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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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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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Commodore 64. It had the tape deck too -- and I LOVED it.

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Dr. Nim - it is a mechanical computer that plays Nim

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxBghtQ8McA

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Dr Nim - it plays the game of Nim

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxBghtQ8McA

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TI-99 4a. Dude, that thing rocked.

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My very first computer was a TRS-80 Color Computer. I love that ugly grey wedge so much. Many a night was spent in the Dungeons of Daggoroth. :)

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My first was a 386 with DOS and Windows 3.1 that my mom bought from an infomercial on TV. The computer came with a CD of "Where in the World is Carmen San Diego?". The first thing I did was try to insert the CD into the 5.25 floppy drive. I succeeded, but luckily I didn't break anything.

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how old are you guys?

anyway, i used a pentium III at about 5-6 years ago. i am going to give it away.

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Like a few folks here, the C64 was my first. At the time I didn't' think of getting into a career of programming (hell the area that I was from, they still don't' have reliable high speed internet), but had some programming books for the machine, and even made some programs in BASIC (remember GOTO loops? Good times.).

Also found that my one of my uncles was studying up FORTRAN and COBOL back when they were brand new, and used to read (well try too anyways) the manuals from his schooling days. Should have read a bit more, I'd be making more money if I knew that stuff.

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HP-2116. In the minicomputer days, I defined "personal computer" to be "anything you could reboot without anyone caring", meaning a single-user machine. This particular machine was stuck into the lab for experimentation after they upgraded the time sharing system with something newer.

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Kaypro with 10MB Hard Disk, Z80 processor running CP/M

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Burroughs B22, with a tower, 8 inch floppy

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http://www.compuclasico.com/argentinos.php?model=cz.php

Czerweny CZ 2000, argentinian sinclair clon.

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awwe geez, here's one I don't think anyone would know... VIDEOTON TV-Computer Learned BASIC on it alt text

it even had a slogan - "Kein Bild, Kein Ton - Videoton"

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Although the Apple IIe was my first computer, the first computer I used and fell in love with programming (10 CLS; 20 PRINT 'HELLO'; 30 GOTO 10) was the Brazilian version of the Japanese MSX, the "Gradiente Expert XP-800", around 1985.

If you look close, it does look like modern PC

The MSX was based on the good old 8-bit Z-80A, with 3.58 Mhz clock and 64KB or RAM.

alt text

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TRS-80 Color :) Classic.

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

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Sinclair Spectrum 48K - Real programmers use rubber keys!

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TRS-80 Color Computer II

although programming with it didn't cause me to "fall in love" with programming

some of the games were fun tho...esp Dungeons of Daggorath

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ZX 81

getting sentimental

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Commodore Vic-20 Boot to a basic interpreter. Had an audio tape drive too. Monitor was a TV. Got it at K-Mart!

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Vic-20, then an Atari 400, then an Apple II

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Amstrad CPC 464 - took so long waiting for the damn tapes to load that I just started writing stuff myself :p

Amstrad CPC 464

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Atari ST 1024, with the mono monitor. Terribly neat machine - sort of a Mac Lite.

At the same time I was coding on an IBM 3090 mainframes at work using Cobol/CICS. C on the Atari was way more interesting.

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Amstrad CPC 664

This model sat between the 464 (but had a disk drive instead of a tape drive), and the CPC 6128 but had 64K of RAM instead of 128K.

Is still own it!

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Sinclair ZX81, upgraded to 16K with expansion pack. (Originally 1K of RAM.) Did a lot of BASIC programming on it and even dabbled in Z80 assembly.

I still have it, sitting in a box somewhere.

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Mine was a Sinclair Z81.

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Commodore 16

Commodore 16

And i've still got it!

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Sord M5. Played games for a few days, then found the cartridge marked "Basic G".

SordM5

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Commodore 64 with a Tape drive only. I wrote so much code the cursor would pause for a few seconds after hitting enter...

Later I got a 1541 Floppy drive, from there I was Amiga fan...

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Commodore 64!!

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