After an off-season filled with constant chatter about his future, and a grudging “Uh, sure, he’s our quarterback,” from Shanahan and Lynch, the team mortgages the farm for a new, young guy. Second, if you wanted to undermine Jimmy Garoppolo’s confidence, congratulations. Whoever it is had better be ready for sky-high expectations and a baptism under fire. None of which screams “can’t miss prospect.”
Lance checks all the boxes, but who did he play at North Dakota State? Mac Jones was successful at Alabama, but who wouldn’t be with that roster? Fields is a big guy, over 220 pounds, who has had some ups and downs at The Ohio State, but mostly ups. He’s shifty and very modern-quarterback-y. Wilson is slight but is said to have elite arm talent. For the rest of his career, the words “whom the 49ers traded three first round draft picks to choose,” are going to be in his bio. This just put a ton of pressure on a rookie quarterback.
So if the 49ers wanted Wilson wouldn’t they have worked out something with the Jets? Couldn’t they get the #2 choice? Maybe just a swap of spots with New York? Do they know who Saleh is going to draft? Or are they OK with missing on Wilson and choosing among the others?īecause one thing is certain. The odd thing is that Wilson is said to have a slight edge on the rest of that group, and the Jets and new coach Robert Saleh, are said to be very interested in him. On the whole, although not a state of the art development environment, Qbasic might still be of use to anyone trying to get started learning a BASIC programming language variant or, most probably, to any teacher trying to get Microsoft's old and stubborn BASIC IDE up and running on a modern Mac computer.Instead, we are left with the second (Jets) and third picks (49ers) to sort out the four remaining candidates, Zach Wilson (BYU), Justin Fields (Ohio State), Trey Lance (North Dakota State) and Mac Jones (Alabama).
Moreover, once Qbasic is installed, you will be able to use all of the features available if you would run it on any Windows computer, with the added advantage of being able to use it on your Mac's desktop.
Simple to install and use Mac wrapper application for Microsoft's Qbasic IDE This being said, despite the fact that Qbasic will start in a small sized window on your Mac's desktop and if you are not a fan of squinting at a blue little rectangle for tens of minutes in a row, you can always make it go full-screen using DOSBox handy OPTION+ENTER keyboard hot-key. BASIC interpreter and debugger, wrapped up in a DOSBox shell and ready to use on any Mac computerĪlthough Microsoft has never released an OS X version of their Qbasic IDE, one can still use it with the help of this DOSBox based app wrapper, designed to allow any Mac user to run Qbasic without having to boot into their Bootcamp partition or to install Windows in a virtual machine.Īfter you have this little Qbasic wrapper installed on your Mac, you can launch it by double clicking the QB app in the "QBasic" folder created within your Mac's Applications directory. One such tool was a programming language designed in the 60s which, because it was embedded in many of the new personal computers sold in the 80s, caught a lot of traction and became the weapon of choice for any programmer wannabe.Īlthough using it was as easy as writing your programs in text form and then running them with the help of the BASIC interpreter carefully bundled within the ROM memory of the computer, the need for a more powerful programming environment became quite evident.īecause of this and the fact that the boost in home computer sales coincided the DOS OS becoming more and more popular, Microsoft created such a tool, an IDE named Qbasic and designed to make it easier to debug one's BASIC programs and to take advantage of its inbuilt and real-time expression evaluation engine. Development environment created in the DOS era for helping its users make use of powerful new features This is because more often than not, people that began using computers during the start of the home computer era had a limited choice of tools for making the most out of their new, quite expensive at the time, "toys". Whether you are a programmer by trade or not, chances are that you've heard at least once about BASIC being mentioned as the first programming language someone learned when first dealing with computers.