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


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1 
The photos inline with the answers make this an awesome poll. We should add photos to every answer where possible. – Schnapple Sep 19 at 17:01
6 
How about adding: - If you own the duplicate, please delete it. – 1.01pm Jan 11 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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415 Answers

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vote up 194 vote down

Commodore 64!

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The commodore 64 was rockin'! – Dan Harper - Leopard CRM Sep 19 at 15:46
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Load "*" ,8,1 – Penguinix Sep 19 at 17:42
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Had these at school when I was 8. Anyone remember 'Logo' with the drawing turtle? First 'programming language" I learned. Things like functions, abstraction, loops. I told my Dad I waned to be a 'logo programmer when I grew up. – Ron Tuffin Sep 20 at 11:11
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Give me a Compute magazine and a Commodore 64 ... oh the memories! – mattruma Sep 20 at 20:15
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vote up 80 vote down

zx Spectrum 48k

Take that you 16k owners :D

Check it OUT! http://www.twinbee.org/hob/play.php?snap=jetsetwilly

ZX Spectrum ///

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vote up 70 vote down

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This is sacrilege but why am I thinking "Will it blend?" :-) – Jonathan Webb Sep 19 at 19:19
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Not THE first computer, YOUR first computer.... geesh! – Aardvark Sep 25 at 22:16
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That's just too funny. got my upvote. – Ben Oct 14 at 20:12
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vote up 54 vote down

ZX81

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It even had intellisense!!! – Chris Needham Mar 20 at 11:31
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vote up 54 vote down

Amiga 500! With BASIC!! alt text

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I still have mine in the lounge room under the TV. About once a year I pull it out and play a bit of Speedball 2, Supercars 2, and SWIV. I've got about 100 floppies with games on them. I love this computer. – Stewart Johnson Sep 21 at 14:30
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vote up 52 vote down

TI-99 4a

It had a crusty old TI-BASIC interpreter and you had to save programs on audio cassettes. I still remember how awesome it felt the first time I got that to actually work!

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vote up 45 vote down

Apple ][+ - learned BASIC, then taught myself assembly.

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vote up 40 vote down

BBC - awesome machine!

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And the way the machine would pause the cassette player during loading which ended up stretching the tape so that it stopped working. Finding programs on a 90-minute cassette was a pain as well. – Jonathan Webb Sep 19 at 19:27
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vote up 33 vote down

Not programmable (I guess you could hack the ROM), but I distinctly remember the a-ha moment on groking division while holding the Little Professor in my hand.

                                               Little Professor

Huh, I just discovered it's featured on The National Museum of American History http://americanhistory.si.edu/teachingmath/html/enlarge/2001_9284.htm website.

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I had one of these! Thanks for the nostalgia moment – Graeme Perrow Sep 19 at 16:00
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vote up 31 vote down

The IBM PC model 5150 -- the current Wikipedia poster child for all IBM PCs!

IBM PC model 5150

My Dad brought this home from his job at IBM when I was about 4 or 5 years old. Specs of the 5150 that we had:

  • CGA display (16 colors!)
  • Dual 5 1/4 floppy drives, A: and B: (A: is the one on the left)
  • No hard drive!
  • 64 KB of RAM
  • Keyboard: Function keys (F1-F10) on the left! (See the image)

Like other machines of the time, the 5150 came with BASIC on the ROM image; the machine would boot to the BASIC development environment if there was no floppy in the A: drive. You couldn't save your programs, though, unless you booted to a DOS diskette (DOS 2.0!) and ran BASIC from there.

By the time I was 6, I was spending hours and hours programming on this thing! F1=List, F2=Run, F3=Load, F4=Save...

Dad eventually added a 2400 baud modem to the machine -- I was in 3rd grade at the time, so around 1985 -- and I logged onto my first BBS from this machine, too.

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This was also my first, minus the CGA display (mine was monochrome text only)... man, I sure miss that keyboard though. They don't click like that anymore. :) – David Crow Sep 20 at 9:07
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> (A: is the one on the left) < I can't believe you had to type that. It must be a sign of the times. Or I must be getting old. Or both. – Euro Micelli Jun 3 at 22:26
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vote up 31 vote down

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As crazy as it may sound I actually think I was already programming basic on my C64, before I ever touched an abacus. – Robert Gould Sep 20 at 0:03
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vote up 30 vote down

Apple IIe, programming in BASIC, of course.

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vote up 30 vote down

A 386DX, when I was about 4. It was state of the art, and cost about $1500 or something stupid..

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Also had a turbo button (didn't know why it exist)

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turbo button: at the time the machine was lauched, there were slower machines on the marked and more importantly software build for slower machines. Also because of the commonly used turbo botton, every new customer would want one on his/her new computer. – Hojou Sep 20 at 11:49
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haha, we used to sell computers back in the 386/486 days and we HAD TO HAVE cases with a turbo button and a turbo MHz display ... the only thing the TURBO button did was changing the MHz display but the costumers were happy! :) – steffenj Sep 22 at 8:08
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This was your first PC?! Dude, I'm old. – ctacke Nov 30 at 4:39
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vote up 28 vote down

TRS-80, I believe, was one of the first I ever got to use (as a very small child). The first one I actually programmed on was an Apple IIgs. I prgrammed all sorts of stuff in Apple BASIC, and used to run programs that were printed in a computer magazine (can't remember the name of it). That did it for me, though it took a lot of years (college) before I actually dove into computers head first.

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I still have the old IIgs sitting around some where. I'm tempted to see if it still works!

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vote up 23 vote down

TRS-80 Color Computer II

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vote up 22 vote down

Atari 800 XL!! --yeah, I'm getting sentimental too... sad... :)

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vote up 17 vote down

Commodore Pet Basic 4.0, 32K ram and a tape drive, this was back in 1981.

I wrote a version of Defender on it ( called Paladin ) in 13k of hand coded 6502 using the hex editor since the assember required a disk drive and I didn't get one of those for another year.

Pet

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vote up 16 vote down

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Osborne 1, running CP/M. I learned BASIC, Pascal and DBase programming on that one! Sweet memories... all my friends had Commodore C64:s, but I had a real computer with no graphics capabilities and no games.

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vote up 16 vote down

TRS-80 Color Computer First edition with the chiclets keyboard.

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vote up 16 vote down

The great ATARI 1040 STF with 1 MB RAM and the razor sharp SM 124 Monitor.

My first programming environment was GFA Basic, a really impressive Basic Interpreter with procedural concepts.

ATARI 1040 STF

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vote up 16 vote down

My first was the Apple IIc. This was arguably Apple's earliest aesthetic device, so I figured it needed its own answer.

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I still have mine and it still works. That little beast is what I taught myself to program on. (Gotta love learning to code with only a list of keywords) – Matthew Whited Jun 3 at 15:44
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vote up 13 vote down


ZX80! still have it. still works.

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As I started with a ZX81, the ZX80 was a kind of legendary lost ancestor thing. I never even saw a picture of one until about 1984, I think. Was it basically like a ZX81 but permanently in 'FAST' mode so the display stopped working whenever it had to do anything? – Earwicker Dec 11 at 23:56
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vote up 12 vote down

Amiga 1000, the first Amiga home computer.. hey, I had the expansion to 512KB of RAM! :D

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Atari 400

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SCNR: That thing looks soooo ugly :-) – Nils Pipenbrinck Sep 19 at 22:09
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vote up 11 vote down

Commodore 128D /w Epyx Fastload Cartridge

C128D

Though I had access to a few Apple ][e's and such before I owned a PC.

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vote up 9 vote down

IBM Ps1 hehe with 2mb of ram

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vote up 9 vote down

Apple IIgs (used). Taught myself basic on it.

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