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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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TRS-80 as well. Had a couple of 'game' coding books, one with superheroes on the cover, and I forget the other one. Although the one I had wasn't the model pictured, and we just used a TV as a monitor.

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Tandy 1000 SX ... I made that thing do quite a bit.

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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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As crazy as it may sound I actually think I was already programming basic on my C64, before I ever touched an abacus. – Robert Gould Sep 20 '08 at 0:03
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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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I had an atari 400 with 16k of memory. And yes I did write code in BASIC on the thing. I later upgraded it to 64k and a replacement keyboard to overcome the membrane keyboard that was rather cruel to code with. Ah, the life of an 9 year old.

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For me, it's a toss-up between the graphing calculator (TI-85) that I programmed in high school and the original IBM PC, where I first learned programming in BASICA

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TI Professional

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Atari STm, connected to a monochrome TV, with an external floppy and GFA Basic!

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

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Wow, the memories. Atari 800. I was about 12 or 13. BASIC cartridge. ANTIC magazine and a tape recorder to store programs. Learned all about Sprits, DMA, collision and it had an amazing 4-voice synthesizer chip that I coded some vicious music with! I would give a year of my life to go back and spend it in those days again! Wonderful memories for me.

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An IBM Thinkpad 300c

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At school we had TRS-80 Model 1s with the mini-tape drives, later the school got the TRS model IIIs. The first one I had at home was the TI-99 4/A, with the Peripheral Expansion Box which made it look a lot more impressive.

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I don't actually know what it was, but the Internet tells me that it looked like a Compaq Portable III. Amber monochromatic screen, keyboard that attached to it, BASIC and WordPerfect.

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Thomson MO-6. There's very little chance that you know what this machine if you didn't live in France at the time. Awesome computer in any case:

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As you can see it used standard audio tapes for storing the software. Copying one was as easy as having a double tape deck (which wasn't that common at the time) and making a copy of the audio track. I think it was a bit of a problem for all the software vendors at the time :)

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A pentium 200 with mmx Using Visual Studio 6 we had that thing pumping out Open GL 3D images from C++! USING 128 mb OF ram and a 4GB harddrive.

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The Tandy Sensation (486, 4mb ram, 1x cdrom, windows 3.1)

The Tandy Sensation

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The Apple ][+ at school in 3rd grade. The countless hours spent after school writing GOTO statements were sheer joy--except perhaps when you had to shift all of the line numbers because you didn't leave large enough gaps!

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Vector Graphic with David Ahl's BASIC Computer Games:

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A custom built PC from a local shop, which I got in 2000.

AMD K6-2 450 MHz, 32 MB RAM, 13 GB HDD, 8 MB SiS 6326 AGP, ISA Sound Card, 14" CRT

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Commodore 64! I learnt basic and assembly on that wee beasty :)

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I had a TI-99 in college, but I never did anything useful with it. My first home computer I had for real was a HP 150 in approximately 1984. I was one of the very few people to have a computer in college. It had a touchscreen monitor!! My mother worked for HP as a programmer, so she got a discount on it - it was only about $5K. I used it all through college and for at least four years afterwards.

But what made me fall in love with programming was taking a programming class in high school in about 1980. alt text

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My first computer was a Hewlett Packard with 128MB RAM, a 20GB hard drive, and a Pentium III at 533Mhz. The price was about $1300 at Best Buy.

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Laser 128

We had a Laser 128 (Apple IIc clone) that we got in about 1989 when I was in 8th grade or so. I did some sweet Basic on that baby...

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Mine was an Oric Atmos. ¿Does anybody remember it?

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Ohio scientific superboard II -- 8k RAM, MS BASIC, an old B&W TV, and a cassette tape recorder

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Apple IIe compatible

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I'm another early sinclair lewis 1000 user (before the Timex version) around 79 /80 I guess - it was the one with 1K ROM 1 (it could have been 4)K RAM.

K

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The first computer I had at home was a Commodore 64 with a tape drive. I used a Commodore PET, TRS-80 Model II, and Apple IIe at school. Later I learned dbase II programming on a kaypro II.

I really fell in love with programming on the 64, Sprites, Simons Basic, even some assembly and C.

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Pravetz 8 - Made in Bulgaria:) It's an Apple II clone if you wonder. It was kind of common in Bulgaria back in the days.

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