I've been building software for 40 years. But I want *you*…
    Neura MarketNeura Market/Stable Diffusion
    ChatGPTChatGPTClaudeClaudeGeminiGeminiCursorCursorGrokGrokPerplexityPerplexityStable DiffusionStable Diffusion
    DeepSeekDeepSeekCoPilotCoPilotMidjourneyMidjourney
    View All Directories
    OverviewPromptsBlogVideosGuidesCoursesCommunityModelsLoRAsComfyUI WorkflowsTrending
    Stable DiffusionBlogI've been building software for 40 years. But I want *you* to tell me about dev in 1986...
    Back to Blog
    I've been building software for 40 years. But I want *you* to tell me about dev in 1986...
    programming

    I've been building software for 40 years. But I want *you* to tell me about dev in 1986...

    John Munsch April 1, 2026
    0 views

    It's 2026 and I started professional software development in 1986 when I took a Summer internship...

    Image description

    It's 2026 and I started professional software development in 1986 when I took a Summer internship at Tandy Computers in Fort Worth, TX after my junior year at Rice. I worked for them again for a few weeks over Christmas break and started full time there the next year.

    Now, as we all go through a series of huge changes in our jobs, I thought it would be fun if you would tell me what software development was like 40 years ago. Don't research it, don't go look at my AMA from years ago, just go with your gut.

    What tools did we use? What did we develop on, machine wise? What was storage like? How did we learn everything we needed to know about languages, libraries, etc.? Communication? Languages used? And, I still had another year at school, how did we build software at school and turn in assignments?

    I got this idea when I watched a story the other day about a teacher who was getting married and she asked her students to give her advice for her wedding and her married life going forward. The advice ranged from thought provoking and sweet to hilarious.

    The difference here is that I can wait a few days for the submissions to all come in and I can actually tell you what it was like then.

    Tags

    programmingdiscussdevelopmentwatercooler

    Comments

    More Blog

    View all
    Context bankruptcy: The case for strategic forgetting for AI Agentsai

    Context bankruptcy: The case for strategic forgetting for AI Agents

    Most of us have seen a coding agent fail to complete a task we know it can do. We just don't...

    J
    James O'Reilly
    Parallel Compliance Engine: Drive-to-Sheets Multi-Agent Orchestrationgooglecloud

    Parallel Compliance Engine: Drive-to-Sheets Multi-Agent Orchestration

    When building Generative AI applications, developers often encounter a massive bottleneck: sequential...

    A
    Aryan Irani
    Is It Ethical to Post and Ask About Circuits on Dev.to?discuss

    Is It Ethical to Post and Ask About Circuits on Dev.to?

    I’ve been thinking about sharing some electronic circuit posts on Dev.to — small circuits, DIY...

    C
    codebunny20
    The One-Click Exporter: AI Studio Antigravity, Probed to Its Limitsagents

    The One-Click Exporter: AI Studio Antigravity, Probed to Its Limits

    What nobody tells you about exporting your multi-agent prototype to a local workspace. Every...

    L
    leslysandra
    Guarding the till while autonomous data agents do the diggingagenticarchitect

    Guarding the till while autonomous data agents do the digging

    Autonomous agents are genuinely good at answering messy business questions. Give one an LLM and a set...

    S
    Sireesha Pulipati
    Return on Attention: Why AI Code Reviews Are Wearing Us Outai

    Return on Attention: Why AI Code Reviews Are Wearing Us Out

    PR volume went up, ticket quality didn't, and the gap got filled with LLMs on both sides of the review: bots reviewing, bots replying, bots occasionally arguing with bots about priorities that only existed in a teammate's head. Our CEO named the actual problem, and it's bigger than code review.

    C
    christine

    Stay up to date

    Get the latest Stable Diffusion prompts, rules, and resources delivered to your inbox weekly.

    Neura Market LogoNeura Market

    Discover the best AI prompts, plugins, and resources for Stable Diffusion and more.

    Content Types

    • Rules
    • Prompts
    • MCPs
    • Agents
    • Guides

    Platforms

    • ChatGPT Directory
    • Claude Directory
    • Gemini Directory
    • Cursor Directory
    • Grok Directory
    • Perplexity Directory
    • DeepSeek Directory
    • CoPilot Directory
    • Stable Diffusion Directory
    • Midjourney Directory
    • All Directories

    Resources

    • Blog
    • Documentation
    • Help Center
    • Marketplace

    Legal

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service

    © 2026 Neura Market. All rights reserved.

    |

    Not affiliated with any AI platform vendors.

    Ready-made automations for this

    Workflows from the Neura Market marketplace related to this Stable Diffusion resource

    • AI Agent Blueprint for Streamlined Website Developmentn8n · $19.99 · Related topic
    • Streamlined Testing Automation for Efficient Development Workflowsmake · $12.34 · Related topic
    • Automate Your Website Development with AI-Powered Chat Workflown8n · $6.3 · Related topic
    • Telegram to Professional LinkedIn Posts with Gemini AI & Approvaln8n · $24.99 · Related topic
    Browse all workflows