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  3. What was your first computer?

What was your first computer?

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  • N Nish Nishant

    I mean the first one of your own. Not the first one you used in college or school or work. Mine was a 80286/2MB Ram/40 MB HD :-) 1.44 MB FD and 1.2 MB FD DOS 5.0 Nish


    Check out last week's Code Project posting stats presentation from :- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments.

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    LittleYellowBird
    wrote on last edited by
    #50

    :-D No one has the same first computer as me! Acorn Electron, 6502 processor, output on tv! Wrote my college project in assembler on it. Cost me a £10! First PC - Amstrad 1640, 40Mb Hard disk and I was really proud because it had a CGA display, cool.... :cool: ali p

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    • D David Cunningham

      Hey Nish, That was my first computer too (the first one I owned anyway) and I'm 35. David http://www.dundas.com

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      Nish Nishant
      wrote on last edited by
      #51

      David Cunningham wrote: That was my first computer too (the first one I owned anyway) and I'm 35. Oh, I see :-) If you hadn't mentioned the 35, I'd have put you in the 45+ group that I put Norm into :-) Nish


      The posting stats are now in PDF:- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments. Updated - May 04th, Saturday

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      • N Nish Nishant

        I mean the first one of your own. Not the first one you used in college or school or work. Mine was a 80286/2MB Ram/40 MB HD :-) 1.44 MB FD and 1.2 MB FD DOS 5.0 Nish


        Check out last week's Code Project posting stats presentation from :- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments.

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        Jack Handy
        wrote on last edited by
        #52

        I had an Atari 800 -Jack To an optimist the glass is half full. To a pessimist the glass is half empty. To a programmer the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.

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        • T Tom Archer

          Mine was an Adam what used audio-like casettes. I worked on that thing night and day realizing that after 18 years I had finally discovered the one thing I enjoyed and do very well. I completely taught myself to program (casette Basic) and wrote, as my first application, a football game. Man, what I wouldn't give to be able to go back and see that code now :) Cheers, Tom Archer Author, Inside C# Author, Visual C++.NET Bible A total abstainer is one who abstains from everything but abstention, and especially from inactivity in the af

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          Nish Nishant
          wrote on last edited by
          #53

          Tom Archer wrote: Man, what I wouldn't give to be able to go back and see that code now I understand. I still wish I could have saved my floppies from 12 years back :-( which contained my first programs some of them in GWBASIC :-) Nish


          The posting stats are now in PDF:- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments. Updated - May 04th, Saturday

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          • T Todd Smith

            IBM 8088. No harddrive. Single floppy. I started typing in BASIC programs from magazines at the tender age of 8. w00t! Todd Smith

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            Nish Nishant
            wrote on last edited by
            #54

            Todd Smith wrote: IBM 8088. No harddrive. Single floppy. Thats the same one we had in school. With green monochrome monitors :-) I still remember booting up from the floppy and it used to take so long then ;-) we thought. Now it takes 10 ten times that much time to logon to XP :-) Nish


            The posting stats are now in PDF:- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments. Updated - May 04th, Saturday

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            • J Josh Knox

              Got a TI99/4A when I was 11, back in 1986. Taught myself BASIC on it so I could make Space Invaders aliens dance around the screen. It had no permanent backup so I had to reenter the program each time. The got an Apple IIE. Then a 486 which I started using Borland Turbo C++. Good ole days. Josh Knox that-guy.net


              "UNIX is basically a simple operating system, but you have to be a genius to understand the simplicity." Dennis Ritchie.

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              Nish Nishant
              wrote on last edited by
              #55

              Josh Knox wrote: It had no permanent backup so I had to reenter the program each time :omg: :omg: :omg:


              The posting stats are now in PDF:- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments. Updated - May 04th, Saturday

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              • N Nish Nishant

                I mean the first one of your own. Not the first one you used in college or school or work. Mine was a 80286/2MB Ram/40 MB HD :-) 1.44 MB FD and 1.2 MB FD DOS 5.0 Nish


                Check out last week's Code Project posting stats presentation from :- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments.

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                Michael Dunn
                wrote on last edited by
                #56

                One of my uncles was really into computers, so back in the early 80s I'd get hardware from him as he upgraded. I started with some TI model (don't think it was the famous 99/4A, some earlier model) and the included BASIC manual, but I couldn't really make sense of BASIC back then (hey, I was only like 10 years old!). It wasn't until an after-school class on BASIC using Apple //e's that I actually started doing programming. --Mike-- Buy me stuff! (Link fixed now) Like the Google toolbar? Then check out UltraBar, with more features & customizable search engines! My really out-of-date homepage Big fan of Alyson Hannigan and Jamie Salé.

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                • L l a u r e n

                  zx81 with a wobbly 16k ram pack :)


                  situations to avoid #37:
                  "good morning ... how many sugars do you take in your coffee ... and what was your name again?"

                  coming soon: situations to avoid #38: "...and the dog was there too?"

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                  Tomaz Stih 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #57

                  Thank you Laureen. With my 29 I feel old among these youngsters. I started with ZX81 with 1k, :-) followed by ZX Spectrum 48K, Amstrad CPC 464, Atari 520 ST, IBM PC XT 640Kb RAM/4Mhz/10MB HDD/Hercules...Oh, well. Regards, Tomaz

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                  • G Giles

                    Atari 520 ST. They were the days.:(( :(( I've still got it, and get it out everynow and again. Still works. :)

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                    Tomaz Stih 0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #58

                    Those were the days. Campus word processor, Lattice C and GEM... Regards, Tomaz

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                    • M Michael A Barnhart

                      Two answers depending on what you call a computer and how far own goes. First one in my family that I used was a Wang 720 (they are in musuems) First one I actually purchased was a vic 20. You can do things with 4k of memory and none of those fancy hard drives. To be conscious that you are ignorant of the facts is a great step towards Knowledge. Benjamin Disraeli

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                      Michael Dunn
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #59

                      Michael A. Barnhart wrote: You can do things with 4k of memory 3583 bytes, actually. ;) --Mike-- Buy me stuff! (Link fixed now) Like the Google toolbar? Then check out UltraBar, with more features & customizable search engines! My really out-of-date homepage Big fan of Alyson Hannigan and Jamie Salé.

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                      • P Phil Speller

                        Original ZX Spectrum - with 48K RAM and dead-flesh feel keyboard. I orginally wanted a ZX81 but couldn't afford the £99 to buy one (being 12 and getting only £1/week pocket money). Free

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                        Tomaz Stih 0
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #60

                        I worked as a delivery boy at age 13 to upgrade from ZX Spectrum to Amstrad (Schneider) CPC 464. It was a luxury computer, with beautiful monitor, 640 x 200 resolution, 80 chars screen width and built in tape. >:-) Plus, it talked Z80, which I learned on Spectrum. Tomaz

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                        • T Tomaz Stih 0

                          Thank you Laureen. With my 29 I feel old among these youngsters. I started with ZX81 with 1k, :-) followed by ZX Spectrum 48K, Amstrad CPC 464, Atari 520 ST, IBM PC XT 640Kb RAM/4Mhz/10MB HDD/Hercules...Oh, well. Regards, Tomaz

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                          Tomaz Stih 0
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #61

                          > IBM PC XT 640Kb RAM/4Mhz/10MB HDD/Hercules Or was it 8Mhz? Can't remember anymore. :-) I just know it had absolutely charming orange screen, which was different from them green screens of neighbourhood peasants. :cool: Tomaz

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                          • T Tomaz Stih 0

                            Thank you Laureen. With my 29 I feel old among these youngsters. I started with ZX81 with 1k, :-) followed by ZX Spectrum 48K, Amstrad CPC 464, Atari 520 ST, IBM PC XT 640Kb RAM/4Mhz/10MB HDD/Hercules...Oh, well. Regards, Tomaz

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                            l a u r e n
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #62

                            i am rather gob-smacked tomasz the list of computers you have exactly matches the list i would make wierd but cool :)


                            situations to avoid #37:
                            "good morning ... how many sugars do you take in your coffee ... and what was your name again?"

                            coming soon: situations to avoid #38: "...and the dog was there too?"

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                            • M Michael Dunn

                              Michael A. Barnhart wrote: You can do things with 4k of memory 3583 bytes, actually. ;) --Mike-- Buy me stuff! (Link fixed now) Like the Google toolbar? Then check out UltraBar, with more features & customizable search engines! My really out-of-date homepage Big fan of Alyson Hannigan and Jamie Salé.

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                              Michael A Barnhart
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #63

                              I actually had a VT100 terminal emulation program going. Although trying to keep up with the 300 baud modem was a little tricky :) To be conscious that you are ignorant of the facts is a great step towards Knowledge. Benjamin Disraeli

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                              • E Erik Westermann

                                Atari, Apple...geez - you guys should have started with the only *real* computer.......

                                :) Commodore 64 :)

                                * 1 MHz processor * 64K RAM * 5 1/4 inch floppy drive that has a capacity of an amazing 170Kb, which you could double when using both sides of the disk! Ducks - expecting somehting to be thrown in this direction Essam - Author, JScript .NET Programming
                                ...and a bunch of articles around the Web

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                                Roger Wright
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #64

                                Essam Ahmed wrote: Commodore 64 That was for rich kids! :-D

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                                • J Josh Knox

                                  Got a TI99/4A when I was 11, back in 1986. Taught myself BASIC on it so I could make Space Invaders aliens dance around the screen. It had no permanent backup so I had to reenter the program each time. The got an Apple IIE. Then a 486 which I started using Borland Turbo C++. Good ole days. Josh Knox that-guy.net


                                  "UNIX is basically a simple operating system, but you have to be a genius to understand the simplicity." Dennis Ritchie.

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                                  Shog9 0
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #65

                                  Josh Knox wrote: It had no permanent backup so I had to reenter the program each time. :) Boy do i remember that! I've still got notebooks filled with BASIC code that i wrote for this purpose; i can tell you, my typing improved drastically from using that machine :-D --------_**

                                  People they come together People they fall apart. No one can stop us now 'cause we are all made of stars...

                                  **_

                                  -- Moby, We are all made of stars

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                                  • N NormDroid

                                    Tandy/Radio Shack TR80 Normski. - Professional Windows Programmer

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                                    Mike Gaskey
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #66

                                    Norm Almond wrote: Tandy/Radio Shack TR80 Norm - mine was the same. Called it a Trash-80. Casette input / output. 4k of RAM. Bought it in '79 for $600.00

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                                    • N Nish Nishant

                                      I mean the first one of your own. Not the first one you used in college or school or work. Mine was a 80286/2MB Ram/40 MB HD :-) 1.44 MB FD and 1.2 MB FD DOS 5.0 Nish


                                      Check out last week's Code Project posting stats presentation from :- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments.

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                                      Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #67

                                      An Apple /// (OK, so it was my Dad's ;))...6502 processor with 128k of bank switched memory, one 5 1/4 inch floppy disk, no hard disk and a green screen monitor. X| A little while later we fitted a Z-80 card which ran CP/M 2.2, which is when I really started learning. :) Andy Metcalfe - Sonardyne International Ltd

                                      Trouble with resource IDs? Try the Resource ID Organiser Add-In for Visual C++
                                      "I would be careful in separating your wierdness, a good quirky weirdness, from the disturbed wierdness of people who take pleasure from PVC sheep with fruit repositories." - Paul Watson

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                                      • N Nish Nishant

                                        I mean the first one of your own. Not the first one you used in college or school or work. Mine was a 80286/2MB Ram/40 MB HD :-) 1.44 MB FD and 1.2 MB FD DOS 5.0 Nish


                                        Check out last week's Code Project posting stats presentation from :- http://www.busterboy.org/codeproject/ Feel free to make your comments.

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                                        Mike Epprecht
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #68

                                        Nish [BusterBoy] wrote: I mean the first one of your own. Not the first one you used in college or school or work. Olivetti 8086, 8Mhz, 640Kb, 20MD HDD, 5.25" FDD, EGA, DOS 3.x The included GW-BASIC was what got me started in this industry. Cheers Mike Johannesburg, South Africa

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                                        • R Roger Wright

                                          Essam Ahmed wrote: Commodore 64 That was for rich kids! :-D

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                                          Erik Westermann
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #69

                                          :-D That was a fun computer - it was amazing what some people got it to do. I used to run my own BBS off that system. I still have it - my kids hook up the monitor to their Nintendo GameCube system - works great! I remember I spent $800 on that system at the time - that was more than I earned working all summer :omg: Essam - Author, JScript .NET Programming
                                          ...and a bunch of articles around the Web

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