Yer first computer!

My first one was a TRS-80 (Tandy, Radio Shack) Color Computer.

It had no disk drive - just an external TAPE drive (and you could use any tape player, really).

It had no internal modem - just a 300 baud one.

I had no MONITOR! I hooked it up to a color TV. Which wasn’t even cable-ready, I might add.

The year was 1980.

How bout you guys? :slight_smile:

Commodore 64, around 1988. Had the newest computer feature, removable media storage, a 5¼ inch floppy drive. Computer and HP dot matrix printer at Sears, $2100. Space Invaders came installed on it too.

Commodore Vic-20, hooked up to an old B/W TV someone gave me for free… no modem, no tape drive (for the first few months I had it, anyways… every program I wrote was gone as soon as I turned it off!).

Those were the days!

Mine was an Apple ][ + … I think it was 1979. It had TWO external floppy disc drives which made fantastic noises when a disc was inserted. I used to sit and program all sorts of crap in BASIC. Lots of fun!

1979 was also the year of my introduction to the internet… we had a Freedom dumb terminal which used an acoustic coupler attached to the handset of the telephone to dial in to my dad’s university’s dial-in banks. I’d sit there and read USENET news and email my dad. I’d also play around with vi, writing little shell scripts to entertain myself. I am ashamed to say I have let my Unix skills slip. I was four, going on five :slight_smile:

Max.

Timex Sinclair.

A Texas Instruments model that my dad brought home (also circa 1980). Data storage was on cassette tape, and you used a B/W TV for a monitor. Programming was in BASIC. I remember my best project – drawing a face that looked right and left and then winked at you. IIRC every pixel had to be defined individually.

Around the same time I also had a “computer” on loan from a friend of my dad’s. It was a huge blue box with plugs and cables like an old-fashioned switchboard. No display, just blinking lights. I remember that it could be programmed to play the old puzzle “Fox and Goose.” Wish I could get another gander at that thing.

Atari 600XL

Geeze…my family’s first computer was an old Atari…possibly the 600XL Hastur mentioned. I vaguely remember it was a fat keyboard with a slot for cartridges on top.

My first computer that I paid for myself is my HP 3290 Laptop, which I’m still using right now.

Yeah, the 600XL and the 800XL both had those slots, and I had both of them around the same time as that CoCo. Also had a Model IV (I think) from Radio Shack. Wasn’t till the early nineties that I got an IBM.

And Scarlett, my BASIC programming was either ripped from a magazine or was along the lines of:

10 CLS
20 PRINT “I AM SO COOL!!!”;
30 GOTO 20

RUN

hehe

I wired an AL something speech chip to a SYM-1 single board computer and had it recite Shakespeare. Sounded like Daffy Duck.

:slight_smile:

TI99/4A! Complete with joysticks, voice synth module, and… Parsec!

Oh, and a tape deck, too, for recording the game programs I’d type in out of 99’er Magazine (or something like that).

I always felt soooo superior to my poor friends with Vic-20’s.

Put me in the TI99 group.

but the first computer I ever really used for anything constructive was the Atari 1040 ST (it was really just a 520 ST with the extra 520k).

I used it in the studio for MIDI control. Here’s the kicker. I didn’t replace it until 1995 when Windows could REALLY keep up with the Atari. (I had tried Windows 3.1 for the studio and wasn’t impressed… and I couldn’t afford an Apple)

Funny thing, I could fire up the Atari and still use it in the studio today.

Put me in the TI99 group.

but the first computer I ever really used for anything constructive was the Atari 1040 ST (it was really just a 520 ST with the extra 520k).

I used it in the studio for MIDI control. Here’s the kicker. I didn’t replace it until 1995 when Windows could REALLY keep up with the Atari. (I had tried Windows 3.1 for the studio and wasn’t impressed… and I couldn’t afford an Apple)

Funny thing, I could fire up the Atari and still use it in the studio today.

Us too! Except I think my parents bought the tape drive right away. They taught me enough basic so I could amuse myself by programing colored balls and birds to bounce/fly around the screen- not bad for a six year old. Some days I get misty-eyed thinking of the Clowns and Seawolf games…:smiley:

Put me in the TI99 group.

but the first computer I ever really used for anything constructive was the Atari 1040 ST (it was really just a 520 ST with the extra 520k).

I used it in the studio for MIDI control. Here’s the kicker. I didn’t replace it until 1995 when Windows could REALLY keep up with the Atari. (I had tried Windows 3.1 for the studio and wasn’t impressed… and I couldn’t afford an Apple)

Funny thing, I could fire up the Atari and still use it in the studio today.

Eeek. Double post.
That never happened on the Atari ST. :wink:

Commodore 64. I used Paperclip as my primary word processor – until GeoWrite. Oh, GEOS! A GUI for the C64. It actually worked pretty good.

And the games! Summer (Olympic) Games! Ghostbusters! Hacker!

Timex/Sinclair T1000 with 16K of RAM! Whoo hoo!

I can’t remember. But I remember fiddling around with my good friend’s computer. And it had a tape recorder “disk drive.” Remember those?

Tandy 1000HX, sometime in the mid-eighties. The hard drive was not accessible. We had to store everything on floppies.

I was very impressed at the time :slight_smile: