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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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Timex Sinclair 1000 that my parents bought for me at a grocery store. Followed four or five years later by a Commodore 64, which I used for about seven years (until college).

I still have both computers...

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Sinclair ZX Spectrum 16K, later upgraded to a mammoth 48K! My Dad bought it directly from Sinclair Research Ltd in 1982.

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Commodore 64, it's BASIC language and some times later I've get back to this machine and had fun with motorolas assembler.

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First computer ever used: one of those Apple II in 6th grade (1989).

First computer at home: My dad bought an IBM PC clone by Hyundai (1890). MS-DOS with GW-BASIC.

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I'm another Sinclair boy. Started with a ZX80 (for my 10th birthday (and christmas too, since it was so expensive!)). I was a Sinclair fanboy for years too. I even had one of those awful QL things with the microdrive ...

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Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48K. After a total of 2 weeks with BASIC managed to find the complete ROM Dissasembly book and learned a LOT on programming and neat techniques. That was when I decided to be a software engineer

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Apple IIc. I actually ended up hauling it back and forth to Junior High School for almost a year.

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The Apple IIe my parents bought. It was great! I played SuperBunny, and Castle Wolfstein. My parents bought me a book with simple games to program using Apple Basic. That computer is probably the main reason I'm a software engineer today!

alt Apple IIe Those were the days...

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A Micron Pentium 90... wow do I feel young I started in Paradox and moved to Delphi, Python, C/C++, Haskell, etc

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Apple ][+. Had to buy a chip to be able to display lower case on the green-screen monitor. But it had a TV out and could do some games in 16 colors, quite a big deal at the time (1981). Then bought an Apple ][c and after that a Commodore Amiga 1000 (1985). The Amiga was quite a computer for the time as well.

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Apple IIe

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Zenith 386 with a 512 MB hard disk alt text

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Sinclair ZX81:

Sinclair ZX81

Followed by a Spectrum 48k, then finally an Amiga 256k! Since then it's been a steady stream of Apple Macs with brief forays into Thinkpads and an EEEPC.

What a long crazy journey it's been!

EDIT: changed 32k to the correct 48k config as J. Topley pointed out in the comments. My memory/logic sometimes fails me.

@Stu Thompson: I didn't see a pc succession identical to my own anywhere else. Sure a few Sinclair ZX-xx's as first computers, but my answer wasn't solely about that. There is other contextual meaning.

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HP-65,

I was like single-digit in age and heard my father and uncle debate whether this was a "universal computing machine" and the answer came down to that little DSZ at the bottom... I had to try it.

hp65 prog calculator

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Well.... an Apple IIe at school, which prompted me to get a Commodore 64 at home, which was my only computer from 5th grade until sometime in my first year of college (in '90-91). I did BASIC, Assembly, and Pascal on that little beastie.

Incidentally, I had my C64 modded to add a second SID (sound) chip for six-voice stereo music and a 512K memory cartridge (I think... it might have just been 256K) for use with GeOS.

I'd add pictures... but there's already plenty ;)

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A 48k Apple ][+ with a composite green screen and a tape drive.

alt text

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Vic-20 but before that I had been exposed to something similar to the KIM-1. The vic-20 would be considered more of a home computer...

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Commodore 64C with external floppy drive followed by a Compaq Presario 486. First ISP was phone modem through AOL and then a 10Mbit dorm room connection at Cornell. Talk about a jump in connection speed.

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Vic 20 - Such a sweet machine - I remember saving programs to tape, and then high-speed dubbing to another tape for backup purposes - though I had exposure at school to early Apple computers, which I think might have been before we got a PC. I didn't get serious about programming until we got a 286 16mhz AT PC with GW-BASIC though, I think because I was always kicked off the Vic-20 if people wanted to watch TV.

Anyone remember this Advert?

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Compac Deskpro - PII 350 mHZ, 128 RAM, 6 GB HDD, 4 MB graphic card.
I bought this computer in 2005, for programming in C++ ;)]

http://i38.tinypic.com/nef5up.jpg

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A Digi-Comp 1!

http://www.mindsontoys.com/kits.htm

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Acorn Electron. After developing a nasty obsession with taking electronic things apart and trying to "build" computers out of wire and cardboard boxes, my parents finally took the hint one Christmas back in 1986 or so.

I had quite a lot of fun just messing about on it, and then one day I discovered BASIC.

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Acorn Electron with tape drive. Programming BASIC and playing Repton.

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Cybermax AMD-133 (overclocked from 90 [I think]) with 16MB RAM, 56k modem, 20GB HD, 4MB video card, and 17in CRT. My wife was generous enough to let me get it with her 401K check after she quit teaching.

Not to brag, but the next Christmas I got another 8MB RAM from CompUSA with my $50 gift certificate. True story.

Sorry, no pic. Cybermax went bankrupt in 2006 and I can't find any images.

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Self-built 386DX with 170 MB HDD. I don't remember how much RAM it had, but I believe it was 2 MB or something.

It ran MS-DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1, and I learned MS BASIC and PASCAL on this baby. =)

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Commodore VIC-20! 4k of RAM baby!

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Elektronika BK-0010-01 (Электроника БК-0010-01) with Vilnius BASIC in ROM.

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I had a HC91 - a zx Spectrum 48k copy when I was young (very young - 10 years).

More info here.

alt text

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466 mhz celeron, hehe, I started late, voodoo3 was such a beast for halflife1 and counterstrike

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I first started with an Oric Atmos ... 48K to do wonders in 6502 Assembly language ...

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