Amateur photographer. Did a tiny bit of HTML back when I had a blog. Learned programming, but that was back around 1980, when the Apple II was a new invention, Windows didn't exist and floppy disk drives were new and still too expensive (the hard drive didn't exist yet for consumer computers). I worked on TRS-80 Model I back then, programming in BASIC. The computer had a whopping 16 KILOBYTES of RAM, and used a dictaphone-style 1970s-era cassette tape player to save programs on high-bias audio tape - it actually saved it in sounds recorded to the tape, which were later played back into the computer through a headphone jack for reloading. A 16kb program took 30 MINUTES to load. I think my analog watch is faster and has more memory...
Funny thing: I once got a program called "Frightful Flight". Back then, "getting a program" was buying a magazine with printed BASIC commands and retyping them manually into the computer, praying all the while that you didn't create any syntax errors. As I typed, I realized that the program commands made absolutely no sense at all - there was no way on earth this thing could run or do anything on the "TRaSh-80". I finished typing up the program, saved it to tape, then checked the next instruction in the magazine: disconnect the cables linking the tape deck to the computer and press Play. Now I knew this thing was insane. I expected nothing but hissing garbage and high-frequency noise.
Imagine my surprise when I heard a crudely digitized, high-pitched and slightly sped-up version of "Flight of the Bumblebee"!
Some programmer with a lot of time. no life and some musical experience figured out that certain commands when saved to tape created certain frequencies, found ways to alter the duration of the frequencies and matched the pitches as close to a musical scale as could be achieved, and actually programmed what had to have been one of the first (if not THE first) real digital sound recordings! It was a hack of epic proportions!