Davew wrote to All <=-
My first computers were:
Times Sinclair 1000
Mattel Aquarius
Commodore VIC-20
Coleco ADAM
Epson Equity 1 (my first PC)
I have an odd path before my first PC. Those were fun times. Anyone ever use the Sinclair or Aquarius. I never met anyone else who owned either one.
Davew wrote to All <=-
My first computers were:
My first computers were:
Times Sinclair 1000
Mattel Aquarius
Commodore VIC-20
Coleco ADAM
Epson Equity 1 (my first PC)
I have an odd path before my first PC. Those were fun times. Anyone ever use the Sinclair or Aquarius. I never met anyone else who owned either one.
My first computers were:
Commodore VIC-20
I have an odd path before my first PC. Those were fun times. Anyone ever use the Sinclair or Aquarius. I never met anyone else who owned either one.
Jay Harris wrote to Davew <=-
My family's first computer when I was growing up was the Commodore 64.
We had the whole kit & caboodle including the monitor with built in speaker, dot matrix printer, joystick and cassette drive. Everything except the modem.
I had the thermal printer; expensive, curly paper.
My first computers were:
Times Sinclair 1000
Mattel Aquarius
Commodore VIC-20
Coleco ADAM
Epson Equity 1 (my first PC)
Davew wrote to All <=-
I jumped over the whole VIC-20, C-64, TI-99/4 era and started right in on th Univac 1100/80 in college.
The first computer I actually owned was a Sperry HT (IBM-XT clone with a hig clock speed). My college had a plan to
allow us to purchase computers on a payment plan.
I jumped over the whole VIC-20, C-64, TI-99/4 era and started right in on th Univac 1100/80 in college.
The first computer I actually owned was a Sperry HT (IBM-XT clone with a hig clock speed). My college had a plan to
allow us to purchase computers on a payment plan.
That's cool! I had no idea that Sperry made PC compatibles. I Googled it and checked it out. Would have been pretty neat to own a personal computer with the Sperry name on it.
My first computer experience was on a TRS-80 Model III. But the first computer I owned was an IBM PCjr. Worst of both worlds: not as good at business software as the IBM PC, and not as good as games as a Commodore or Atari. But I learned a lot by trying to make things work.
Michael Knapp wrote to Ron Lauzon <=-
That's cool! I had no idea that Sperry made PC compatibles. I Googled
it and checked it out. Would have been pretty neat to own a personal computer with the Sperry name on it.
My first computer experience was on a TRS-80 Model III. But the first computer I owned was an IBM PCjr. Worst of both worlds: not as good at business software as the IBM PC, and not as good as games as a
Commodore or Atari. But I learned a lot by trying to make things work.
My apologies for the over-quoting but whenever I see a TI-99/4a I jump
at the opportunity to talk about it. I got my first one in 1982 (Christmas, I was 7). Even though it was a little lame, cartridges, 40-column display, it was still amazing! I spent too many hours
learning the ins and outs of computers, dialing up BBSes and college
VAXs and learning more and more. When I finally got my IBM PS/2 Model
30 286 a couple years later I was living the dream.
Brian, the TI-99/4A was my first computer, as well. And, I also got mine on Christmas 1982 (I was 9) -- same morning! I have a photo of the system that I
took with my Kodak Disc Camera, which I also got for Christmas that year.
A great machine. I still have a TI setup, in full, with 80-col F18a expansion and a RPi 3 connecting it to the Internet (TIPIPeb). Pics of all that can be seen in the gallery that's part of the first link posted above.
It was my first computer as well. I had 2 game cartridges, a terminal emulator, and the
entire Plato series of education floppies on 5-1/2 disks. I joined a Users Group and met
plenty of others that wanted to share their knowledge.
My first PC was a Packard Bell 286 with a very slow modem. I purchased Wildcat DOS version from Mustang Software and had 4 phone lines
connected to it. I was able to share my internet connection because one
of the phone lines was on an auto-dialer to an internet provider.
We've come along way since then!
Blake Patterson wrote to Brian Klauss <=-
@MSGID: <6050BE1E.236.fidonet_classicc@caughtinadream.com>
@TZ: 003c
Brian, the TI-99/4A was my first computer, as well. And, I also got
mine on Christmas 1982 (I was 9) -- same morning! I have a photo of
the system that I took with my Kodak Disc Camera, which I also got
for Christmas that year.
https://is.gd/x0LzAC
I did a blog post that shows photos from '84 when it was a rather
more expanded system. Have a look:
https://bytecellar.com/2016/07/03/33-year-old-roll-of-film-offers-a-g limpse-of-
my-vintage-computing-beginnings/
( short link: https://is.gd/GMKfnl )
A great machine. I still have a TI setup, in full, with 80-col F18a expansion and a RPi 3 connecting it to the Internet (TIPIPeb). Pics
of all that can be seen in the gallery that's part of the first link posted above.
Sysop: | Nelgin |
---|---|
Location: | Plano, TX |
Users: | 606 |
Nodes: | 10 (1 / 9) |
Uptime: | 100:07:57 |
Calls: | 9,651 |
Calls today: | 6 |
Files: | 16,070 |
Messages: | 1,065,032 |
Posted today: | 4 |