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What was your first home computer? The one that made you "fall in love" with programming.


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The photos inline with the answers make this an awesome poll. We should add photos to every answer where possible. – Schnapple Sep 19 '08 at 17:01
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How about adding: - If you own the duplicate, please delete it. – 1.01pm Jan 11 '09 at 3:32
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Still waiting for some 19y old to post picture of MacBook Air ... – stefanB Jun 4 at 5:37
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Should this be marked as "belongs on superuser"? – Paul Nathan Jul 16 at 22:59
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LOL stefanB :-) Indeed, iPhone is far more powerfull than most of computers listed here :-) – Bernard Notarianni Aug 24 at 20:04
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450 Answers

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Although the Apple IIe was my first computer, the first computer I used and fell in love with programming (10 CLS; 20 PRINT 'HELLO'; 30 GOTO 10) was the Brazilian version of the Japanese MSX, the "Gradiente Expert XP-800", around 1985.

If you look close, it does look like modern PC

The MSX was based on the good old 8-bit Z-80A, with 3.58 Mhz clock and 64KB or RAM.

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awwe geez, here's one I don't think anyone would know... VIDEOTON TV-Computer Learned BASIC on it alt text

it even had a slogan - "Kein Bild, Kein Ton - Videoton"

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http://www.compuclasico.com/argentinos.php?model=cz.php

Czerweny CZ 2000, argentinian sinclair clon.

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The Intellivision Odyssey 2.. Technically just changing the cards for the game controllers can be considered programming. (as a kid I was the only one that could figure it out when my parents couldn't.)

Also - you can consider the times when playing Astrosmash on level 10+ and having smart bombs fly right through you can be considered software debugging. (that is when I first learned about sprite-collision.)

The Intellivision Odyssey 2

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This handsome devil:

PC Jr.

Which was essentially a Scubaventure-dedicated machine.

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Microbee 16K IC (with only a cassette tape drive).

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Burroughs B22, with a tower, 8 inch floppy

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My first computer was a Logix Electronic computer.

With a clock frequency of about 0.2 Hz. 8-)

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I got an Acorn Electron in 1993 from my brother in England, who inherited it from a crazy trip to a car boot sale. I leaned how to use a keyboard and write BASIC, getting magazines to get listings for Games. I still have the thing along with an Amiga 600, which I got years later.

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The Schneider Euro PC.

http://www.heimcomputer.de/english/pcs/europc.html

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well, an 11/44, actually, from a company that didn't want it any more because they were upgrading to VAX. The power bill went up, but I never needed to turn the heating on that winter!

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Vector Four. CPM operating system. Z80 processor. 2 8-inch floppy drives. And Basic, where I got hooked on coding.

Read more about it here

(I see someone listed a Vector One, but this one is quite a bit different.)

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Kaypro with 10MB Hard Disk, Z80 processor running CP/M

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HP-2116. In the minicomputer days, I defined "personal computer" to be "anything you could reboot without anyone caring", meaning a single-user machine. This particular machine was stuck into the lab for experimentation after they upgraded the time sharing system with something newer.

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Timex Sinclair ZX81

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Like a few folks here, the C64 was my first. At the time I didn't' think of getting into a career of programming (hell the area that I was from, they still don't' have reliable high speed internet), but had some programming books for the machine, and even made some programs in BASIC (remember GOTO loops? Good times.).

Also found that my one of my uncles was studying up FORTRAN and COBOL back when they were brand new, and used to read (well try too anyways) the manuals from his schooling days. Should have read a bit more, I'd be making more money if I knew that stuff.

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how old are you guys?

anyway, i used a pentium III at about 5-6 years ago. i am going to give it away.

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It was a Compaq Portable with an 8086, 20MB HDD, and 2 5 1/4" drives.

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My first was a 386 with DOS and Windows 3.1 that my mom bought from an infomercial on TV. The computer came with a CD of "Where in the World is Carmen San Diego?". The first thing I did was try to insert the CD into the 5.25 floppy drive. I succeeded, but luckily I didn't break anything.

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The 1st computer in our home was a Z1013, a ZilogZ80 compatible single-board computer made and sold in eastern germany from 1985. It had a 1Mhz processor and 16KB RAM.

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z1013

Robotron Z1013

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My very first computer was a TRS-80 Color Computer. I love that ugly grey wedge so much. Many a night was spent in the Dungeons of Daggoroth. :)

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TI-99 4a. Dude, that thing rocked.

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Dr Nim - it plays the game of Nim

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxBghtQ8McA

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Dr. Nim - it is a mechanical computer that plays Nim

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxBghtQ8McA

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Amstrad CPC 464! :)

Amstrad pic

All my friends had nintendos and amiga 5/600's at the time - but when my mom came home with one of these bad boys I was sold :)

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Commodore 64. It had the tape deck too -- and I LOVED it.

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Mine was an Epson HX-20. Black. I learned programming on it, by editing values from the manual's examples.

Fun fact: I could barely read back then, I was that young.

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Sharp PC-1500 Pocket Computer with 8K of RAM, a cool printer/cassette interface that could print/plot in 4 colors and turn a cassette player (or an external relay) on/off programatically (making for a great little alarm clock that could turn lights on or sound an external bell).

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first was a 386.. Then i upgraded it to 486.. so on =)

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My first homecomputer was the famous c-64 , where i have started to create crazy games with basic :-)

After this time, i have bought an 8086 from IBM, with this nice "green" Screen.. what a time..

First real pc

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