vote up 93 vote down star
19

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.

  • If you see a duplicate, vote it down so the top entries have only one of each model listed.

  • If you have interesting or additional information to add, use a comment or edit the original entry rather than creating a duplicate.

flag
1  
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
6  
How about adding: - If you own the duplicate, please delete it. – 1.01pm Jan 11 '09 at 3:32
14  
Still waiting for some 19y old to post picture of MacBook Air ... – stefanB Jun 4 at 5:37
8  
Should this be marked as "belongs on superuser"? – Paul Nathan Jul 16 at 22:59
1  
LOL stefanB :-) Indeed, iPhone is far more powerfull than most of computers listed here :-) – Bernard Notarianni Aug 24 at 20:04
show 8 more comments

450 Answers

prev 1 9 10 11 12 13 15 next
vote up 0 vote down

I also started with the Vic 20. Still have the books somewhere. The computer died spectaculair because i tried to do other things with the casette port ;-).

Lots of sweet memories (or should i say mid life crisis).

link|flag
vote up 39 vote down

The IBM PC model 5150 -- the current Wikipedia poster child for all IBM PCs!

IBM PC model 5150

My Dad brought this home from his job at IBM when I was about 4 or 5 years old. Specs of the 5150 that we had:

  • CGA display (16 colors!)
  • Dual 5 1/4 floppy drives, A: and B: (A: is the one on the left)
  • No hard drive!
  • 64 KB of RAM
  • Keyboard: Function keys (F1-F10) on the left! (See the image)

Like other machines of the time, the 5150 came with BASIC on the ROM image; the machine would boot to the BASIC development environment if there was no floppy in the A: drive. You couldn't save your programs, though, unless you booted to a DOS diskette (DOS 2.0!) and ran BASIC from there.

By the time I was 6, I was spending hours and hours programming on this thing! F1=List, F2=Run, F3=Load, F4=Save...

Dad eventually added a 2400 baud modem to the machine -- I was in 3rd grade at the time, so around 1985 -- and I logged onto my first BBS from this machine, too.

link|flag
1  
This was also my first, minus the CGA display (mine was monochrome text only)... man, I sure miss that keyboard though. They don't click like that anymore. :) – David Crow Sep 20 '08 at 9:07
1  
> (A: is the one on the left) < I can't believe you had to type that. It must be a sign of the times. Or I must be getting old. Or both. – Euro Micelli Jun 3 at 22:26
show 11 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

My experience, was on a Apple II, and it was formatting a floppy disk. I thought it was the coolest thing i'd ever seen or done!

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

386 with colour monitor & a enormous 4 MB RAM

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

A 286 PC when I was in high school.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

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

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

alt text

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.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Sinclair zx81

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

IBM PC Jr with extra floppy drive, extra memory, color monitor, chicklet keyboard and a daisy wheel printer. I was the only person in my dorm with their own PC in 1987.

Image copied from Wikipedia.

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 19 vote down

My first was the Apple IIc. This was arguably Apple's earliest aesthetic device, so I figured it needed its own answer.

alt text

link|flag
2  
I still have mine and it still works. That little beast is what I taught myself to program on. (Gotta love learning to code with only a list of keywords) – Matthew Whited Jun 3 at 15:44
1  
I wrote more lines of BASIC on this little beauty than I can remember. They were mostly failed attempts to write text-based adventure games. – Adam McKee Jun 18 at 15:23
1  
Forgot about space quarks..can't forget about that... – ahiru Jun 30 at 18:45
show 5 more comments
vote up 4 vote down

Commodore Plus/4

link|flag
vote up 21 vote down

The great ATARI 1040 STF with 1 MB RAM and the razor sharp SM 124 Monitor.

My first programming environment was GFA Basic, a really impressive Basic Interpreter with procedural concepts.

ATARI 1040 STF

link|flag
show 5 more comments
vote up 8 vote down

No pics, but mine was a 286 PC, 640K RAM, no hard drive, but it had TWO FLOPPY DRIVES (A, B).

So we used to create a RAM drive on it and load TURBO PASCAL, a fantastic compiler and really a beautiful language to program (Pascal).

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

A HeathKit H89. It had 2 Z-80 processors!

Well, technically, one of the processors was a terminal controller and couldn't be programmed, but I got a kick out of telling people it had 2 processors.

alt text

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

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

link|flag
vote up 17 vote down

Amiga 1000, the first Amiga home computer.. hey, I had the expansion to 512KB of RAM! :D

alt text

link|flag
show 8 more comments
vote up 2 vote down

Tandy RLX 1000

alt text

link|flag
vote up 8 vote down

Zeos 486dx2. 66mhz of screaming raw processing power. It could play doom. Also, it weighed about 40 pounds since the entire case was made out of what seemed like half inch thick steel.

It eventually died (bad power supply), although the 14 inch monitor soldiered on for a few more years before starting on fire and going out in blaze of glory.

alt text

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

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.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

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.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Ohio Scientific C8P. 8k ram, basic in ROM. 64 character wide screen (spacious compared to the 32 character wide screen of it's predecessor, the C4P).

There were no games for it, to speak of, so I wrote my own, learning programming as I went. Worked for me!

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

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

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

alt text

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

I don't see it here, but a school friend had an old Oric-1:

alt text

Did anyone else have one?

link|flag
show 5 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

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

link|flag
3  
This should have been a comment... – Omar Kooheji Jun 3 at 13:09
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

Phoenix Commodore, with 640KB RAM, 20MB Hard disk (early 90s)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Amstrad CPC 464

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

HC 85

HC 85

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

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

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

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

link|flag
prev 1 9 10 11 12 13 15 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.