Your First Computer...
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C64 Amiga 500+ Amiga 1200 Boring PC
Vic20 C64 Boring PC Another Boring PC Yet Another Boring PC ... and then again Another Boring PC does it ever stop?
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I had a huge Wang (don't go there!) given to me by a customer, who had upgraded to an IBM something-or-other. I later *upgraded* to a speccy.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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I had a huge Wang (don't go there!) given to me by a customer, who had upgraded to an IBM something-or-other. I later *upgraded* to a speccy.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
You are all sooooo young it hurts! First computer I ever wrote for (at school!) was an ICL 1903 using FORTRAN. At UNI I used a KDF9 (undergrad computer) fronted by a PDP11, programmed via punch cards or teletype. An Elliott 903, programmed via papertape and teletype. an ICL 1906A, mainly teletype, but also two, very expensive interactive terminals (text) or two even more expensive Tektronix interactive graphics terminals using persistent phosphor technology to 'draw' line graphs etc. Programming in COBOL, FORTRAN IV or ALGOL 68R. (Drew my first spirograph patterns on the A0 plotter!) Just after I left UNI I built my first computer, a Z80 based NASCOM2 It's been all down hill since then 8) but what an exciting time... 8) Mike
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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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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
1. IBM 1620, golf ball typewriter and card reader/punch (1965 uni) 2. Wang distributed calculator with Nixie tubes 3. CDC 6400 (uni project) 4. Various RCA/Siemens/Fujitsu machines (writing operating systems) 5. GEC-Elliott 2050 (I started work in process control systems in 1975) 6. PDP-11 (various) 7. HP something or other 8. VAX (various) 9. BBC Micro: first machine I ever owned 10. DEC Alpha (various) 11. Acorn RISC (best firmware ever!) I still have it and it's still pretty good! 12. IBM RISC machines (various) 13. HP (ditto) 14. PC's: Compaqs, Dells, Gateways, HP's and homebrewed machines, some of which I actually owned! Along the way, there were Apple MACs, PDP-8's and a very memorable GE 4060 with a drum memory (20 hours MTBF) and a host of other very forgettable machines. Can I retire now? 41 pay slips and counting...
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I had a huge Wang (don't go there!) given to me by a customer, who had upgraded to an IBM something-or-other. I later *upgraded* to a speccy.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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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
First I used was probably a BBC Micro in school (I mightn't have actually gotten to use it, since there was only one - maybe it was more of a demonstration, and I was about 5 years old). I got a C64 for, iirc, my 10th birthday (the newer light beige one, not the ugly brown ones that I saw a few years later at my secondary school), and started programming a little by typing in the lame sprite/character graphics examples in the manual, then a few programs out of magazines and a few silly "10 ?"I ROCK!!! 20 goto 10" things. The fact that CBM BASIC on the C64 sucked unbelievably didn't help much... Then I got an Atari STFM a few years later with 512kb RAM, and a couple of years later another STFM with 4mb (although the RAM sometimes got unseated and it required a short drop). I soon found a Basic interpreter called GFA Basic, which was the bee's knees :rose:, structured with an auto-indenting syntax checking interactive editor - a total joy to play with compared to the C64's awful Basic. Eventually I moved to the dark side and got a 350mhz Pentium 2 machine and that was that. The STFMs apparently went in the bin (thanks, maw) and the C64 got kicked to death by "a burglar" after I had left it in a friend's house for a year or two. Picked up another pair of STEs a couple of years ago, along with an Atari Falcon, but I don't really use 'em :doh:
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I had a huge Wang (don't go there!) given to me by a customer, who had upgraded to an IBM something-or-other. I later *upgraded* to a speccy.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
No TRS-80 folks out there? I cut my teeth on a TRS-80 Color Computer. Ironically, it was connected to a black-and-white TV for a monitor... I remember having the ROMs upgraded (although I didn't know that's what they were doing) to get a fancier "extended" basic interpreted. My sister and I spent hours dictating and typing BASIC code out of a computer magazine to program some dumb games. 10 print "Hello" 20 goto 10 Good times...
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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
I first saw a computer back in '94 at one of my cousin's home. It was a IBM machine, can't tell the model. The first one I got my hands on was probably a cloned PC, used to play Paranoid on it, that too was back in mid 90's. The first one I bought was in 2000, was a HP BRIO BA600.
[Kayes]
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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
IBM PC jr was the first my family owned and the first I did any programming on. Lazer 486 SX33 with 4 MB RAM, 120 MB hard drive and a screaming 33 MHZ processor was the first that I ever bought for myself.
Mike Devenney