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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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449 Answers

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I don't yet see an image of...

Spectravideo SVI 728

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Yes, the keyboard is just as terrible as it looks.

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I love the placement of the power button. Must have been a joy spending hours writing a good program and going for left shift... boom. – Ludvig A Norin Sep 19 '08 at 21:29
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The Apple IIe.

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My first home computer was a pieced together 486 running DOS 5.1. It was horrible, but I loved to tinker around with it. Whoda thunk I'd be writing code for a living back then!

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Atari 130XE, the last of the Atari 8-bits.

Atari 130XE

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The first family computer that I was able to work alone on was a Tandy 1200 (an 8088 XT clone). Wrote many lines of GW-Basic code on it.

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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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BBC Model B - my father managed to cobble a 3.5" floppy drive to it (rather than the then-standard 5.25") and I still remember installing a word processor by physically inserting a microchip! alt text

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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 '08 at 16:00
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"while holding the Little Professor in my hand." I'm surprised you haven't gone blind. – Earwicker Dec 11 '08 at 23:59
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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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An Amstrad 464 with a green screen and a tape deck.

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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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Sinclair Spectrum 48K - Real programmers use rubber keys!

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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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Used to call these TRASH-80 because it was made so cheaply :-) – DJ Oct 7 at 23:06
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Apple II - no games available so I had to try and write my own....not very easily if I remember correctly

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Challenger 2P. Floppies FTW.

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

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Tandy 1000 A. Nothing like computers from the Trash Shack.

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Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48k with a 3rd party keyboard upgrade

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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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My first computer was the Timex Sinclair ZX81 as a birthday gift in 6th grade and I then purchased the 16 Kb memory module upgrade so that I could load the cassette tape based games that I had also bought with allowance. I remember loading and saving programs to tape and eventually writing a Farm Market Simulator game and playing that with all of my friends in the neighborhood. We'd all crowd around the old B/W television set and watch the random numbers generated for corn, soybeans, cows, and pigs and then we'd all pick how much we'd invest in the items each month.

It was my first introduction to programming and even though I couldn't get my hands wrapped around how the games I played worked, Flight Simulator and Maze, it started me down the technology path and shaped the patience I have for troubleshooting the issues I run into today. Thanks Timex/Sinclair...

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Dad had a Franklin ACE1200 (the Apple ][ clone with double full height 5 1/4" drives)

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which we wrote a BASIC looping program to 'do' my 'homework' (entire class punishment for something trivial) of 100x "I will not yada yada" given by a lunch monitor.

my own first computer was a C64 which i punched a few basic progs from some books into until someone gave me a box of games.... and so endeth my programming life until university!

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Amiga 500! With BASIC!! alt text

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SWEET memories. Too bad Commodore couldn't market the machine. Otherwise, I think it would have more marketshare than Macs do. – Troy DeMonbreun Sep 19 '08 at 16:11
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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 '08 at 14:30
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Apple ][E of course. In fact that computer is older than me (Built in the seventies) but it got me started and I used it for years claiming it as my own when the family got a 386.

I started programming on it when I was seven because my Dad had been teaching my brother how to code on it and I was jealous for the attention. It ended up that my older brother now does nothing to do with coding and it has been my greatest hobby ever since.

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I got a Coleco Adam as a Xmas gift in 1984. It was one of the greatest fiascoes of the early PC industry.

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I kept it for only a couple weeks and returned it for full refund, then went out and got a Commodore 64.

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Apple IIe...taught myself BASIC and Logo, followed by a IIgs where I taught myself Pascal.

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TRS-80 Color :) Classic.

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An Aquarius, it came with 4k of memory! I still have it in storage, just for kicks.

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Apple IIgs! I taught myself Apple BASIC. :-)

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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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