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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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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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IBM PC XT I remember spending long hours playing BEAST on that thing. Best game ever.

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Wipro Genius AT 286. 1 MB RAM. 2x5.25" floppy drives. MSDOS 6.22 and a rock solid monochrome monitor. No hard-disk. No mouse.

I couldn't locate a image of this machine, but let me tell you it was magical! Changed my life.

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My first was not the oldest one I ever owned, it was a standard Macintosh. I think my dad got it through some early-access program.

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Apple ][e :D I remember playing Stickybear Math on the monochrome green. Then, one day, my dad brought home a switch to hook the computer up to the TV!! Color monitor baby! Stickybear was never the same. On top of that my dad showed me how to write programs that drew blocks of color. I was psyched beyond belief. From that moment on, my destiny to become a programmer was sealed.

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Amstrad 464 Plus (Basic 1.1 OS)

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TI-99/4A

That was the one that did it for me. I had so much fun on it with its Basic and the Extended Basic add-on. Of course you had to be careful with the cassette and loading and saving programs. Tons of fun :)

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Casio PB-100. With the memory expansion pack that took it up to 1568 bytes of user RAM (not a typo!). It had room for 10 programs, in a tiny BASIC. Amazing what you can do in that space. And it was really easy to take to school.

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Apple II+. Love programming in Basic, including some simple graphics. Also had great games for it such as Lode Runner, Castle Wolfenstein, and Aztec (right name?).

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I nearly had a ZX81 for Christmas in around 1982 but got a VIC20 because Sinclair had trouble delivering then I had an Amstrad CPC464

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Commodore PC 80/286,Turbo Pascal and Turbo C/C++ hooked me for life and eventually made me seek a career as a programmer :)

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HC 85

HC 85

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Amstrad CPC 464

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People, please try to find pictures of your computers to include with your posts. I find them... adorable.

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This should have been a comment... – Omar Kooheji Jun 3 at 13:09
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TRS-80 Model 1. We got it when I was 8 years old, and somehow my parents got a set of programming books meant to teach kids BASIC. We also had a floppy disk (and LPT port) adapter that was about the size of a standard AT style case and sat under the monitor, while the TRS-80 Model 1 itself was built into its own keyboard.

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Commodore VIC-20, where I typed a BASIC program into it from a magazine article (a game). That was fun, and when the computer was turned off the program was gone (no cassette recorder at first to store the program).

Much later I learned PC-type programming using Turbo Pascal 1.0 on a Sanyo 555. My first real PC programming.

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One of these: Sinclair ZX80 OK, it wasn't mine as such, I was only 9 at the time, but I did learn to program on it.

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Skizz

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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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zx spectrum 48k. it was awesome. i knew every assembly command. those were the good old days.

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I had an Acorn Atom. 2kb of RAM was enough for me!

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My first home computer was a TI-99/4A, but my father at the time used to work for American International College so I got to play with a PDP/11-40 at a rather young age :)

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Sinclair zx81

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my parents bought a packard bell legend 486 with 8mb ram and a 800 mb hdd and windows 3.x but i regularly used apple IIe's in school from k-6

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