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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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An IBM PC jr. Given to me by my boss at Amdek. I managed to score a Parallel adapter so I could print to a Ricoh daisywheel printer. Found an article on how to modify the floppy controller to add another disk drive (hacked it up and added two more). DOS 2.1 running a modified Vdisk.sys for a ram drive. DOS was in A:, Applications in B: and Data in C:. A few bytes to change the equipment status byte and I was flyin'. Whoo Hoo!

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My first computer was a 50 Mhz Windows 3.1 machine that ran everything in DOS.

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Science of Cambridge Mk 14

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An Oric Atmos
Oric Atmos
Sorry, couldn't find a better image

Oh ... does a Commodore PR100 count?
Commodore PR100

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Also a TRS-80 Model I. We had the AT case sized floppy and PPT adapter that sat under the monitor for it, and the floppy disk drive that sounded like a garbage disposal unit to sit next to it.

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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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Christmas gift. A little expensive, but worth its cost.

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The first computer I owned was a BBC model B but technically the first computer I programmed was a kitset system based on a RCA1802 (possibly a COSMAC ELF) that belonged to a friend. This machine had a set of toggle switches on the front and a LED hex display.

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A Philips P2000T. My father used to work at Philips Research labs. The first 50 machines were sold at a large discount to people working there with the provision that the source code for programs they wrote in the first year(s) would be made available to all P2000 users.

Wow, 12 pages of answers.

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Intel SDK-85

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

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Leading Edge

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A Heathkit H8 (sorry, no picture)

2MHz 8080 16K of RAM (I splurged!) Audio tape for storage.

Purchased in kit form, everything except the CPU card had to be hand assembled and soldered. The 10 slot backplane took a lot of patience.

I also bought a H19 video terminal, but that was back ordered for a few weeks. So I got to run hand-assembled programs keyed in on the front panel in octal until that arrived and I got to use the assembler.

Six months later I bought a floppy drive and controller and never looked back.

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An Atari 130XE. 128kB of RAM, tapedrive and floppydrive (overclocked with a so-called Happy chip).

I programmed an adventure game in Turbo Basic. Later, my mother threw out the machine as junk. She hadn't realized the sentimental value. Sob...

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Radio Shack's TRS-80

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Mine was "Alice32" ! French computer :p

alice32

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My first computer was a Mac IIvi. I still have it stashed in the corner of a closet. My next computer was a 486 Windows box running Windows 95 and upgraded to 98. That was succeeded by a newer PC running Windows XP. That one's still chugging away. I plan on getting an Intel Macbook Pro soon. (The plan is to put Windows on it so I can boot into either OS.)

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my first computer was IBM 5170. Learnt Lotus and Basic on it.

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My first computer was a Amstrad PC 1640, which is an extended version of the Amstrad 1512 (more memory and EGA graphics! Yeah !).

Mine had two 5.25" floppy drives, and no hard drive (I had to return my copy of "Sim City" to the store, as it required to be installed on a hard drive!).

It was in 1988...

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I'm pretty young, so...
Packard Bell C115

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My first computer was an ABC-80 8-bit Z80. It had 16K RAM, a tape drive and a BW 40x25 screen. I think it cost around 6000 Swedish crowns in those days which was a lot.

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The Spectravideo SV-328: alt text As I recall, it had a pretty decent BASIC built into it, with graphics. I distinctly remember the revelation of using FOR loops to draw many concentric circles, each larger than the one before. :) Me being ... oh, around 7-8 years old, it did its fair share of game-playing too of course.

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intel pentium 100MHz 8Mb Ram and the tremendous amount of 1GB hard-disk-space and an borland turbo c compiler - still love that ide - has all you need - except code completion ;)

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Commodore 16

Commodore 16

And i've still got it!

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Tandy 1200

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My father had a Zx Spectrum back in 1984. I played some games, but then I was 4 and never learned how to program on it. The "computer" I programmed first was the Casio Fx-4500p calculator

I made games, math programs, and even some funny animations!!

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A Nascom 2 in 1980

Hardware : 2/4 MHz Z80, 32 kB RAM + 1k video ram, RS232, RF out, TTY, PIO lines, 300/1200baud casette, single board uncased.

Built in software : 2k monitor (NAS-SYS3) & 8k Microsoft ROM basic.

Heavily modded over the years, ended up as CP/M machine with dual floppies and 256k ram. Still have it in the shed, tried powering it up last year, dead as a dodo (doh).

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Acorn Atom

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6502@1MHz

12Kb RAM

256*192 black+white graphics

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Enterprise 128. alt text

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Sinclair QL God bless those microdrives! I then had an Atari ST, followed by a Compaq PC 386!

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