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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 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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I discovered my passion for programming on a Tandy TRS-80 when I was about 6. After becoming bored with the contents of the TRS-80 programming manuals I started adapting programs from any BASIC books I could find to the TRS-80 (and later ported them to my next computer - An Epson PC-XT 8086).

Such fond memories... I wonder if it's still in my parents' garage.

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Macintosh IIsi

Man, I still haven't found Carmen Sandiago!

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Commodore Vic-20 with tape cassette to save data.

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Honeywell 316

"Mom's" first computer?


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A Nascom 1 of 1978/79

HW

1 MHz Z80, 2 kB RAM of which appr 850 bytes user RAM, 1 kB ROM, RS232, RF out, TTY, PIO lines, 300baud casette, single board uncased.

SW

Z80 machine code + monitor

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TRS-80 MC-10. I think my mom got it free from some crazy guy my step dad knew in the early 80s, when I was about 13. It came with the small keypad, 4k RAM with an external 16k module, cassette loaded, a few books with BASIC programs, and you could connect it to a color TV.
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Ohio Scientific Challenger 2P

  • 4K RAM
  • cassette tape
  • dual 8 inch floppy drives (later)
  • acoustic coupler

It had several different operating systems, OS65D, and UCSD Pascal. I either typed games in from books and magazines or bought them.

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Intel SDK-85

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PROCESSOR 8085-A, RAM: 512 bytes ROM: 2k

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A Thomson TO7/70

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The image is stolen borrowed from Wikipedia :-)

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Apparently I'm the only one so far(!)...

I give you, the mighty, Amstrad PCW9512:

Amstrad PCW9512 with daisywheel printer

Primarily a word processing machine - you could either boot into LocoScript, or if you used a different (3") floppy, into CP/M. In CP/M you could use something called 'Mallard BASIC' (if memory serves - so named because it was as fast as an Olympic runner named Mallard!)

Ahh... the nights I was kept awake by the thundering of the daisywheel printer. Sounded uncannily like a machine gun!

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The Sharp PC-1211 hooked me into computing: alt text

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Despite the 380+ answers, this one was still missing: MikroMikko!

These were manufactured in Finland by Nokia Data, a division of the company that later went on to concentrate on mobile phones and networks. (Nokia Data was sold in 1991 to ICL, which in turn was absorbed to Fujitsu, or what nowadays is Fujitsu Siemens Computers.)

I had the original model, MikroMikko 1 (pictured), which dated from early 1980s. It was equipped with:

  • 2 MHz Intel 8085
  • 64KB of RAM
  • No hard drive but two 5.25" floppy drives (which had been labeled "program" and "data" by some previous owner)
  • Gorgeous green-on-black display
  • Some early version of DOS, I think, and a Basic interpreter

I can't really say I fell in love with programming with it - I just toyed around and created primitive Basic programs. (I did plan some elaborate text adventure game but never got around implementing it properly with my very limited Basic skills.)

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I can't believe nobody has mentioned the Acorn System One

1k of ram, plus another 128 bytes in the io chip

I managed a basic interpreter, a 7 segment space invaders, and a Mastermind game solver (but not all at the same time).

I even bought the 128 byte ram upgrade

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This was my first computer as well, the 6502 was quite an elegant processor. Got it for my 15th birthday 30 years ago! – Tony Edgecombe Oct 8 at 19:53
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Datavue Spark

The Datavue Spark, though mine was white(ish)!
I've had countless nights with GW-Basic, Quick Basic, DOS debug and old Sierra games together with this beast...
My screen died after about a year, after I fiddled with some wires back in the modem slot, and after that I had an external CGA montitor instead.

The Datavue Spark was one of the First Laptops Ever Made. It Featured a Powerful (Back Then) Intel 8088 with a clock Speed of 9.77MHz.

It had a tiny blue 5” screen made by Epson that supported 16 Colors. DOS could be run on this system, but needed a boot disk to do anything.

Due to a very high retail price, very few Spark were sold. Datavue made it up until 1993, then the company went under due to the many more powerful laptops on the market at the time. Datavue produced many other laptops.

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Superboard II - Challenger 1P (from Ohio Scientific. 4kb RAM!). We used it in our school for our Computer Club.

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Sharp MZ-80K

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It was my grandmothers, got me interested in programming.

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This is a duplicate – Stephen C Aug 2 at 7:05
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My first foray into computers was a HP 41CV. Do not for one moment think this was a mere calculator just because of the form factor.

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I had a REAL computer.

With a HARDDRIVE. And a CD-ROM DRIVE. It ran WINDOWS 3.1!

(No idea on the stats, I just remember it ran Jazz Jackrabbit from DOS)

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Jazz Jackrabbit was FREAKING SWEET! Ah, those were the days. – Tullo Oct 15 at 4:20
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Mine was a Synertek SYM1 6502 development board with (IIRC) 1K ram, a 20 something key membrane keypad and 6 digit LED 'display'.

SYM1 development board

I later expanded to 4K ram, a BASIC ROM, and a keyboard + TV adapter.

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Franklin Ace 1000

The Franklin Ace 1000

Eventually, Franklin lost a patent infringement lawsuit to Apple, for this fine Apple ][+ clone.

I learned to program BASIC on this guy, waaaaay back in the mid-1980s. My brothers and I used to write text adventure games on it.

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Brazilian computer CP 500. MIne was white. Urgh... ugly, but I loved it. alt text

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Vtech Precomputer 1000 at age 8

Fundamentaly an educational toy, but it had a BASIC interpreter which was the only feature I ended up using :D

Precomputer 1000

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The 1st computer in our home was a Z1013, a ZilogZ80 compatible single-board computer made and sold in eastern germany from 1985. It had a 1Mhz processor and 16KB RAM.

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z1013

Robotron Z1013

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The IBM Convertable! Taught myself Basic on this bad boy.

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Timex Sinclair ZX81

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I bought a used Vic-20 with my own money and it even included a tape drive!

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Vic-20 for me, too.

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Apple II without floppy drive

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