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


There are 300+ entries, many (most?) of which are duplicates.

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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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Atari 400

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SCNR: That thing looks soooo ugly :-) – Nils Pipenbrinck Sep 19 '08 at 22:09
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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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IBM Ps1 hehe with 2mb of ram

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2MB of RAM? You showoff!!! ;) – ivan_ivanovich_ivanoff Jul 1 at 8:40
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Apple IIgs (used). Taught myself basic on it.

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Mine was the Timex Sinclair 1000

TS1000

soon after was the TS2068

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Ferranti Mercury

Ferranti Mercury. They didn't have "Home Computers" back then...

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wow... fantastic! – ramayac Sep 21 '08 at 22:06
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Beautiful. Reminds me of the Burroughs B5500 I saw in high school, or the IBM 1620 I used in college, then on to the 360 and 1130. – Mike Dunlavey Dec 16 '08 at 18:01
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wow, had look up wikipedia on this one.. it's amazing how far did technology progress in last 50 years. – lubos hasko Aug 2 at 6:59
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The mighty Acorn Electron, purchased from Boots the Chemists because my parents could not afford the BBC Micro that I really wanted. It allowed me to do my school computer club homework at home though. My "monitor" was a 14" black and white TV with a rotary tuning knob. It would slowly drift off frequency and need tweaking back on to the correct channel periodically. "Elite" seemed to take forever to load but was one of the most awesome games ever.

Acorn Electron on Wikipedia

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Atari 800. $747 - 24k - cassette. Upgraded to 90k floppy $444.00. $250.00 to upgrade RAM to 48k. $200 for 16k RAM module and $50.00 to solder 16k onto the existing 8k board. (bruceatk)

Atari 800
Atari 410 Tape Drive

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мк-85 мк-85

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I trust the "Electronica" name. – Purfideas Sep 24 '08 at 7:18
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BBC Micro Model B

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A BBC Micro Model B when I was 7

It had a cassette interface and plugged in to a regular TV

I taught myself Basic on it and then taught myself 6502 assembler.

Some years later we got a word processor (Acornsoft View) ROM installed in it, a floppy drive (double sided, double density, twin floppy drive!), a proper monitor and a dot matrix printer.

It was all the computer I needed for about 10 years

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Zeos 486dx2. 66mhz of screaming raw processing power. It could play doom. Also, it weighed about 40 pounds since the entire case was made out of what seemed like half inch thick steel.

It eventually died (bad power supply), although the 14 inch monitor soldiered on for a few more years before starting on fire and going out in blaze of glory.

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No pics, but mine was a 286 PC, 640K RAM, no hard drive, but it had TWO FLOPPY DRIVES (A, B).

So we used to create a RAM drive on it and load TURBO PASCAL, a fantastic compiler and really a beautiful language to program (Pascal).

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Basic BASIC

A borrowed copy of Basic BASIC, and a pad of paper.

My parents couldn't afford to buy me a computer (I couldn't afford to purchase my own computer until after I'd been programming for 8 years). The local high school didn't get a computer until the following year. The closest computer access for me was a dialup terminal at a public library 20 miles away.

So my first dozen programs were all written out by hand, and then executed on paper...

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vote up 7 vote down

Kaypro II!

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Learned BASIC on this bad boy.

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WTF is that?! I wish computers still looked like that! – reefnet_alex Sep 19 '08 at 20:34
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My dad's first computer! We lost TV reception in the entire house every time he turned it on. good times. – bendin Mar 21 at 12:43
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Very cool box. CP/M and a game called 'Ladder' Hooka!!! – n8wrl May 29 at 16:48
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Commodore Amiga. First home computer to have a dedicated graphics processor (AGA).

Mine was an Amiga 1200, 2MB RAM, 14MHz CPU, 3.5in floppy, no hard drive. I got it in 1992.

I got a demo of AMOS Professional with a magazine. In less than 770KB it provided a BASIC interpreter, editor (with auto-indentation), animation capable paint package, audio editor, 2-pane file manager like FreeCommander, online help and sample programs including a Mandlebrot explorer and a Mario clone. All in 770KB!

Amiga 1200

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AMOS! That was a great little development package. – Jonathan Webb Sep 19 '08 at 19:41
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Hey, Francois Lionet has put the AMOS source code online [here][1]. :-) [1]: clickteam.com/eng/downloadcenter.php?i=58/… – Jonathan Webb Sep 19 '08 at 20:21
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Colecovision + Adam computer. This thing was inexpensive, came with a cassette drive, printer and Apple BASIC. I was able to upgrade to a Commodore 64 shortly after.

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IBM PC Jr with extra floppy drive, extra memory, color monitor, chicklet keyboard and a daisy wheel printer. I was the only person in my dorm with their own PC in 1987.

Image copied from Wikipedia.

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The IBM PS/2 owned by my parents (still working to this day).

IBM PS/2 model 30

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Dragon 32 With a 5+1/4 drive incuding Sprite Magic! Those were that days.

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Amstrad PC 1512

with two 5.25" floppy drives and a color monitor

It came with MS-DOS and the GEM window system. When I tried to make a backup copy of the GEM floppy, I actually destroyed it by confusing the SOURCE and DESTINATION parameters :-) That was my first WTF moment.

But I didn't find out about programming until I got my next computer, found QBasic and read the help file.

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This was my first one too. I started programming with it - typing in assembler copied from a magazine, and the BASIC that was in GEM. – harriyott Sep 19 '08 at 22:36
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I don't see it here, but a school friend had an old Oric-1:

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Did anyone else have one?

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I started on a TRS-80 Pocket Computer that my uncle gave me when I was 9 or 10: TRS-80 Pocket Computer I punched in a BASIC slot-machine program from a manual, and edited the source so I could cheat! Those keys were tiny, even for a kid!

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vote up 4 vote down

While not as cool as many above.

Packard Bell 486DX2, 4MB on-board RAM, few months later I upgraded with additional 12MB on three 72 pin simms.

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I had the TI-99-4A and the Extended Basic cartridge. Made a pretty decent Pac-Man knock-off at the time too. I think we even sold some software cassettes of it here and there.

I remember using the sprite animation to create little music videos - I mean if you were going to have a cassette player hooked up to the thing, you might as well pump some music out too!

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an Apple 2 e

I learned to program on the Apple ][e. AppleSoft BASIC is... is not something I like to think about too much ;)

The Macintosh SE was the one that made me fall in love with computers.

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Dragon 32.

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Sigh :'( I still have mine... the single piece of hardware that changed my life, I suppose... I was eight years old. – Manrico Corazzi Sep 19 '08 at 20:22
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Commodore Plus/4

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Timex Sinclair ZX-81 / 1000 With the expansion memory and all

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An old Compaq

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Commodore 16... parents did not want to buy me the 64k version... ahh miss those days.

Commodore 16

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