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A couple of years later I learned from my math teacher they used 'peek' and 'poke' to directly access memory. Unfortuanately in eight grade assembly language was over my head.
Looks like fun. I'm not sure 8th graders should be learning assembly, which now that I think of it, meant something entirely different in secondary school.
Seems like Tandys (or is it Tandies) are a popular first computer. I guess that makes sense.
I keep waiting for someone to say, "my first computer was made out of sticks and grape stems". That sucker was fast too.
Used to read tea leaves too.
Joke was on me, although Win 95 was a leap compared to 3.11. Ah Win 95. I had to support 16-bit Oracle Office on 95; that was a trip.
I remember Windows 3.11 too, but was more of a WFWG guy :).
I had a calculator at home, orange on black LED, ftw!
1K of RAM and THAT keyboard.
Years later I had a 286 which I used to access CompuServe and also my first web browsing experience via TELNET and lynx.
Mouse. I don't need a steenking mouse!
If we're doing first Internet experience, my was through something called America Online in 1995.
This post makes me want to order the 25th anniversary of War Games and show it to my kids and show them how it was back in the day.
What every happened to Dabney Coleman? He was in every movie made in the 80s.
Since you asked.
Or have you modded the Amiga to do Intertubes and what not?
XP, Vista, XP, XP, XP, sometimes an old W95 for silly apps I haven't moved yet.
But I spend most of my time with computers at work, mostly hp-ux, XP with various levels of virtualization. I'm in an old-school environment, they only went to XP because a vendor forced them to for some new stuff, but there are some interesting virtualization, video and distributed db projects. I try to stick with Oracle/unix and the ERP as much as possible. I'd like to do the APEX & Web/social stuff, but oh well (Oracle corp really pissed off the management before I ever got involved). I read a newspaper on the train, people there have had a bit of cognitive dissonance when I tell them what I do (there are a lot of techie types on this train, places like Quest and various biosciences are in this area, plus university students).
First computer was a keyboard/monitor using and acoustic coupling modem to some mainframe up-state. I learned BASIC. My high school was a beta site for DEC and we had the beta PDP-11/44. My sister was in college using cards. I was baffled by cards.
In college I got the 512K Mac after using my friend's 128K. Upgrading to double-sided floppy drive was awesome! I stayed with Mac through college (of course in college we used emacs to program PASCAL) and for 5 years after that. But everyone was using PCs (Windows) and I kept getting discarded company laptops.
So, I eventually tossed my 512K Mac (1992?) right about the time my brother's company gave him an Osborne luggable with Wordstar on it.
Today, my wife and I average 4 Dell (usually) laptops in the home -- 1 each personal and work. WE both like Macs from the old days, but there is still the uncomfortable feeling of losing compatibility if you go back. I've been toying with getting one for home audio, though.
Actually, I think I'd like to get a machine set up with Ubuntu, but getting time to play with one more machine is a little tough at this point.
Oh no, that line was about at home. I thought that was disambuigated by the next paragraph. Sorry. The Amiga is in my home office.