What was your first computer?

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theanimala

Senior member
May 10, 2000
330
1
81
Atari 800. I had the tape loader to load cames from cassettes. It took 45 minutes to load Zaxxon, but it was sweet. I remember when my parents finally got me a floppy drive, cost a couple hundred bucks I think.


Next - Apple IIc. I used this through high school and college. Upgraded to the color monitor and typed all of my papers on it and printed on a dot matrix printer. My college GF had a 8088 that she used. FYI, when I graduated 468/66's were becoming popular.

Then P120 Gateway (overclocked to P133) , then Athlon 750mhz homemade o/c'd to 933.

Currently P4 2.66. Works fine enough for me, but I do miss my old Atari...
 

thirdlegstump

Banned
Feb 12, 2001
8,713
0
0
Was a Mac-man until I came to my senses.

Powermac 6100
Powermac 6400
Powermac 7200
Powermac 7500
Powerbook 1300cs
Powermac G4 dual 1.25

micropc brand 133mhz pentium w/16mb edo
custom pc 200mhz mmx 256mb mem
200mhz laptop w/192mb mem
custom p3 700mhz slot 1 512mb
athlon xp 1700+
athlon xp 2500+
athlon xp 2800+ -current rig
 

Gamingphreek

Lifer
Mar 31, 2003
11,679
0
81
I was only about 7 years old when i got my fiest computer. It was so cool. My grandpa (died in 1996 ) and i used to play Doom on it all the time. I miss those days!!!

I also liked Sim City 2000 Spear of Destiny, Wolfenstein, etc... (Duke Nukem)

Now a real question is how many of those things are still working ??

I thought i had had a really old system but turns out that i didn't, whos system was the oldest so far?

-Kevin
 

Markfw

Moderator Emeritus, Elite Member
May 16, 2002
26,129
15,275
136
Originally posted by: heartsurgeon
Data General SuperNova (#2 off the assembly line)

this is at least 9-10 years before the IBM PC became available.

4K of memory covered a board 16" square.

maxed out, the machine had 64K of memory (man, you could rule the world with that much memory)
So what year was that ? This could be the winner....

 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
My first computer was some old Mac Plus from ten or more years ago that I don't know the origins of. (I was just two or three at the time.)
 

AU Tiger

Diamond Member
Dec 26, 1999
4,280
0
76
I had a Commodore 128, but didn't like it too much and ended up with an IBM PCjr for my Christmas present one year. I played many of the great Sierra games on that PCjr for at least five years. Ultima III was the first great game I remember playing on it.

 

Adn4n

Golden Member
Aug 6, 2004
1,043
0
0
P166MMX, that's all I remember.

How many geeks does it take to screw in a lightbulb? Two! One to screw it in, and one to talk about how the old one was better.
 

DarkKnight

Golden Member
Apr 21, 2001
1,197
0
0
166mhz Pentium computer by Packard bell
16mb ram
6 gb HD
ISA graphics, sound and modem combo(all on one card).
Windows 95

 

NoahFrenzy

Member
Jan 8, 2001
96
0
0
1. Commodore 64. Played with it for about five or six years at least. Oh, used GEOS for Word Processing and whatnot as well.

2. IBM PC XT. Had it for much of the time I had the C64, though I had far less to do with it.

3. Piece of crap TigerDirect computer. Browsing, ICQ, Word Processing, and Emulation. "Why won't this 3D game work?!?!1"
Cyrix 300mhz. On-board everything. 2 meg video. 32 megs of ram. 2 gig HD.

4. eMachine 400 id3. Browsing, AIM, Word Processing, Emulation, some PC Gaming, Image Editing.
Celeron 400. 4 meg ATi Rage video. 32 megs ram. 4 gig HD.

5. Self/friend-built. Browsing, AIM/Trillian, Emulation, Quake 3, Image Editing, web site server.
Pentium III 550e. Soundblaster 128. 8 meg ATi Expert 98. Started with 64 megs ram, ended up with 256 before I was finished with it. 13 gig HD.

6. Self-built. Browsing, Trillian, Emulation, Doom III, Image Editing, site server/usenet and mail server.
AMD Athlon XP 1700, now a 2400. 128 meg GF4Ti 4400. Onboard sound, lan, etc. 512 megs ram. 120 gig HD.
 

Mucker

Platinum Member
Apr 28, 2001
2,833
0
0
Daewoo
386 16Mhz
1 Mb RAM
40Mb Harddrive
14" bulbous monitor - refresh rate seemed like 45Hz - I still have headaches
It was truly a wonder to me then.....worst part was I paid $2000 for the privelege

but I have no regrets

m
 

Hyperfocal

Senior member
Oct 8, 2003
801
0
0
1. Access to PDP-11 using acoustic coupler modem and printing terminal (no CRT, just reams of fanfold paper). (Through school -- doesn't really count, but it got me hooked.)

1a. Timex Sinclair with 16kb memory.
2. Commodore 64
3. Kaypro II
4. Epson XT clone with 2 floppies.
5. Acer 486sx 25mhz (upgraded to DX2 66mhz)
6. Homebuilt P1 100 (upgraded to 200mhz MMX)
7. Homebuilt PII 350 (upgraded to 900mhz Celeron -- box now holds 2.0ghz Duron rig)
8. Homebuilt Athlon XP 2500+ running at 3200+

That's a lot of money down the drain.
 

mauiblue

Senior member
Aug 8, 2004
652
1
81
Commodore 64 was my first. Ah, the good old days. Then came a Radio Shack notebook that could only run DOS. Then came my Dell XPS 400 mhz.

Now I have a homebrew rig with 3.2 P4 Northwood, Soyo mobo, 2 GB of RAM, ATI 9800 Pro 256 video card, and 2 RAID raid arrays - sweet!
 

darXoul

Senior member
Jan 15, 2004
702
0
0
Atari 800 XL

Commodore 64

Amiga 600 1MB extension

486 DX 40 MHz 4 MB RAM, upgraded to 8 MB for Doom 2, 1 MB video card, 250 MB HDD

Pentium 166, 16 MB RAM, 4 MB Matrox Millennium

Pentium 233 MMX, 32 MB RAM, 4 MB Matrox Mystique + 4 MB Voodoo, 4 GB HDD

Celeron 500, 128 MB RAM, TNT2 Ultra 32 MB, 8 GB HDD IIRC

Athlon XP 2000+, 512 MB RAM, GF4 Ti4400 128 MB, 80 GB HDD

Athlon 64 3200+, 1 GB RAM, GF 6800 GT 256 MB, 200 + 160 GB HDD
 

vegetation

Diamond Member
Feb 21, 2001
4,270
2
0
C64, few Amiga models, bunch of PC clones. They were all decent machines in their times (especially the Amiga). Now I'm with my HP ZT3000 laptop and love it, honestly saying it's the best computer I've owned so far!
 

Kenazo

Lifer
Sep 15, 2000
10,429
1
81
486sx-25. My parents weren't too quick to get on the computer bandwagon, and since I lived under their roof, I wasn't either.
 

SourTimes

Member
Sep 22, 2004
59
0
0
First computer was from my folks when I was 15. IBM XT 8MhZ, 640k, cga, 5meg hard drive i think it was.
 

heartsurgeon

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2001
4,260
0
0
quote:
Originally posted by: heartsurgeon
Data General SuperNova (#2 off the assembly line)

this is at least 9-10 years before the IBM PC became available.

4K of memory covered a board 16" square.

maxed out, the machine had 64K of memory (man, you could rule the world with that much memory)


So what year was that ? This could be the winner....

1970..

here is a little history of the Data General SuperNova and Nova....


Data General Nova
Data General SuperNova'
The Nova was a popular 16-bit minicomputer built by Data General starting in 1968.

The Nova packed enough power to do most simple computing tasks into a single rack mount case, and became hugely popular in science labs around the world. Eventually 50,000 would be sold. Data General attempted to follow up the success of the Nova with a number of larger machines, but none of them were nearly as popular and Data General faded from the scene in the 1980s.

Edson deCastro was the Product Manager of the famous PDP-8 machine at DEC, generally considered by most to be the first true minicomputer. However deCastro was convinced it could be done even better, and left DEC to form Data General in 1968. The next year they released the Nova at a base price of US$3,995 as the best small computer in the world, and soon Nova's were being sold in the tens per minute.

The big innovations of the Nova were not technical as much as packaging. Primarily the entire machine was built onto a single 15 inch by 15 inch printed circuit board, which could then be run off an assembly line with no wiring required. This greatly reduced costs over the PDP-8, which consisted of several boards and modules that had to be wired together by hand. This also made the Nova more reliable, which served it well in the lab setting.

The first models were available with 4K of core memory as an option, one that practically everyone had to buy, bringing the system cost to $7,995. Even here DG managed to innovate, packing several planes of very small core into a rectangular box lying along the left side of the case. Up to 32K could be supported in an external expansion box. Semiconductor ROM was already available at the time, and RAM-less systems with ROM-only became popular in industrial settings. The original Nova machines ran at 1.5MHz, but the series was soon upgraded with semiconductor RAM which allowed DG to create the 3MHz SuperNova.

The standardized backplane and I/O signals that implemented a simple but effective I/O design made interfacing programmed I/O and Data Channel devices simple compared to other machines of the day. The backplane had wirewrap pins that could be used for non-standard connectors or other special purposes.

The Nova had four 16-bit accumulator registers, of which two could be used as index registers. There was a 15-bit program counter and a single-bit Carry register. As for the PDP-8, current + zero page addressing was central. The instruction format could be broadly categorized into one of three functions: 1) register-to-register manipulation, 2) memory reference, and 3) input/output. Each instruction was contained one word. The register-to-register manipulation was almost RISC-like in its bit efficiency; and an instruction that manipulated register data could also perform tests, shifts and even elect to discard the result.

The Nova's biggest competition was from the newly-born DEC PDP-11 computer series, and to a lesser extent the venerable DEC PDP-8 systems. Some have said that the Nova was pretty crude compared to its competitors, but it was quite effective and very fast for its day, at least at this low-cost end of the market. In fact, the SuperNova computer's 300 nanosecond cycle time was the fastest minicomputer for over a decade following its introduction. The Nova influenced the design of both the Xerox Alto (1973) and Apple I (1976) computers. Its external design has been reported to be the direct inspiration for the front panel of the MITS Altair (1975) microcomputer.

As of 2003 there are still 16-bit Novas and Eclipsess running in a variety of applications worldwide. There is a diverse but ardent group of people worldwide who restore and preserve legacy 16-bit Data General systems, and a web search of [Data General Nova], [Eclipse], [RDOS], or the various other DG-related keywords should yield good results.

I remember it fondly....
learned to program in assembly language..this was my sophmore year in high school....
numerous paper cuts running huge spools of paper tape through a high speed paper tape reader to compile programs for execution, bootstrap loading, all the basics you kids don't know anything about...you had to be a serious nerd back then to be into computers....
 

Richard98

Golden Member
Jan 30, 2001
1,093
0
0
VIC-20
Atari 800 - A tech savvy friend upgraded the memory from 48K to 256k - WOW!
Amiga 2000 - Still have this one in the garage, but haven't fired it up in a long time. Great game machine in its day.
 
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