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davidd
05-04-2010, 10:34am
Hi

what was your first PC?

My first home computer was a Commodore 64 back in 1982. It had a tape drive and took about 20 mins to save 48Kb of program...

My first work computer (in 1983) was an IBM PC XT , with 512 Kb of ram (needed an extra board for the last 128Kb) and a 10Mb hard drive. 10 Mb!! It was huge! I never filled it. It ran MSDOS version 2.1. Have worked up through the DOS versions to Version 5, then Windows 95, 98, 2000, and now XT. Time for Windows 7 (or perhaps a Mac?) :)

JohnRA
05-04-2010, 10:43am
Promise not laugh ?????

OK .... In that case I'll tell you.

It was a Tandy TRS80. Programs loaded (eventually) by tape & had a whopping 4k memory.

As soon as finances permitted it was replaced by the Commodore 64

DAdeGroot
05-04-2010, 10:51am
It took ages to convince my parents that a computer would be a good idea, so our first one was an Amstrad PC1512. 8088 cpu, 512kb of ram, dual 360kb floppies, 16 shades of grey hybrid CGA display.

I eventually shoehorned a full height five and a quarter inch hard disk into it (ESDI). Alas, by the time we got it, 286's were the norm. Still, it served me well for about 4 years.

bjholton
05-04-2010, 10:54am
First one was a microbee which only had a orange-black monitor ... ( keeping it inline with the bee theme i am guessing..... ) was good for programming in basic and that was around the very early 80's...

have now progressed to having 3xP4's with between 2gb and 4gb ram .... 2x Compaq laptops with the new one running 2gb ram .... to have this sort of computing power way back then would have been unheard of.... lol

hus
05-04-2010, 11:31am
Home made case with a 8080 processor, small black and white tv as monitor and another case that was real heavy which was a olivetti 8 inch floppy disk drive and the operating system was the old CPM 2.2

Kym
05-04-2010, 1:02pm
PC ... Nec APC IV (1983?)
First computer I ever got to use/program http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_1130 in 1971
http://www.users.on.net/~farnik/wikicgi/wiki.pl?RetroComputing

ricktas
05-04-2010, 1:04pm
Vic 20, which was followed by a Commodore 64. Both of which I still have.

Calxoddity
05-04-2010, 1:07pm
First one I ever owned: A 1984 XT clone with 512Kb RAM, *two* 5.25" floppy drives, a Hercules character-based graphics card, and amber character-based (ie not graphical) monitor.

Bought it from a PC shop in Seattle, about a mile from Microsoft HQ. Now if only I'd bought Microsoft shares with that money....

ameerat42
05-04-2010, 1:29pm
A Casio pocket computer, with 1K RAM, then a Commodore 64. I got both almost at the same time, and used them for different things. The Casio stopped working after it got drowned in its second flood. The C64 only got dunked once. I used to dismantle and dry them. Eventually I got a floppy disk drive for it. Boy, did it sing then! But I'd bet there are heaps of us who fondly remember our adventures with such gear at the time. Am.

Xenedis
05-04-2010, 1:37pm
what was your first PC?

I was quite a late entrant into the world of computer ownership, only having my first in 1992.

It was a 286 with 640KB of base RAM (and 512KB extended RAM), had a 20MB hard disk and a CGI display, and ran MS-DOS 3.3.

This computer was a laptop, and a specialised one at that, as it was a Yamaha music computer and had MIDI interfaces on it. It was purchased second-hand, not for the music capability, but for the computer part.

I installed Stacker 2.0 at one stage, and ended up with a whopping 60MB of disk space. Disk compression utilities were supposed to double the amount of disk space, but this one trebled it. Score.

Since that first computer and in the 18 years since, I've only owned five more PCs:


Generic 486SX (33MHz) with 4MB of RAM, 130MB HDD and 14" CRT [1993];
Generic Pentium MMX (166MHz) with 16MB(?) of RAM, 500MB(?) HDD and 15" CRT [1997];
Packard Bell - Pentium 4 (1.8GHz) with 256MB of RAM, 40GB HDD and 15" LCD display [2003];
Dell Inspiron 9400 - Core 2 (2GHz) with 1GB of RAM, 160GB HDD and a 17" wide-screen LCD [2006]; and
MacBook Pro - Core 2 Duo (2.8GHz) with 4GB of RAM, 500GB HDD and 17" wide-screen LCD [2009].


(I really cannot remember the RAM and HDD specs of my third PC.)

Some people 'round here have more PCs in their possession currently than I've owned in the past two decades! Yes, Dave, I'm looking at you. :-)



It ran MSDOS version 2.1. Have worked up through the DOS versions to Version 5, then Windows 95, 98, 2000, and now XT. Time for Windows 7 (or perhaps a Mac?) :)

I started with MS-DOS 3.3, ran DR-DOS 6 at some stage, then ran MS-DOS 6.21 and 6.22. I think I missed MS-DOS 4 and 5 altogether, although I remember when MS-DOS 5 was released, as it was quite a major upgrade at the time.

With Windows, I started with 3.0, then went to 3.1, 3.11 (for Workgroups), 95 and finally XP.

I missed Windows 98 altogether, as well as Windows 2000. I never ran Vista or Windows 7, as in the Vista days I was happy with XP on my Dell laptop, and when I moved to Mac OS X last year, I bid farewell to Windows altogether.

I still have my Dell laptop here as a backup, but haven't needed it. Once I fully transitioned to my Mac I reformatted my Dell's laptop, installed Windows XP from scratch (plus the drivers for the laptop) and ran through Microsoft Update. It's basically a fresh, bare machine with no apps installed.

I periodically drag the Dell out of retirement and run Microsoft Update to keep it current, and I've just done that today.

Ah, it's fun to reminisce! :-)

Dizzy Photographics
05-04-2010, 1:58pm
the first computer in our house was the commodore 64...i remember that well lol...until the nintendo all the way from America came along anyways. Then i had no interest in computers until my dad purchased one in 1992...dont know what it was just that it could connect to the internet and was interesting. Though in our house it was mainly used for games more than anything else

kiwi
05-04-2010, 2:14pm
I built a sinclair z81 I think it was from a kitset


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

dbax
05-04-2010, 2:30pm
mmmm I can just remember my Amiga 500......those were the days everyting loaded each time by disk, wonderful.....and it even had windows before windows:confused013

davidd
05-04-2010, 4:29pm
So, it seems I'm not the only old f**t who has used computers for ever! ;)

I look at my 1Tb external drive sitting on my desk, and think it has 100,000 times the storage of that first 10Mb drive, and that was a full-height 5 1/4" drive, and weighed a ton!

My laptop has 3 Gb of ram, or 2000 times the IBM's memory, in 2 little strips about 3 inches long. The IBM had the mother board full of 16 Kb chips, to get 384 Kb, and a second plug in-board (full size) for the last 128 Kb.

Where will the next 27 years take us in computer power? ( I probably won't be here to find out!)

dieselpower
05-04-2010, 4:55pm
First one was a microbee which only had a orange-black monitor ... ( keeping it inline with the bee theme i am guessing..... ) was good for programming in basic and that was around the very early 80's...

Same here. My olds had one, and there's a photo of me at about 9 months old reading a basic programming manual. Trend setter I guess, I now work in IT. We even had an old Microbee modem for cruising BBS's, although I think this was a later incarnation of the one that we had when I was a tot.

Miaow
05-04-2010, 6:31pm
Apple ][ which i made into an Apple ][+ even had a floppy drive and a colour card - mind you only had 48K of memory lol

pgbphotographytas
05-04-2010, 7:05pm
Mine was an Amiga 500 :)

bigbikes
05-04-2010, 7:10pm
I cannot remember exactly what brand it was but I do remember it was a 486 with 8mg of ram and a (I think) 750 h/drive and was extremely slow.
What a beast of a machine that was :lol::lol:

Calxoddity
05-04-2010, 7:51pm
Mine was an Amiga 500 :)

That was my second computer: did my post-grad IT diploma on it - great little unit.

Regards,
Calx

davesmith
06-04-2010, 10:02am
Commodore VIC 20 for me. 5KB RAM, an awesome bit of kit. Unfortunately we didn't have the tape drive, or "datasette" as I think it was known, early on. I'd spend two hours one-finger typing up game code in BASIC, another 2-3 hours trying to find the inevitable syntax error, 5 minutes playing the actual game then losing it all when it was switched off.

Ironically though, that experience 30 years ago of endless basic coding wasn't for nothing. Today I still build database and excel applications in visual basic.

farmer_rob
06-04-2010, 1:08pm
The first computer with a keyboard and screen and such that I owned was a Macintosh 512k with an 800k floppy drive - I also bought a 15" dot matrix printer and the whole lot cost around $4000 - in 1985 dollars. I had been using IBM PCs at work for a couple of years and also x86-based Concurrent CP/M machines (with an 8" floppy disk and 10Mbyte hard disk.)

The first "computer" I owned was a SC/MP microprocessor system with 256 bytes of memory, programmed by 8 switches on the front and output was 8 leds.

Since then I've been through 4 laptops, 3 desktops and numerous work computers.

boggo
06-04-2010, 1:44pm
c64 for me.. still fondly remember the games on it too and fighting with siblings as to when the game got switched off as the high scores were wiped!

Hamish McHaggis
06-04-2010, 1:50pm
I built a sinclair z81 I think it was from a kitset

Me too - ZX81. It had 1K memory and no storage, so once you programed it you couldn't switch it off unless you wanted to reprogram it...

Topgunn
06-04-2010, 2:20pm
Our first computer was a vic20 and I still remember seeing a typed message run down the screen with the last one flashing lol :) we had the tape drive and thought nothing about waiting 5minutes for it to do anything. Now if my pc isnt instant im not happy and wondering whats wrong. I heard somewhere about an unwritten? law about technology doubling with each upgrade so my mind boggles on where we will be in another 10 years.

ving
06-04-2010, 2:53pm
Vic 20...ditto...i had the tape player. gee it had some funky games :p

apple 2e at school and the equivalent ibm at home.

virgal_tracy
06-04-2010, 2:56pm
Another Vic20 owner here. It was so fancy after game playing on the Atari 2600. The Vic 20 came along just as we were about to buy the upgrade for the Atari to turm it into a PC. Following the Vic 20 was an Apple IIe clone. I'm sure it was called an apricot or the like. It came with 2 x 5 1/4" drives which enabled you to run a programme and then save it at the same time.

My biggest achievement back then was to cut out the memory protection tab on the right hand side of the 5 1/4" diisks to turn them into 2 sided and double the memory capacity.

Oh the memories.

Keith
06-04-2010, 3:12pm
Promise not laugh ?????

OK .... In that case I'll tell you.

It was a Tandy TRS80. Programs loaded (eventually) by tape & had a whopping 4k memory.

As soon as finances permitted it was replaced by the Commodore 64


Hey I had a TRS80 as well :) Mine was second hand but I was lucky enough to have a twin floppy drive, and those tiny joysticks.

But before that I had a VZ200! What a beast it was.

peterking
06-04-2010, 11:24pm
Tang 8086 with a 8088 maths Co-pro, 356kb of ram, 20mb hard drive, one 5.25 and one 3.5in drive and mono graphics card with a Nice One modem and amber monitor.
It was the latest and greatest.

oldfart
07-04-2010, 6:33am
Vic20, followed by an trusty XT with twin 360kb drives.

Invictus
14-04-2010, 6:00pm
Hmmm, haven't seen anyone else list what I had.

BBC Micro - MOS 6502 CPU @ 2Mhz, 64Kb RAM, Hooked up to the family TV and used an adapter cable for the cassette player. Same era ('81/'82) and style as some of the early apples and commodores.
I would hate to know how many days/weeks I spent typing on that thing ... yay BASIC !