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What was your first home computer? The one that made you "fall in love" with programming.


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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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450 Answers

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Like so many of you guys my first computer was the Commodore 64. It was sold as a multipurpose computer, but I mainly used it for playing games.

Mine came with the classic tape drive as disk drives was really expensive back then.

Favourite titles: International Karate +, Ghostbusters, Commando.. ah brings back.. For all you old C64 fans, check out the C64 tribute band Press Play On Tape. I watched them at the JavaZone'08 conference in Oslo last week, and those guys are really great ;-)

My second computer was a Commodore Amiga 600 (anyone remember those?). I had a ancient 14' Sony color TV (from 1972) in my room that I used as monitor for both the C64 and the Amiga ;-)

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Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48K.

The good: It introduced me to programming.

The bad: It was BASIC.

Also, IMHO, the best keyboard ever.

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Oh how I miss my Commodore 64. SID Chips FTW! :)

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From about 1984, my parents had an IBM PC 5150, and I was so mad that it had no graphics of any sort. My friends all had Spectrums and Commodore 64s. We had a total of 2 games - Othello and "BUGS!" (a Centipede clone done entirely in ASCII characters which I still can't locate anywhere on the web to my increasing dismay). I broke Othello trying to reprogram it. Doh!

But actually, no graphics turned out to be an amazing thing as I ended up loving text adventures so much that I started writing them and programming very badly in BASIC. One thing led to another and now coding pays for my whole life. I still kind of miss the glowing green text-only interface though... but not the endless floppy disk failures. Ugh.

Oh, and I still hanker after the days I spent on my Amiga 500+ which is now going yellow in my attic. It still works somehow, just with a few more guru meditation errors.

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The Commodore VIC-20.

It had a cassette deck for permanent storage, and plugged into the TV. Had about 3.5 kb of usable RAM, more with an optional memory cartridge.

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alt text

http://www.xs4all.nl/~tluif/chescom/EngCCmk2.html

Computer name:      Chess Champion Mk II
Manufacturer:       Novag
Dates from:         1979
Dimensions:         23 x 15 x 6 cm (including display height of 2 cm)
Power supply:       adapter from 220 to 9 volt
Rating:             beginners / weak occasional players (Elo 1090)
Other details:      operated via keys
                    red LED display
                    produces tunes
                    same program also in housing with rounded edges
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Macintosh IIsi

Man, I still haven't found Carmen Sandiago!

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Orel BK08 (ZX Spectrum clone produced in USSR back in 1991)

With Basic onboard and using cassette player to load available programs.

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Commodore Vic-20 with tape cassette to save data.

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Atari 800 - still have it, still works.

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мк-85 мк-85

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I trust the "Electronica" name. – Purfideas Sep 24 '08 at 7:18
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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.
alt text

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My love for computing and programming began when I installed Visual Basic 6 on a Compaq Presario 5528

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I had an Atari 400 loaded with 8k of ram. Never thought I would use it all up. We won it from the Pepsi cap game. Way back when you knew you won without having to login to their web site and plug in a huge code.

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The first computer I remember using was a dual-boot Win95/DOS. It spent most of its time in DOS, running Mechwarrior 2.

The first computer I actually owned was a home-built 486 with DOS. I taught myself BASIC in the QBASIC interpreter.

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A Turing machine.

(Image not available)

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Amiga 1000 w/RAM upgrade. Ahh, what a sweet machine.

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Honeywell 316

"Mom's" first computer?


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

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The Epson QX-11, known also (at least in Venezuela) as the "Epson Abacus"

Quoting (and slightly editing) parts of my nostalgic ramblings from here:

Epson sold in the '80s a PC called the "QX-11". As far as I know, it was only sold in parts of Latin America and -- at least in Venezuela -- marketed under the name "Abacus" as a bundle with some very impressive (if crash-prone) productivity software with a Spanish UI, apparently custom written in-house.

An 8086-2 8Mhz processor, an impressive high-resolution monochrome display at 640x400 (fully graphic) with text sharp-as-knife; a sound chip with 3-channels (sound tones) + 1 ("noise") with 16 independent volume levels; two Atari-2600 joystick ports, a battery-backed RT clock and DOS 2.11 in ROM (fast, floppy-less boot) as well as support for some custom ROM cartridges (I never saw one, and don't know what they were for). The box was about 3" x 10" x 12". The floppies were 3 1/2", but used a 360KB format.

The Abacus software featured always-active WYSIWYG bold/italics/underline display, drop-down menus and mouse support; there was a bitmap drawing program that could be driven with a mouse or a joystick and a spreadsheet with charting that could save to the same file format as the drawing program. The Word processor had on-the-fly text justification, customizable tab-stops and margins that could change anywhere in the document and embeddable images... all this while my peers were using WordStar.

Ah, yes. It also came with GW-BASIC. I was doomed.

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I started when my dad sat me down in front of an HP desktop computer - single line of 7-segment leds for text, with a cassette interface and a big platter hard drive. Later I played a little with a Sol-20 as mentioned above. However, a couple of years later, what really caught me was the Epson QX-10 that my mom bought to do contract word-processing work.

alt text

It was a beautiful machine witih a Z-80, 265K bytes of bank-switched RAM, bit-mapped graphics, running TP/M, an extended version of CP/M. During the day she used VALDOCS, the highly-integrated WYSIWYG word-processing and business software, an at night I got to peek and poke at it with MS-BASIC and 8080 assembler. Lots of learning that summer...

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PDP-1 was the first one I used, but they wouldn't let me take it home. The first home computer was a VIC20. I eventually added a 8K RAM expansion for a total of 11.5K and a single side floppy disk drive.

Now that think about it, by very first computer was a slide rule. It was analog instead of digial, but it was still a computer!

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I had a Pineapple;

Shortly followed by an Apple ][+ for years, and then a //gs, then a 386 with no math co-processor, and a 486 DX after that... then a Macintosh Quadra 950. It could run Photoshop 2 and had a programmer's button. My PowerMac 8500/120 actually has a kind of forth built in to the OpenFirmware.

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Tandy 1000 SL running deskmate followed closely by tons of apple mackintoshes at school.

Glorious Machine.

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My first was the IBM Aptiva M Series. The first Aptiva to come pre-loaded with Windows '95. The best part of it was the software bundle which came with out, including the "Hyperman" and "Cyberia" games.

While searching for the brand of Aptiva I owned, I came across this article which announces the new, state of the art system. It was a good read for a trip down memory lane.

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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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My first was home computer was a Tatung Einstein, but I programmed on a Commodore 64 (my cousins) and a BBC Micro (at school) prior to that.
alt text

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AST 100 Mhz P1 but didn't found a photo

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Tandy 1000EX

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Still have my first computer, an Apple ][ plus.

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