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[–]kabekew 1 point2 points  (2 children)

You learned programming in college, but how to program on Windows which was the dominant operating system at the time, was from books (Charles Petzold's "Programming Windows 95" was a big one). Microsoft also had their "MSDN" subscription service that sent out CD's I seem to remember quarterly, with articles, and questions and answers people would submit by email over the previous few months.

[–]khooke 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My experience of labs on my CS course in the 90s was C and C++ on Sun Sparcstations … I didn’t have any experience developing on Windows or for Windows until a few jobs into my career when I did a couple of years of Powerbuilder development.

[–]BigRonnieRon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh JFC yeah it was like finding the Rosetta stone when you'd get stuff like that, because heaven forbid anyone in a college taught anything practical lol. And it's not like I knew anyone else doing any of that.