Early 80s.
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Early 80s. A small lawn, a red Vespa, and the illusion of absolute freedom.
Judging by the color of the Vespa, it was probably powered by FreeBSD, even if it did not exist yet.
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Early 80s. A small lawn, a red Vespa, and the illusion of absolute freedom.
Judging by the color of the Vespa, it was probably powered by FreeBSD, even if it did not exist yet.
@stefano OMG sooo cute!!!
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Early 80s. A small lawn, a red Vespa, and the illusion of absolute freedom.
Judging by the color of the Vespa, it was probably powered by FreeBSD, even if it did not exist yet.
@stefano At the very least, we now know where the later choice of operating system based on predominant logo color came from. ;-)
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@stefano OMG sooo cute!!!
@_elena many, many hair ago
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@stefano At the very least, we now know where the later choice of operating system based on predominant logo color came from. ;-)
@mkj now that I think about it: among my favourite toys, there were a roundy fish (!!!) and a sort of house, with a big orange flag (!!!).
Yes, imprinting. -
Early 80s. A small lawn, a red Vespa, and the illusion of absolute freedom.
Judging by the color of the Vespa, it was probably powered by FreeBSD, even if it did not exist yet.
@stefano oh my god, really? Italian kids got to ride around on little toy Vespas?
I mean we had the Big Wheel which feels quintessentially American, but still... that is so cute, I love it. -
@stefano oh my god, really? Italian kids got to ride around on little toy Vespas?
I mean we had the Big Wheel which feels quintessentially American, but still... that is so cute, I love it.@feld it definitely is! 🙂
And yes, the Vespa toys were quite common. That Vespa could still be in my parent's house. -
@piero sure. But BSD meant, for me, BiscuitsSweetsDesserts