another machine on the 'net). It was both an e-mail and USENET node and I had a couple dozen friends as users of my machine (remote login via it's 4 Hayes modems). It was an exciting time!
Hard to believe I've been "on-line" for over twenty years.
(And when we were discussing Tim's ideas back in the early '90's I thought they were a bunch of crap - they'd never fly and take too much bandwidth to ever be practical. Guess I was wrong, eh? /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/blush.gif )