On 12/15/2015 09:13 PM, Mouse wrote:
What would you do with a home no screen computer?

Depends on what counts as a "screen".  If any visible output counts,
there isn't much - but I suspect you don't want to go that far.

You can connect to it from other computers.  I have six machines
running right now with no screens on them (though four of them have
the host-side hardware for a screen).

You can talk to it with a terminal.  If a video-display terminal
counts as a screen, use a printing terminal.

It's also occurred to me that without screens, we might be better off today (oh boy, am I going to get flack on this one).

We might be in the position of being more concise in our computer output. A "screen" is an output device--really, ordinary human input devices haven't changed much. The average web-surfing experience blasts the user with tons of filigree and useless data, but very little useful information.

Don't forget that the first games were text-only. Web sites that have multi-megabyte splash screens that serve no purpose other than tell you that you've arrived. It's like your local Walmart hiring a marching band to greet every single customer individually. Data is cheap and Parkinson's law applies.

--Chuck

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