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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).

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

alt text

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

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

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Challenger 2P. Floppies FTW.

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

Atari 130XE

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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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The Apple IIe.

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TI 99-4a though I mostly gamed on it.

Then C-64 and many blissful hours typing in programs from Byte magazine... IIRC, they had some kind of assembly validator that would beep when a line was correct.

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Tandy TL/2 1000

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Computer that got me into programming was an IBM 360/40, but the first 'home' computer I had was an Amstrad CPC464 - you could run CP/M if you had the disk drive - and it came with the firmware manuals.

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I had access to an IBM 5100 for a while. But there's an entire graveyard of early computers that passed through my hands. Everything from DEC's VT180 to a Coleco Adam to an Atari 800 and a 1040ST and an Amiga 2000 before getting a PC clone when Windows 3.1 came out.

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I consider the Parker Brothers Merlin to be the first computer I owned. It had a microprocessor and you could program music with it.

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Damn, what a great walk down memory lane with that little owl calculator, the vic-20, the Apple IIc, Trs-80. The Coleco Adam. I didn't see that above (but I probably missed it).

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+1 for Apple ][e

I started out playing the Wizardry series, then fell into dabbling with BASIC programming through high school. Though not the smartest guy around, programming came naturally. Years later I got back into professional programming with Visual Basic during college, and now C#.

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My first was a TI-994a however the one that I learned to program on was Tandy Color Computer 2. I saved up the $250 of so to get a 156k floppy drive. Wrote a few games and learned a little assembler on it as well. I had it for years. But I always pined away for an Amiga.... ahhh the good old days..

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Apple II Europlus. My dad took me to his lab and they had Apple IIs there to control physics experiments. After many Saturdays at the lab he bought one for us and I used and abused it for years.

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Packard Bell (shudder) 50 MHz 486DX2, a whopping 4 MB of RAM, upgradeable to 64!! Ran Dos 6.22, Win 3.11, even had a CD-ROM!

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an abacus

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Commodore VIC-20 Woot Woot!alt text

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An ELF kit using the redoubtable RCA 1802 processor. It was a single circiut board with some wood wedges on the back to set it at an angle so you could use the hex keyboard in comfort. A two digit LED display and 256 bytes of memory. Very cool for 1976.

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TRS-80. 4K memory, used an audio cassette for program loading and saving.

Spent more than $500 of my own money to upgrade to 16K memory.

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this is was my great firts programing PC:

AT&T Safari 3151 Laptop Computer

AT&T Safari 3151 Laptop Computer with Intel 486 DX4-25/75 MHz Processor

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The Timex Computer 2048, the variant only sold in Portugal and Poland.

I spent quite a few hours of my youth fiddling around with the azimuth of the head of my tape recorder.

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TI Speak & Math ;)

but seriously, probably Logo on Apple II was my first experience with programming

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A split between an Apple IIe (wrote BASIC programs)

AND: a XT TURBO 640K. It still runs DOS 4.1, for such classic arcade epics such as Zaxxon and Test Drive 1 & 2. Ran on a CGA monitor... yikes.

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The first one I owned was in 1995 I think - a 486 DX4 100MHz 540MB HDD .. i forget how much RAM it had :)

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Xerox 820-II at my Dad's office. I always got a kick out of copy being "PIP" which I believe stood for peripheral interface program.

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