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  3. Your First Computer...

Your First Computer...

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  • J jesseseger

    The first computer I remeber using was an Apple2. The first computer I bought was an HP in 1995. It came with windows 95 on it. I didn't really use it until someone bought me Star Craft a few years later. Then I used it all the time. No I don't even get to play games anymore. It's all work, work, work.

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    Flynn Arrowstarr Regular Schmoe
    wrote on last edited by
    #83

    I used the Apple II in school (primarily 7th through 10th grades, and the IIGS in 11th and 12th). Never owned one though. I did have a few disks full of little games and such with a few favorite games -- Lady Tut, Droll and some of the Wizardry games. I was able to get most of those for my C=64 as well. :) My brother had the C=Vic20, but he gave it to me when he bought a C=64 in 1984. I bought my own C=64 in 1986, and upgraded it to a C=128 after a few years. The Amiga 500 I bought in 1991. Flynn


    _If we can't corrupt the youth of today,
    the adults of tomorrow will be no fun...
    _

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    • D Dalek Dave

      Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

      ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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      rhoward
      wrote on last edited by
      #84

      Intertec Data Systems Superbrain. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superbrain CP/M and SuperDOS Z80 @ 4Mhz! 64k of ram! Dual 340k floppies! Learned to program on this machine using Leor Zolman's BDS 'C' Compiler! Those were the days! :-D Rick

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      • R RoboJRR

        A Colecovision Adam computer...it was a computer, game console and printer with TV output. It was the shiznit!

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        Glenn E Lanier II
        wrote on last edited by
        #85

        RoboJRR wrote:

        Colecovision Adam computer...it was a computer, game console and printer with TV output

        I was beginning to wonder if I was the only person that had one of these. It was turned on Christmas morning, and sat there blinking. I started talking to it, and my dad handed me a programming book -- said you have to make it talk back. From there, I went to Apple //c and IIgs, then to the 486-DX100 and other clones.

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        • D Dalek Dave

          Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

          ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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          Fabio Franco
          wrote on last edited by
          #86

          It seems nobody met the MSX. Well, that was my first, barely remember the stuff I did with it. But I do remember that it was where I wrote my first line of code.

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          • D Dalek Dave

            Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

            ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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            Shelby Robertson
            wrote on last edited by
            #87

            Compaq LTE 486DX4 laptop...to this day the best pointing device ever on a laptop.

            Trollslayer wrote:

            Meetings - where minutes are taken and hours are lost.

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            • D Dalek Dave

              Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

              ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

              Richard Andrew x64R Offline
              Richard Andrew x64R Offline
              Richard Andrew x64
              wrote on last edited by
              #88

              First computer I programmed was a TRS-80 Model I. First computer I owned was a TI-99/4A. Learned assembly on that one.

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              • A Alexander DiMauro

                My first was a Texas Instruments TI-99/4 (The first 16-bit domestic computer, according to Wikipedia...woo hoo!), upgrading shortly after to the TI-99/4A (Woo hoo!). Turn it on to a nice blank screen, and type away in BASIC if you wanted to see anything, and save to cassette tape! There was also a cartridge slot, but it was discontinued so soon after coming out that cartridges were rare...besides, I played all my games on my Atari, anyway... I spent countless hours on it programing in BASIC, it was the computer that got me into programming...so, I always have a soft spot for it.

                Richard Andrew x64R Offline
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                Richard Andrew x64
                wrote on last edited by
                #89

                I owned the TI-99/4A as well. As you say, it was the first 16-bit machine. However, it doesn't seem to garner much respect among the people who collect historic machines. There's a club near me that isn't interested in it at all, and they have more TRS-80's than you can shake a memory stick at.

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                • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                  I owned the TI-99/4A as well. As you say, it was the first 16-bit machine. However, it doesn't seem to garner much respect among the people who collect historic machines. There's a club near me that isn't interested in it at all, and they have more TRS-80's than you can shake a memory stick at.

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                  Alexander DiMauro
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #90

                  It may not have as much respect as other historic machines, but it did have a bit of a following. One other thing I remember is that it also had it's own magazine. I had a subscription, and remember spending hours every weekend typing in the huge programs that were in there. Fond memories...

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                  • D Dalek Dave

                    Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                    ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                    Graham Cottle
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #91

                    ZX80 - 1k RAM. Could do a lot with that then. UK101 - Kit built machine in the UK. 6502, 8k RAM, 1k Video memory - still got it after 25+ years! Amstrad CPC 6128 - Z80 with 128k and a 3" floppy built in. Did my final year thesis on that, including write the firmware etc for a couple of standalone processor boards. Actually broke out the expansion port on the back of it to make a Z80 emulator. Computer died after 10 years for want of an elastic band to drive the floppy disk. The old one perished and wouldn't grip :(. Still got it in the hope that I will get round to fixing it one day. Then just PC after PC after PC......

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                    • D Dalek Dave

                      Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                      ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                      urbane tiger
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #92

                      first used - ferranti sirius p/t io, bit like this one[^] - except I'm sure the one at ICI Research labs in Welwyn GC had its mandatory hi-tech p/t collection devices several feet from the punches. first owned - pdp11/23, dectapes & fanfold p/t - left rack only[^] - note the url where I found the pic

                      Multi famam, conscientiam pauci verentur.(Pliny)

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                      • D Dalek Dave

                        Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                        ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                        Wirehand
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #93

                        ELF-II like this but without all the "fancy" expansion boards Elf Photo 256 Bytes of memory programmed in machine language (anyone remeber assembler forms?) then a ZX-1000 with 16K expansion memory then a PDP-11/20 (and a room full of peripherals including a card reader) ... PC-XT - dual floppies

                        Using the latest technology to create tomorrows problems today.

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                        • D Dalek Dave

                          Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                          ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                          Yuri Vital
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #94

                          I have started with a (already) old Macintosh SE... :) Great stuff, rock solid hardware. But i have never used Mac since

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                          • D Dalek Dave

                            Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                            ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                            Pierre Buckley
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #95

                            Well, I seem to be way younger than you guys. My first was a [Book PC^] with a 400Mhz AMD K6-2 processor and 64MB of SDRAM. It came with a 10GB hard drive, which took me a while to fill. :laugh:

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                            • D Dalek Dave

                              Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                              ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                              Bob Beechey
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #96

                              Everyone here seems so young. First computer I met was feeding lab results on paper tape into an Elliot 803 which used cinefilm as permanent memory. Second was sending PL1 progs to run on IBM 360. First personal computer used was Radio Shack TRS80. First computer owned was the legendary Atari 400

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                              • D Dalek Dave

                                Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                                ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                                Jeremy Gugenheim
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #97

                                Nascom 2 (Z80) Ahhhhhh...

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                                • D Dalek Dave

                                  Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                                  ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                                  Luc Pattyn
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #98

                                  The first "computer" I owned is not in the list; it dates back more than 30 years. It was an evaluation board for a Motorola MC6800 microprocessor (1MHz, 64KB address space, 8-bit data) with 256 bytes of RAM, 1KB of EPROM, 24 keys (16 hex and 8 function keys), and six 7-segment displays (enough to see one address and one data byte). The resident "monitor" supported memory reads and writes, program execution (aka GOTO address), and file save/restore (it had an audio modem to a cassette deck, using two tones at 300 baud) so you didn't haver to retype the 256 bytes it could hold for you! Some of the first things I did were: - create a cross-assembler running on PDP11 (Fortran 4!) - disassemble the monitor; - replace the EPROM by a bigger one (4KB!), requiring a new and bigger socket; - replace the MC6800 by a 6809, which was twice as fast, and more powerful, requiring an entire monitor rewrite and a new socket. Then I created some apps, the most impressive one solved Mastermind puzzles: 4 positions, N colors (N<10) with an algorithm that was guaranteed to find the solution in N tries (checked by running a simulation on a PDP 11/40 which took a whole day for each value of N). Mastermind in 256 bytes, counting both the code and the data. Nowadays you couldn't say "Hello World!"in less than a couple MB. :)

                                  Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]


                                  The quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get. Show formatted code inside PRE tags, and give clear symptoms when describing a problem.


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                                  • D Dalek Dave

                                    Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                                    ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                                    Roger Wright
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #99

                                    How could they leave the Altair 8800 off that list? Grrr... sacrilege!:mad:

                                    "A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"

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                                    • D Dalek Dave

                                      Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                                      ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                                      Lost User
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #100

                                      1. - Some experimental development machine my Dad's student's were building at Aston University (B'ham) in the mid-70's. All switches and binary-entry but I programmed it to count down to zero then flash a lot! 2. Commodore Pet - 80 column screen and disk drive - swiped from the Uni by my dad for use at home - though I used it a lot more than him. Wrote an assembler, in BASIC, then developed a version of Missile Command (which, considering it wasn't a graphic screen - text only based, I figured was pretty clever!) I also designed and built an 'Adventure Game Engine' in the style of the original 'Colossal Cave' 3. BBC B. I was one of the first couple of hundred people to get one, after I phoned to ask when mine would be sent out, and happened to get the head honcho from Acorn (wasn't it Chris someone or other?) on the end of the phone.. I don't know if it was my pleading voice, or his desire to get out of the office, but my 'B' arrived two days later. Wrote loads, disassembled Elite and Scramble to work out how to low-level program the graphics, wrote the infamous "PooperPig" (still available and runs on BBC Emulators if you're interested - I think it is worth it just for the opening story!) 4. Atari ST - I still remember setting it up and wondering how to run anything - there was this green screen with a disk icon on it - but nowhere to type! Learned 68000 assembler (SO much nicer than 6502) and worked for Atari ST User (and even resurected Atari ST World for a while) as Technical Editor - which basically meant getting programs for the cover disk - - which really meant playing with software all day! 5. Acorn Archimedes. FANTASTIC machine. One of the best thought-out OSes I've ever used. It unfortunately didn't have a real good target market - but it sure as hell wiped the floor with most other computers at the time. 6. Some TI PC Clone I was loaned (by TI) as I was working on TI Mini computers at the time. Had fun developing some graphically rich software (analogue clock, maze drawer) but the PC didn't take off as people were still not being fired for buying IBM! 7..20 something Various PCs - oh the joy really wnet oout of the market when everything became a clone.

                                      ___________________________________________ .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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                                      • D Dalek Dave

                                        Here is a suggestion list[^] The First I used was a Teletype Terminal connected to a 360 and only had paper out put, no screen. Then a ZX80 Then a 380z The first I owned was a ZX Speccy 48K I loved the PET and the Amiga. Ah the nostalgia!

                                        ------------------------------------ "When Belly Full, Chin Hit Chest" Confucius 502BC

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                                        l_d_allan
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #101

                                        IBM 7094 (pre 360) in 1968 at age 16. One JCL job card per day. Traded for unused cards of my classmates to learn Fortran. On career track to be 3033 systems programmer in early 80's, and bought a Sinclair when they first came out, paying extra to have 8kb instead of 4kb, iirc. Figured out how to poke bytes to do ASM for software divide. Still recall that C9=RET. You kids got it easy. Amazed at how fast a z80 was compared to Basic (at least 10,000x faster?). Dropped IBM big blue iron like a hot potato. NEC 8086 with CPM-86 and pair of 8" floppies, early 80's. Spent about $7000 in early 80's for S-100 Compupro with CPM-68000, also 8" floppies. Spent a bunch for 256kb ram and 2mb RamDisk. Upgraded to 10mb hard drive several years later for about $1000, iirc. As I write, holding a 5 1/2" Miniscribe hard-drive with 8 platters, 40mb IIRC. Serial number 52609. Top removed so I can see the platters, 16 heads, etc. About 6 lbs.

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                                        • B Bob Beechey

                                          Everyone here seems so young. First computer I met was feeding lab results on paper tape into an Elliot 803 which used cinefilm as permanent memory. Second was sending PL1 progs to run on IBM 360. First personal computer used was Radio Shack TRS80. First computer owned was the legendary Atari 400

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                                          urbane tiger
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #102

                                          Not everyone m8, see my post just above yours Ferranti tried bolting an Elliot 803 onto the front of our Sirius to speed up simulations - didn't work though. They said it worked somewhere else that they couldn't tell us about. Maybe Blue Streak, that didn't work either, or perhaps it was at Calder Hall, I think they had some kit over there. From the Sirius went to Fortran on CDC 3600, then to PLI on 360's, then assembler on DEC PDP6, all downhill from there. First "personal computer" was Phillips something, more like a glorified calculator, handled 7 bit ASCII, stored programs & data on mag coated cards about size of punch card. It was personal 'cos I was the only one who could program it, and 'cos it sat beside my desk; but its printer was in another room, those friden flexowriters were bloody noisy.

                                          Multi famam, conscientiam pauci verentur.(Pliny)

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