I was 9. It ran windows95, and I waited a gazillion years for every web page to load just to have my connection broken every time someone answered the phone.
I think I was 10, an Apple II+. It wasn't the first thing I used to program (I'd dabbled in LOGO and BASIC before), but it was a surprisingly complete computer. I used it to learn about a lot of different things, such as input from peripherals like a joystick, as well as memory management -- from that damnable "out of memory" error when my overzealous BASIC programs got too big. :)
I was 17 1/2. It was 1979, it was a TRS-80 with a whole 16KB of memory and a Z80 running at 1.77 MHz.
After two months I got fed up with how slow it was and wrote a compiler. It was written in BASIC and compiled itself. In the 16KB I fitted the BASIC source, two copies of the compiled version, and the tape saving program.
I was 7 or 8, it was a Sharp machine that had a tape (as in cassette) drive and no screen (they were expensive). Using the manual, we used to boot up the machine from the tape, type commands on the keyboard in something like BASIC, and get a roll printer to print out-into two colors, black and red!- a car.
The second machine I got was an IBM XT clone, with DOS 2 or 3 and green CRT twice as deep as the desk we had it on.
Ditto, the family bought Sharp MZ-700 when I was 7 (c.1985), and only I became interested in it.
I upgraded to a Commodore 64 in about 1988, after my aunt didn't want it, and then a disk drive 2 years later with freezer cartridge. I had a lot of fun. The 16-bit machines (I had an Amiga/Atari ST) were fun, but it took until I got a 486 PC with 16mb RAM (1996) to actually make good use of a computer. Mainly web design work and email.
Once my mother was working on a big project for her work in word. So, she was pretty much done when she hit Ctrl-A + spacebar. She panicked. All that work wasted. My 4 year old self heard her yelling in the other room and I came in. She explained what happened and I just pressed Ctrl-Z. Everything was back. She thought I was magical.
My first computer was about when i was 3. Well, I always had computers around but I started using them and surfing the web at around 3(which pretty much amounted to silly little games). But I knew the ins and outs of Windows and how to get around and figure stuff out.
I got my own personal computer at around 10.
Now, I'm 14 and I'm just getting into programming and Linux.
Cassette tape was also the format of choice for my Atari 400, but I had the computer for a year before I got the tape drive. So for a year I had to retype my BASIC programs into the 16k of RAM every time the computer got turned off. On the membrane "keyboard".
I was 6 and it was a Brazilian MSX: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotbit. Man, those were the days, using MS-BASIC and drowning on GOSUBs and SPRITEs ;)
It was a time where the knowledge was a lot harder to be obtained, you had to buy books and magazines to know the new programming tips. Hard times :P
Wow, I'm surprised!! I am Brazilian too, though my very first computer was a TK-85 (aka Sinclair ZX81), when I was 13... At the time Brazil was under a "market block-out" that blocked all imported computers, so we were forced to use the crappy Brazilian knock-offs!
A few years later I got an Expert (MSX) and in fact I ended up writing the first anti-virus for MSX computers (Viru-Boot, not sure if you ever seen it, it was featured in the magazines at the time)
Are you from Sao Paulo? In Sao Paulo the default hang-out was either Paulisoft or Disprosoft, the best places to get pirate software.
I am from Campinas, but I bought a lot of pirate software from those stores, and others. Since I was really young, my father used to drive me to São Paulo, to a joint on the Nacional building I think, where there was a software house that used to sell MSX floppies with software.
I remember it was one of the happiest moments of my life when I entered that office, picked the softwares I wanted from a list copied using a "mimeograph". Soon after that, guy that was helping us came back carrying a paper box full of 5 1/4" disks on it. I couldn't wait to be home and test all that :-)
Yeah, good old days... Playing Magical Tree, Nemesis, Penguin Adventure between MS-BASIC hacking. And I was 6! :-)
RIGHT! The place at the Nacional building (old downtown) was Paulisoft. Man, you could smell the scent of those 5 1/4" Nashua floppies as soon as you get out of the elevator!
ME TOO, My friends and I would carefully select the games over the week and then we couldn't wait until Saturday to get them. In fact, one day we almost got pickpocketed in the subway, and our concern was not our money or wallet, but protecting our floppies!! pretty hilarious now that I think about it...
At some point they published a book to hack the games so you'd get infinite lives. My friends and I figured out the assembly hex code for "minus one" (i. e.: one less life) and soon we were able to hack a bunch of games by looking for that byte alone throughout the memory.
Also we would hang-out at DDX. I lived my entire life in Vila Mariana (a Sao Paulo neighborhood), and we would just hang-out there with the guy who designed the mega-ram and the msx2 clone boards. The guy was doing pretty hardcore stuff, pure hacking... He would be considered a hero here in the US, but unfortunately in Brazil we don't recognize such talent...
There are still various MSX fan-clubs alive all over the world, and there are quite a few open source emulators. You can get all those games, and even MSX2 games too.
Probably 8 or 9 - had a ZX80 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZX80) and bought a book on BASIC so I could learn to write games. I learned GOTO and thought it was just the absolute sickest thing EVAR!
Macintosh LC III. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_LC#.22Pizza_boxes.22 It was snappy enough with 36MB of RAM but the 80MB of HD was kind of killer. I was probably 7 years old when we got it and 10 when we maxed the RAM and bought a modem. I'm surprised that no one else had a Mac but my mother was a school teacher. I got a real computer at 13.
I didn't have my first personal computer until I was 30. It was a Sun 3 "dickless" workstation on my desk, POS. I gave it to my grad student and got a Mac II the next year.
I read a Fortran (66?) programming lesson book when I was 15, and wrote some programs on paper, but had no machine to try them on.
I wrote Basic on a dial-in (120 bps acoustic coupled) teletype (with paper tape for saving/restoring) at high school when I was 16 (1973).
My parents bought an Apple IIe when I was 8 or 9. When I was 11, I got a computer of my own - a Powerbook 140. A laptop with 4M RAM, 40M disk, a 16 MHz 68030 and a built-in trackball was quite impressive in 1992.
14. It was a Vic-20. Cassete tape storage, 3.5k of memory. It did have a wicked fast centipede game, though in Ireland I wasn't able to find any decent books on writing machine code instead of BASIC. And Gridrunner. Oh yeah.
56 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 101 ms ] threadAfter two months I got fed up with how slow it was and wrote a compiler. It was written in BASIC and compiled itself. In the 16KB I fitted the BASIC source, two copies of the compiled version, and the tape saving program.
I think the compiler was 3810 bytes ...
LOGO rocks :)
The second machine I got was an IBM XT clone, with DOS 2 or 3 and green CRT twice as deep as the desk we had it on.
I upgraded to a Commodore 64 in about 1988, after my aunt didn't want it, and then a disk drive 2 years later with freezer cartridge. I had a lot of fun. The 16-bit machines (I had an Amiga/Atari ST) were fun, but it took until I got a 486 PC with 16mb RAM (1996) to actually make good use of a computer. Mainly web design work and email.
My first computer was about when i was 3. Well, I always had computers around but I started using them and surfing the web at around 3(which pretty much amounted to silly little games). But I knew the ins and outs of Windows and how to get around and figure stuff out.
I got my own personal computer at around 10.
Now, I'm 14 and I'm just getting into programming and Linux.
Cue Monty Python sketch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13JK5kChbRw
I remember wishing I had an Atari 800, which had 64k of RAM and a real keyboard!
I was 16, but that was 1982. No intertubes. No printer. No RS-232. Cassette tapes.
It was a time where the knowledge was a lot harder to be obtained, you had to buy books and magazines to know the new programming tips. Hard times :P
A few years later I got an Expert (MSX) and in fact I ended up writing the first anti-virus for MSX computers (Viru-Boot, not sure if you ever seen it, it was featured in the magazines at the time)
Are you from Sao Paulo? In Sao Paulo the default hang-out was either Paulisoft or Disprosoft, the best places to get pirate software.
The good-old-days!!
I remember it was one of the happiest moments of my life when I entered that office, picked the softwares I wanted from a list copied using a "mimeograph". Soon after that, guy that was helping us came back carrying a paper box full of 5 1/4" disks on it. I couldn't wait to be home and test all that :-)
Yeah, good old days... Playing Magical Tree, Nemesis, Penguin Adventure between MS-BASIC hacking. And I was 6! :-)
My first computer was a 386 already in the age of windows, and I was 6-8 years old :D
ME TOO, My friends and I would carefully select the games over the week and then we couldn't wait until Saturday to get them. In fact, one day we almost got pickpocketed in the subway, and our concern was not our money or wallet, but protecting our floppies!! pretty hilarious now that I think about it...
At some point they published a book to hack the games so you'd get infinite lives. My friends and I figured out the assembly hex code for "minus one" (i. e.: one less life) and soon we were able to hack a bunch of games by looking for that byte alone throughout the memory.
Also we would hang-out at DDX. I lived my entire life in Vila Mariana (a Sao Paulo neighborhood), and we would just hang-out there with the guy who designed the mega-ram and the msx2 clone boards. The guy was doing pretty hardcore stuff, pure hacking... He would be considered a hero here in the US, but unfortunately in Brazil we don't recognize such talent...
There are still various MSX fan-clubs alive all over the world, and there are quite a few open source emulators. You can get all those games, and even MSX2 games too.
1998.
I read a Fortran (66?) programming lesson book when I was 15, and wrote some programs on paper, but had no machine to try them on.
I wrote Basic on a dial-in (120 bps acoustic coupled) teletype (with paper tape for saving/restoring) at high school when I was 16 (1973).