I loved it because I witnessed the growth of computers from the first Desktop Personal Computers in the early 1980s to Atari and Commodore computers to actual PCs in the late 1980s and then laptops in the home in the early 1990s. I bought my first computer 30 years ago this summer in 1989 for $2600. It had DOS 4.01 as the operating system, 1 MB of RAM built into the motherboard, a 65 MB Hard Drive, no mouse, just the cursor buttons, 3.5 Floppy and a 5.25 Floppy and a 14" Monochrome monitor. What software there was around didn't come from the manufacturer or Microsoft, but rather it was purchased from retail stores like Computerland and later Egghead Software(Amazon bought the internet part of Egghead in 1996). I still use the same brand of word processing software WordPerfect, Microsoft's Word wouldn't exist for a few more years, isn't interesting that Microsoft Office products are almost identical to WordPerfect's Office, because for the years before Word, Excel, Access and Powerpoint existed WordPerfect had to give their software code for WordPerfect, Quattro Pro, Paradox and Presentations to Microsoft to run on DOS, you know the MS developers took a peek. The 1990s was when PCs went from monochrome screens to 16 million color screens from 65 MB Hard Drives to 300 GB Hard Drives, 14K dial up modems to 56K dial up modems to Cable modems and the internet went from simple bulletin board websites to AOL and Compuserve and Browsers that opened the World Wide Web to the world!