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Your first computer

A Mac II, sometime in the late 80s. Our neighbors scoffed at the 40MB hard drive, saying we would never need that much space.
:lol:

Along those lines, I remember a guy who worked in the local computer shop telling me the P2 was going to be the end-all of processors for YEARS. Of course, he was probably only trying to sell me something. I w only 16; probably figured I didn't know any better.
 
I don't remember the details. I just know that it was a 386 and was running Windows 3.1. It was a hand-me-down from my father, who had upgraded to a 486 and so he gave me my very own computer. I had Wheel of Fortune on a 3.5" floppy that I could play, but I had to use DOS. Eventually, the computer was upgraded with a CD-ROM and that was pretty exciting. I also eventually got an external modem and America Online.
 
Tandy 10000 EX, first computer my parents bought way back in 1986 or so. 8088 processor, no hard drive, 5 1/4 floppy drive.
Same one here, though with an additional 5 1/4" drive. That was a "powerhouse" of a clone back then - 7.16mhz, 256k RAM, PCjr graphics and a sound chip. I programmed the hell out of it. And then there was Starflight...
For idiotic nostalgia, I picked one up last winter. This one is maxed out with 640k and has an external 3 1/2" drive, and a mouse. Boots up and runs fine. I seriously doubt any computer today will still be running 25 years down the road. Well. I think processors will still work, but no motherboard or PSU will last like that.

First machine I bought after leaving the nest was a mighty K6-III. After that I got into building my own systems.
I had no real understanding, when I was in middle school, of what my parents spent on that 1000 EX with its extra drive, daisy wheel printer and CM-11 monitor. It'd be approaching $4000 today. Now I put a killer mid-range system together for $5-600, or about the cost of a C64 back then.
 
My family had an Atari stE 520 in the early 1990s, then my brother got an Amstrad for uni and I got a Compaq in either 1999 or 2000 as my first computer.
 
We had a Commodore 64 with floppy disk drive in '84 or '85, but my dad refused to buy any of the neat games for it, so all I did on it was play that stupid lemonade stand game that couldn't even add up single digits properly. One of my brothers tinkered around with it and made it a beer stand, which made it slightly more amusing, but the game still couldn't add properly. It was never set up to be a word processor, so it was never used for school work.

In '91, when I was in uni, I got an IBM-compatible Philips 286 with a 40Mg hard drive, 640k RAM, and no Windows. I had Tetris and a few other games, but spent most of my time frantically writing essays and assignments on WordPerfect (remember that blue screen?) into the wee hours of the morning. A few years later I got a 486 but can't remember the specs. I do remember disliking Windows, which came with it, because I was used to running programs through DOS.
 
I don't remember the details. I just know that it was a 386 and was running Windows 3.1. It was a hand-me-down from my father, who had upgraded to a 486 and so he gave me my very own computer. I had Wheel of Fortune on a 3.5" floppy that I could play, but I had to use DOS. Eventually, the computer was upgraded with a CD-ROM and that was pretty exciting. I also eventually got an external modem and America Online.

Similar story: I was given an old IBM 486 by a friend of mine. I don't remember the speed or the RAM (but obviously they were small), but it had a 20 MB hard drive, a 14.4 internal modem, and running a Dutch version of Windows 3.1 ("Windows 3.1 voor Workgroups"). The video card was only 16 colors, and when I bought a better card and installed it myself (and I thought I was oh, so smart at the time), it would work but cause the computer to freeze at random times, necessitating a re-press of the start button (no "reset" button). The monitor was 13 inches screensize, but was about three feet long:lol:

I eventually added a standard floppy drive (making the other larger floppy drive useless because there was only one data/power cord). My first ISP was Erol's (remember them?), and they mailed me 6 floppies to install Netscape Navigator. Once I was online I could upgrade NN to a newer version. The download took about 10 hours. I remember starting it, then going to bed and waking up the next morning and it was still going (and of course I had to remove the new video card first so that it wouldn't freeze...)
 
This thread made me realise that we now have people whose first computer wasn't one of the first big mass consumer products of early 80s. i.e. their first computer wasn't one of the first widely-available computers. In time, we'll have people posting whose first computer was a dual-core Pentium or something like that. Weird. Shouldn't be. But it does feel it to me.

I kind of miss green monitors sometimes; they were cool.
 
A couple of years after having the EX my dad bought a new machine -the HX- which couldn't play one of my favorite games I played on the EX (the PC version of the Ghostbusters game) so he got rid of it and got the EX back.

Eventually we got the SX which could play the Ghostbusters game (or it's possible the game was old enough by that point for me to not care) IIRC that machine had an 80286 processor, still a 5 1/4 floppy bay and maybe even a 3 1/4 floppy bay. Then the magic happened! We got it expanded to 640K of memory!

THEN we got a 20 MB hard drive! I still remember my dad's reaction when we had filled up the 20MB drive, "How did you guys fill up 20 megabytes?!"

It's funny to think about those old beasts of machines, things my cell-phone can do laps around when it comes to computing and those old machines were large, noisy and put out some serious heat. God, that sound of an old-school hard-drive clicking and running up is just one of those nifty sounds from my childhood that can just bring to me a smile.

All of these machines ran MS-DOS.

Eventually we got a Tandy Sensation! (80486 DX @ 25mhz, 4mb RAM) and that machine stuck around long past its useful lifespan. That machine had a CD-ROM in it and my dad insisted we put the 5 1/4 floppy into it even though that disc format was extinct by that point. It had, I believe, a 100mb hard drive.

When we finally got a new machine it was a IBM machine (by that point I think Tandy had stopped making machines and Radio Shack (where my dad worked) started carrying IBM.)

That may have been a 686 running at probably 100 Mhz or so with 8 or 16 MB of RAM and probably a 1/4 GB hard drive. That machine stuck around... for a while. It ran Windows 3.11 and actually had a modem which we used to get on bulletin boards and eventually the internet.

Around 1995 or 96 we got another new machine that I don't recall much about. It was likely another IBM machine operating on whatever the top specs were at that time, it ran Windows 95 and my parents kept that machine for a long time as well. When I graduated High School that's when I bought my own machine as outlined above.

Eventually when I moved out and my buddy and I started a bit of a computer business my parents bought a computer from us that ran at around 350 Mhz, probably 256 MB of ram with a 20-50 GB hard drive running Windows 98. During that same period we built five machines for an in-home network job all were top of the line machines so they had 450-500 Mhz processors, memory maxed out on motherboards (probably around a GB or so, whatever was the most at the time Windows could support) and the largest hard-drives at the time. Again, this was probably around 100 GB. All of those computers we had running Windows 98 as it was still the "best' operating system at the time to run machines on, the server had Windows NT on it but eventually was given Windows 98 as to us working on that proved a bit more stable. Not a chance in hell we were putting Windows ME on it!

When I look back at those machines at at what I have now (2.5 GHZ, 2 GB Memory, 500GB hard drive) it's amazing to me how much technology has changed in the last 25 years since getting that first computer way back then and now.

Hell, how much things have changed in just the last 10 years.

But, I definitely need to look into building a new machine.

Looking it up real quick, on my phone:

Processor: 624 MHZ
Memory: 512 MB of RAM
Storage: 256 MB.

So it's pretty much on par with those machines I build, and even owned, 10 years ago, aside from the storage. That's incredible to think of that right now in my hands, I hold basically the same type of computer that took up and entire desk 10 years ago and cost me almost $800 to build. This phone cost me around $100.
 
I was one of about 2 people in school who had a BBC Micro model B. Everyone else had ZX Spectrums, possibly also because the school all had ZX Spectrums for some reason, although there was the odd person with an Amstrad (which I thought was the coolest hting in the world when I was 8) or a Commodore 64. The schools eventually saw sense by replacing all their Speccys with BBC Master 128s. :biggrin: I suspect they all became Archimedes computers by the time I left, though (I wanted an Archimedes so badly when I was 11), although now they're probably all PCs.

I knew my BBC Micro model B intimately. Yes, we played games with each other, but I also managed to get under the skin a few times and push the right buttons to create programs of my own. However, I did pick up an old Model B+ and twin disk drives for £7 when I entered university, which may have led to some tension with my first one. We don't talk very much now, although I still have fond memories of the good times we had together.

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRBrWZlofhg[/yt]

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rc10LC4dy2M[/yt]

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxMf7yq--f8[/yt]

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgiA10MfOu4[/yt]

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sRFxCf5pIE[/yt]

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gwl0ISGyHck[/yt]
 
I miss my //GS the most out of any of my old computers. :sigh:

(it died when I was in college. Motherboard damn near melted itself)
 
I wanted an Archimedes so badly when I was 11
I have one in a cupboard gathering dust, complete with the same Big Square Monitor used with the BBC. I stopped using it once I got into PC's. Lovely machine, though.
Got a Commodore 64 machine sometime in the mid-to-late 80s. Awesome games. Really wish I could play them all again.
I still do, on occasion. I use an emulator on my PC. Many games here. :D
Thanks for this, ITL!
:techman:
 
I wanted an Archimedes so badly when I was 11
I have one in a cupboard gathering dust, complete with the same Big Square Monitor used with the BBC. I stopped using it once I got into PC's. Lovely machine, though.

I think pretty much everyone also stopped using them (even, eventually, the educational establishments) once the modern PC market gained greater momentum in the early to mid 90s. Heck, even my second computer was a 486 DX33 with 8Mb of RAM. A shame, as from what I had read in BBC Acorn User, the Archie series was a formidable machine for its time. The Archimedes version of the original Elite was said to be the best version of Elite ever written.

What model was yours?
 
I wanted an Archimedes so badly when I was 11
I have one in a cupboard gathering dust, complete with the same Big Square Monitor used with the BBC. I stopped using it once I got into PC's. Lovely machine, though.

I think pretty much everyone also stopped using them (even, eventually, the educational establishments) once the modern PC market gained greater momentum in the early to mid 90s. Heck, even my second computer was a 486 DX33 with 8Mb of RAM. A shame, as from what I had read in BBC Acorn User, the Archie series was a formidable machine for its time. The Archimedes version of the original Elite was said to be the best version of Elite ever written.

What model was yours?
Not the most basic one, I think. Beyond that, I couldn't say - it's been so long since I've used it. I do remember that it had a great GUI that I spent ages customizing, as is my wont. :D

And as it was an ACORN machine, pottering around with BASIC was nice and easy. I even had a decent SoundTracker type program for music. And yes, Elite was great for the Archie. Pity that I never got the hang of it...
 
I have one in a cupboard gathering dust, complete with the same Big Square Monitor used with the BBC. I stopped using it once I got into PC's. Lovely machine, though.

I think pretty much everyone also stopped using them (even, eventually, the educational establishments) once the modern PC market gained greater momentum in the early to mid 90s. Heck, even my second computer was a 486 DX33 with 8Mb of RAM. A shame, as from what I had read in BBC Acorn User, the Archie series was a formidable machine for its time. The Archimedes version of the original Elite was said to be the best version of Elite ever written.

What model was yours?
Not the most basic one, I think. Beyond that, I couldn't say - it's been so long since I've used it. I do remember that it had a great GUI that I spent ages customizing, as is my wont. :D

And as it was an ACORN machine, pottering around with BASIC was nice and easy. I even had a decent SoundTracker type program for music. And yes, Elite was great for the Archie. Pity that I never got the hang of it...

I remember there were the old "Archimedes" branded machines, the A300, A400 series and A540, which had separate keyboards, base units and monitors, and which finished with the A3000 which looked like a pale-faced Commodore Amiga on steroids (and was indeed marketed as "the new BBC Micro"). Then there was the second-generation of "Acorn" branded models, led by the top of the range A5000 (which was the base unit and keyboard style) and the lesser model A3020-type series that took on the look of the A3000 but with green function keys, all of which had RISC OS 3.1 (I think) and above. After that were the RISC PC models, and then, nothing else of that line.

I wanted an A5000. It looked awesome.
 
I remember there were the old "Archimedes" branded machines, the A300, A400 series and A540, which had separate keyboards, base units and monitors, and which finished with the A3000 which looked like a pale-faced Commodore Amiga on steroids (and was indeed marketed as "the new BBC Micro"). Then there was the second-generation of "Acorn" branded models, led by the top of the range A5000 (which was the base unit and keyboard style) and the lesser model A3020-type series that took on the look of the A3000 but with green function keys, all of which had RISC OS 3.1 (I think) and above. After that were the RISC PC models, and then, nothing else of that line.

I wanted an A5000. It looked awesome.
Mine is an A3000, then - single unit with red function keys, so it's not an A3020.
 
dragon.jpg


Welsh computing at its finest.
 
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