Oh geez, I guess I'll bite, LOL.
My brother bought our first seat on the PSE Options floor in 1978.
I came on in April 1979.
Wake up at 3:30 to run option reports on our Options Research Scanner (Blair Hull's mainframe in S.F.). Scan all options exchanges to find best risk/reward play. Reports ran on an old Texas Instruments TI745 with cups for the Telephone receiver to hook into. Printed at 300 baud on heat sensitive paper (One long roll). I had to tear the sheets into various size reports, and then start making out option spread tickets to give to the clerks on the Exchange floor to call the other exchanges to place orders.
Then go to the Pit for opening rotation. Fight with the guys over opening prices...who had the best volatility on their sheets... who had sheets, LOL.
We set up the first booth phone to our equity floor next door. This helped us beat the other market makers to stock purchases. We started our own Bright Securities so we could execute our own equity trades.
First ITS (Intermarket Trading System) terminal came into being so we could submit orders directly to the NYSE without local Specialist doing it. We had to "ok" any trade with local Specialist AND pick up a phone to "ok" our trade with the L.A. Specialist as well (fun of a dual floor). ONly when they both refused the order could we send to the NYSE. After a while, I just went straight to the ITS machine and told the Specialist..."if you want some too, let me know" - this eliminated the time delay and their front running me to NYSE.
It goes on and on....enough for now. And, yes, quarters and halves etc. were pretty good...if we only knew then....etc.
Oh yeah, I was online before the Internet with a thing called the Source, got me hooked on chat rooms (oh no, and I'm still here...aagghhh, LOL). For you youngsters, see below.
OK, enough for now (for sure this time).
Don
The Source (Source Telecomputing Corporation) was the name of an early online service. One of the first online services to be oriented toward and available to the general public, The Source was in operation from 1979 to 1989, when it was purchased by rival CompuServe and discontinued sometime after. The Source, based in McLean, Virginia, was owned for most of its existence by Readers' Digest and Control Data Corporation.