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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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450 Answers

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ZX Spectrum 128K

Sinclair ZX Spectrum

The first machine I got my hands on, was in year 1995, a Sinclair ZX Spectrum 128. I was just 10 years old and had started my tryst with code.

Tell you, you can't even imagine how HAPPY :) I was, to own a 'PC' (if you may call it) which

  • Had BASIC interpreter only with a 128K RAM (mentioned in RED bold letters on its body)
  • Used a Mono cassete tape for storing data
  • Used a TV screen for Console Output

But, it was good enough for anyone who has to start learning programming I did and grew along as the PCs around me did too.

First computer is like your first love. You can't just forget it.

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ZX-81

  • 1KB RAM
  • 8KB ROM
  • 3.25 Mhz Z80 CPU

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The first computer my family owned was the HP 5030, preloaded with Windows 95.

I feel insufficiently old school.

Although, the first computer I used regularly was the Apple IIe's at school. The sales clerk was a bit confused when I said I wanted to buy one of those suckers when my parents said we could get a computer in 1996.

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Like a lot of Dutch: MSX Philips VG 8020.

I remember one time, I had programmed a fractal (Mandelbrot) in MSX-Basic. After 1 week (!) of calculating I came home from school. My mother told me, she turned off my computer when cleaning the room.

But the first computer I ever used was (naturally) the IBM System 34 (or 36, don't really know, I was only 10 years old). When I was visiting my father at work. After 15 minutes I was able to find the games.

MSX Philips VG 8020

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The HP 41C and synthetic programming - the notion that data and instructions were stored in the same (binary) format was a revelation for me as a teen. Pulling modules to blur that line between data and programs also felt like dark magic.

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The KIM-1 based 6502 Microcomputer

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Schneider CPC 464

"The Schneider CPC-464 was produced in Germany by Schneider Rundfunkwerke. It was first marketed successfully in Germany, then in France and Spain and maybe other European countries. It was basically the same machine as the Amstrad CPC-64 with a less colorful case and keyboard and some slight hardware differences, like better quality back connectors." (link)

I later even upgraded with a color monitor an external floppy disc and an annoyingly loud printer...

Schneider CPC 464

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An 8088 PC-XT clone running at something like 4MHz. 640kb RAM, MS-DOS 3.0, and GW-BASIC. Don't believe it had a hard disk, but hey, when you have two bootable 5.25" floppy drives, who needs one!?

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Dick Smith VZ200, for all the Aussies (and Kiwis, apologies spdenne) out there

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2360/2258441337_a55835352d.jpg

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alt text

Christmas gift. A little expensive, but worth its cost.

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Atari 130XE... with an XC-12 tape drive!

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I was beginning to think I was the only one! I had a floppy drive, though. :) – Bombe Dec 9 '08 at 15:34
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Computer pic

atari 520 stfm

Was the only one at school to have one of these, everyboby else had amiga 500's. I took my first look at code on this one, but couldn't get any of the stuff in a 'type this in and hit run'-book to work so gave up.

It did however teach me to solder, as the neighbour's 2-year-old sat on it, pushing one of the (pipe-ish thing for getting a hole for a screw deeper inside the case) through the keyboard pcb, breaking about 20 connections.

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Vector Four. CPM operating system. Z80 processor. 2 8-inch floppy drives. And Basic, where I got hooked on coding.

Read more about it here

(I see someone listed a Vector One, but this one is quite a bit different.)

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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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An Amstrad 464 with a green screen and a tape deck.

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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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+1 for the VIC-20.

I used to hand program a text adventure game out of the one programming magazine I owned every time that I wanted to play it.

Also, long live Omega Race!!! (which was set in the futuristic year 2003)

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Tandy RLX 1000

alt text

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Self-made computer Radio-86RK from a russian magazine.

i8080 compatible processor, 32KB of RAM, running Microsoft BASIC.

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Like several others here a ZX81 with 16K RAM pack, but I just wanted to add...

  • Do you remember typing in thousands of lines of code out of a magazine only to find the thing never worked? Programmes came in books too, and that keyboard was not built for typing. Particularly as if you pressed to hard the 16K RAM pack would bum out!
  • After all these late night typing in programmes sessions, was I the only kid to get in trouble at school for writing my sums like this:

    What is 13 * 3?
    ANS$ = 39

I got in such trouble for that...

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286SX with a whopping 2Mb RAM or would the Speak&Spell qualify?

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alt text The Sol-20 by Processor Technology which was based on the 8080 processor from Intel. I learned assembly language and it had the horrid audio cassette way of saving data. Eventually I got a 2400 baud modem and used that as well.

(Picture from sol20.org)

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Didaktik M (ZX Spectrum clone), 1992

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Didaktik

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HC-90 (with a Z80 microprocessor)
HC-90 computer

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A 486DX IBM PC Compatible Computer running on Windows 95.. Back then I used it to program in Pascal and C...

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A TRS-80

It had a fantastic 16KB of ram. Later added the Expansion Interface, a box as big as the computer, which increased the memory to a total of 48KB, and allowed you to add a floppy driver.

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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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Mine was "Alice32" ! French computer :p

alice32

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Programmable microcalculator MK-61

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The 1st computer in our home was a Z1013, a ZilogZ80 compatible single-board computer made and sold in eastern germany from 1985. It had a 1Mhz processor and 16KB RAM.

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z1013

Robotron Z1013

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