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    My first computer

    Water Closet
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    • hobbit666H
      hobbit666
      last edited by

      Does an Amiga 500 count?
      If not my First "PC" was a 486 Tiny Computer

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • jt1001001J
        jt1001001
        last edited by

        TI 99 4/A

        JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @jt1001001
          last edited by

          @jt1001001 said in My first computer:

          TI 99 4/A

          My friend had a TI-99. I had a TRS-80

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • travisdh1T
            travisdh1
            last edited by

            I have fond memories of Dig-Dug on a TRS-80. Wasn't my computer, sadly.

            My first computer was a whitebox 486DX2 built by a local shop. Full height 512MB HDD, it could save all the things in a DOS/Win3.11 era.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @hobbit666
              last edited by

              @hobbit666 said in My first computer:

              Does an Amiga 500 count?
              If not my First "PC" was a 486 Tiny Computer

              He didn't say PC, all of us posting had computers before PCs even existed. The 500 was well into the PC era, so you are unique there, but it was common at the time not to use PCs at home.

              My first Amiga was the Amiga 1000, I still have it.

              1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • 1
                1337 @scottalanmiller
                last edited by 1337

                @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                @hobbit666 said in My first computer:

                Does an Amiga 500 count?
                If not my First "PC" was a 486 Tiny Computer

                He didn't say PC, all of us posting had computers before PCs even existed. The 500 was well into the PC era, so you are unique there, but it was common at the time not to use PCs at home.

                My first Amiga was the Amiga 1000, I still have it.

                The Amiga 500 was an awesome computer for arcade style gaming. It had sprites and good sound. I had one too. Motorola 68000 16/32 bit CPU in those machines. Same as Apple had in their Macintosh before the started with PowerPC.
                0_1539359543102_5b708780-88d8-49f4-a52b-f8797a7a8667-image.png

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                  I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                  1 PhlipElderP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • 1
                    1337 @Dashrender
                    last edited by

                    @dashrender said in My first computer:

                    I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                    I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                    Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @1337
                      last edited by

                      @pete-s said in My first computer:

                      @dashrender said in My first computer:

                      I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                      I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                      Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                      lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                      1 scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • 1
                        1337 @Dashrender
                        last edited by 1337

                        @dashrender said in My first computer:

                        Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                        lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                        With "serious" I meant workstation/servers contrary to desktops. When IBM brought the PC to the market, every machine was serious money, I think around $3K to $4K.

                        1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • 1
                          1337 @1337
                          last edited by 1337

                          @pete-s said in My first computer:

                          @dashrender said in My first computer:

                          Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                          lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                          With "serious" I meant workstation/servers contrary to desktops. When IBM brought the PC to the market, every machine was serious money, I think around $3K to $4K.

                          Around that time was also the time when servers actually took off in the PC market. First it was networks cards with twisted pair and drivers on top of MS-DOS. More peer-to-peer type file transfer. But when Novell made their Netware 286 it started to take off. You would then run IPX/SPX drivers on top of MS-DOS and a server running Novell Netware would do file sharing, login and what not. Network was then coax cables.

                          The file server was born.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @1337
                            last edited by

                            @pete-s said in My first computer:

                            @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                            @hobbit666 said in My first computer:

                            Does an Amiga 500 count?
                            If not my First "PC" was a 486 Tiny Computer

                            He didn't say PC, all of us posting had computers before PCs even existed. The 500 was well into the PC era, so you are unique there, but it was common at the time not to use PCs at home.

                            My first Amiga was the Amiga 1000, I still have it.

                            The Amiga 500 was an awesome computer for arcade style gaming. It had sprites and good sound. I had one too. Motorola 68000 16/32 bit CPU in those machines. Same as Apple had in their Macintosh before the started with PowerPC.
                            0_1539359543102_5b708780-88d8-49f4-a52b-f8797a7a8667-image.png

                            But the Amiga crushed the Mac. It basically had GPUs before they were cool.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                              last edited by

                              @dashrender said in My first computer:

                              @pete-s said in My first computer:

                              @dashrender said in My first computer:

                              I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                              I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                              Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                              lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                              Some 8088 were PC, some were not. Only the PC ones got famous in years later. But at the time, there were loads of non-PC 8088 based computers.

                              1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • dbeatoD
                                dbeato
                                last edited by

                                My First Computer was with an Intel Pentium 2 and the Intel SE440BX-2 motherboard.

                                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @dbeato
                                  last edited by

                                  @dbeato said in My first computer:

                                  My First Computer was with an Intel Pentium 2 and the Intel SE440BX-2 motherboard.

                                  Get off my lawn!

                                  dbeatoD 1 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                  • dbeatoD
                                    dbeato @scottalanmiller
                                    last edited by

                                    @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                                    @dbeato said in My first computer:

                                    My First Computer was with an Intel Pentium 2 and the Intel SE440BX-2 motherboard.

                                    Get off my lawn!

                                    Lol 🙂

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • 1
                                      1337 @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                                      @dashrender said in My first computer:

                                      @pete-s said in My first computer:

                                      @dashrender said in My first computer:

                                      I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                                      I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                                      Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                                      lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                                      Some 8088 were PC, some were not. Only the PC ones got famous in years later. But at the time, there were loads of non-PC 8088 based computers.

                                      Actually 8086 was the real CPU (hence the name x86 architecture).
                                      The 8088 was just a cheaper variation with 8-bit external bus (8088) instead of the standard 16-bit bus.

                                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • 1
                                        1337 @scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by 1337

                                        @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                                        @dbeato said in My first computer:

                                        My First Computer was with an Intel Pentium 2 and the Intel SE440BX-2 motherboard.

                                        Get off my lawn!

                                        :thumbs_up:

                                        This is what the first generation PC motherboards looked like. If you like me were building PCs back then, you had to have an eprom-programmer and UV eraser if you wanted to update the bios (ICs in the top middle with labels). And you had to put all the memory chips in sockets yourself (the lower right area on the pic). 640 KByte was a lot of memory.

                                        0_1539362794452_s-l1000.jpg

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @1337
                                          last edited by

                                          @pete-s said in My first computer:

                                          @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                                          @dashrender said in My first computer:

                                          @pete-s said in My first computer:

                                          @dashrender said in My first computer:

                                          I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                                          I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                                          Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                                          lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                                          Some 8088 were PC, some were not. Only the PC ones got famous in years later. But at the time, there were loads of non-PC 8088 based computers.

                                          Actually 8086 was the real CPU (hence the name x86 architecture).
                                          The 8088 was just a cheaper variation with 8-bit external bus (8088) instead of the standard 16-bit bus.

                                          Yup, I'm very aware, was already in to computers when PC architecture came out.

                                          8086 was never used in a PC however. PC architecture, which required x86, used 8088 in all the first models, not the 8086 to save money. But the 8088 was an x86. But the 186, 286, and so forth all got used in real world PCs, while the 8086 did not. You could, in theory, make an 8086 based PC, it fits in the architecture, but they didn't release at the time.

                                          But PC is a full system architecture, not just computers based on 8086 family processors. That was my point. Back in the 8086 and 8088 eras, half of the machines made with those processors (some 8088s and all 8086s) were not PC, but were x86.

                                          1 DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • 1
                                            1337 @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                                            @pete-s said in My first computer:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in My first computer:

                                            @dashrender said in My first computer:

                                            @pete-s said in My first computer:

                                            @dashrender said in My first computer:

                                            I bought my first computer when I was 12 (1988). It was a used 8088 with 640K memory (if memory serves), amber screen, two 5.25 floppies, no hard disk - $250. turned right around and went to Sam's club and bought a 30 MB drive for $300 - that was pre ATA (is that called Winchester?) My dad installed the drive, then I installed DOS 3.x on it.

                                            I know I used computers before that, but I don't recall what they were though. I do remember playing with an Apple IIe in elemetry school, but we didn't have one at home. I think my computer was the first one owned by us in the house. Though my dad had a "portable" computer from the military that he brought home often. It was as large as carry on luggage today.

                                            Before ATA I think it was ST-506 interface. "Serious" computers used SCSI disks though.

                                            lol - I'm pretty sure the 8088 was considered a PC, not sure about the 'seriousness' of it.. but I wouldn't expect most home users to have SCSI.

                                            Some 8088 were PC, some were not. Only the PC ones got famous in years later. But at the time, there were loads of non-PC 8088 based computers.

                                            Actually 8086 was the real CPU (hence the name x86 architecture).
                                            The 8088 was just a cheaper variation with 8-bit external bus (8088) instead of the standard 16-bit bus.

                                            Yup, I'm very aware, was already in to computers when PC architecture came out.

                                            8086 was never used in a PC however. PC architecture, which required x86, used 8088 in all the first models, not the 8086 to save money. But the 8088 was an x86. But the 186, 286, and so forth all got used in real world PCs, while the 8086 did not. You could, in theory, make an 8086 based PC, it fits in the architecture, but they didn't release at the time.

                                            But PC is a full system architecture, not just computers based on 8086 family processors. That was my point. Back in the 8086 and 8088 eras, half of the machines made with those processors (some 8088s and all 8086s) were not PC, but were x86.

                                            Yes, agreed.

                                            But kids today think the 8086 is the Intel Core i7-8086K. 🤦

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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