Your First Development Machine?
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ZX Spectrum 48k[^] 1983 & at home. Mostly stuff from Byte magazine and stuff garnered from the BBC's various publications at the time. I wonder how many times the Spectrum has paid for itself since I started coding for a living, probably the best financial help my Grandma ever gave come to think of it.
PB 369,783 wrote:
I just find him very unlikeable, and I think the way he looks like a prettier version of his Mum is very disturbing.[^]
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
An HP-2000C via modem using an ASR-33 teletype @ 110 baud in high school. It was available to some schools in the Los Angeles School District if there was an instructor to teach Basic programming (all we had). Programs were created offline on another ASR-33 using paper tape. We couldn't store files, so when done you had to output your program onto paper tape again after making changes or lose them. My first personal computer was a Commodore Kim-1 (6502) with an S-100 expansion board to add 8K bytes of static RAM. The terminal was a Compucolor 8001 19" color graphics terminal, which was an 8080 computer in its own right. This was in 1974 I believe. Mike
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A TI-994A. With a tape recorded for storage... we were never rich enough to shell out for a disk drive. I remember my dad asking if I wanted to get an Atari at Christmas or the TI now... I'm a kid, of course I want it NOW. So while I never got to play the same cool games that all of my friends had (since EVERYONE else had an Atari), it did give me my first introduction to a real computer. After introducing me to programming, I then continued on with the various TI magazines (can't remember the name of any of them off-hand) and learned a lot about line-code programming.
Same here on the TI-994a. I still have it, though I haven't started it in over 20 years. When I was in high school, I used to write little programs to do all my math homework. I also spent many hours playing the Scott Adams Adventure games. :laugh:
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
How about a KIM-1. A Single Board computer with a 6502 processor, 2K ROM, 1K Ram (expandable to all of 4K), a 24 key keypad, and a 2 character single line display. This was in 1978 or so. All assembly language, It could be connected to an ASR-33/KSR-38 Teletype (anyone remember those?). Still have the KIM-1 somewhere.
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
PDP-8/I running TSS-8/I in high school. Used FOCAL-8, BASIC-8, and PALD-8 (Assembler), also IBM S/360 FORTRAN and COBOL when the school finally added a programming class (we spent most of the time teaching the teachers). Univac 418 Model II for first paid job ($5) FORTRAN and ART418 Assembler IBM S/370 first salaried programming in Assembler.
Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
A PDP-8e with real ferrite core memory. Taught myself Dartmouth Basic from a book my dad had, I wrote the program on paper, he typed it in for me. He had to fix a few typos. It was really stupid.. it printed a picture of an airplane. Later, I'd go into work with him on Saturdays and write Basic on their "mainframe" (an 11/70, I think.. never saw it in person).
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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I taught myself GW-Basic on this Zenith 120[^] back in 1985 while in the Marine Corps. I still have the book
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
TRS-80 Model III in 1983. 8" floppies, 16K RAM. Got it from a business office when they upgraded - altogether ~$3K worth of gear + software. Learned QBASIC, got exposed to databases, had an outrageous non-WYSIWYG word processor lol. The printer was a mega-industrial very fast daisywheel unit which came in its own very large acoustic enclosure and still sounded like a truck going through when it ran.
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A PDP-8e with real ferrite core memory. Taught myself Dartmouth Basic from a book my dad had, I wrote the program on paper, he typed it in for me. He had to fix a few typos. It was really stupid.. it printed a picture of an airplane. Later, I'd go into work with him on Saturdays and write Basic on their "mainframe" (an 11/70, I think.. never saw it in person).
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
Very cool :). When was this?