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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.

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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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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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Commodore Pet Basic 4.0, 32K ram and a tape drive, this was back in 1981.

I wrote a version of Defender on it ( called Paladin ) in 13k of hand coded 6502 using the hex editor since the assember required a disk drive and I didn't get one of those for another year.

Pet

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Dude, the Commodore Pets we had in school (would be 1977, I guess) only had 1k of RAM. We did have one upgraded model with 4k! Such luxury. – Brad Wilson Sep 20 '08 at 22:36
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Russian KUVT Korvet. It was based on Soviet microprocessor, a clone of the Intel 8080 CPU - KR580VM80A

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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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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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ZX 81

getting sentimental

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Commodore Vic-20. Great piece of kit with those big plug-in 64k RAM Packs.

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An unbranded 386 PC with both 5 1/4" and 3.5" floppy drives. It came with DOS but we soon upgraded to MS Windows 3.0 with a dozen or so floppies. Before that I had done programming on GW Basic on school computers, so DOS based QBasic loaded with this thing made me super-excited. It was a super-productive IDE for me :) No need to generate line numbers for each line :)

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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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+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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Atari 800 XL!! --yeah, I'm getting sentimental too... sad... :)

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Atari 800. $747 - 24k - cassette. Upgraded to 90k floppy $444.00. $250.00 to upgrade RAM to 48k. $200 for 16k RAM module and $50.00 to solder 16k onto the existing 8k board. (bruceatk)

Atari 800
Atari 410 Tape Drive

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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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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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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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Commodore 64!!

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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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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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trs80 model1

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Commodore 128D /w Epyx Fastload Cartridge

C128D

Though I had access to a few Apple ][e's and such before I owned a PC.

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an Apple 2 e

I learned to program on the Apple ][e. AppleSoft BASIC is... is not something I like to think about too much ;)

The Macintosh SE was the one that made me fall in love with computers.

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Kaypro II!

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Learned BASIC on this bad boy.

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WTF is that?! I wish computers still looked like that! – reefnet_alex Sep 19 '08 at 20:34
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My dad's first computer! We lost TV reception in the entire house every time he turned it on. good times. – bendin Mar 21 at 12:43
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Very cool box. CP/M and a game called 'Ladder' Hooka!!! – n8wrl May 29 at 16:48
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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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Mine was the Timex Sinclair 1000

TS1000

soon after was the TS2068

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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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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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an abacus

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