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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.

As with all StackOverflow Poll type Q&As, please make certain your answer is NOT listed already before adding a new answer - searching doesn't always find it (model naming variations, I assume).

  • If it already exists, vote that one up so we see what the most popular answer is, rather than duplicating an existing entry.

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  • If you have interesting or additional information to add, use a comment or edit the original entry rather than creating a duplicate.

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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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449 Answers

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Microdigital TK-85 - a Brazilian clone of the Sinclair ZX-81, with 16 KB RAM.

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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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Mine was a TRS-80, I eventually had the Model 1, model 2 and model III, as well as the coco 1 and 2. and my first program I ever wrote was a stupid tick tack toe program in Z-80 Assembly on that TRS-80 model 1.

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vote up 12 vote down

Amstrad CPC 6128 Similar to the 464, but had twice the memory (128Kb!) which was paged because an 8-bit processor can only address 64Kb at a time. Also it came with a 3" floppy drive instead of a tape drive.

No, not 3.5", 3"

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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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And, it's portable! lol – Chris Pietschmann Oct 6 '08 at 22:58
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Apple II without floppy drive

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Vic-20 for me, too.

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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 '08 at 19:27
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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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Commodore 128!

Commodore 128

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How I wanted one of these! – Nathan Fellman Jun 3 at 18:15
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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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TRS-80 Color Computer First edition with the chiclets keyboard.

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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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One of these: Sinclair ZX80 OK, it wasn't mine as such, I was only 9 at the time, but I did learn to program on it.

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Skizz

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TRS-80 Color Computer II

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Apple IIe, programming in BASIC, of course.

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

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A Bally game console with a BASIC cartridge in ca. 1978.

Check out that keyboard. There were plastic overlays for different games and the one for the BASIC interpreter gave you "color" keys -- basically three different shift/ctrl/alt keys that turned it into a "full" keyboard. There was also a "gold" key that provided whole words "print," "goto," etc to make things faster. Wow...what a drag. :)

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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 '08 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 '08 at 8:08
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This was your first PC?! Dude, I'm old. – ctacke Nov 30 '08 at 4:39
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I had an Acorn Atom. 2kb of RAM was enough for me!

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ZX81

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It even had intellisense!!! – Chris Needham Mar 20 at 11:31
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Apple ][+ - learned BASIC, then taught myself assembly.

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I bought a used Vic-20 with my own money and it even included a tape drive!

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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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IBM Model 5120

I've still got a box of 8" floppies around somewhere.

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Commodore 64!

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The commodore 64 was rockin'! – Dan Harper - Leopard CRM Sep 19 '08 at 15:46
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Load "*" ,8,1 – Penguinix Sep 19 '08 at 17:42
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Extra points if you know what POKE 53280,7 does! – Steve Hanov Sep 19 '08 at 19:05
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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 '08 at 11:11
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Give me a Compute magazine and a Commodore 64 ... oh the memories! – mattruma Sep 20 '08 at 20:15
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