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What system did you first use?

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  • I thought it would be good to start a thread so all on here can reveal the first systems they used ๐Ÿ™‚ Iโ€™ll startโ€ฆ

    My interests in programming actually started in 1984 (yes, I suppose there is a parallel with George Orwellโ€™s novel, but it wasnโ€™t intended) and I started out on one of these

    bbc.jpg

    At the time, my year of school was the very first to sit the new GCSE. My Computer Studies teacher offered me a chance to write my own application for my exam, so I did. It was in tandem with the Geography department, who at the time, were studying rainfall over the course of a 6 month period. I collected rainfall data every day (I distinctly recall having to go into school an hour earlier to do this every day), and then added that to a database. I then wrote a front-end (all in BASIC) that allowed you to query the database, and return results. When printed, the entire program list stretched 5 lengths of the classroom! The final part was for me to highlight the various sections of the printout to explain what they did, and why they were there.

    I have fond memories of this. It was DOT Matrix 3-part NCR paper, printed by a Daisy Wheel. For those who arenโ€™t sure of what that looks like, here it is.

    printer.jpg

    Oh, I remember this well. It printed NLQ (Near Letter Quality) - long before fonts were even a thing. It was as noisy as hell - and S U P E R slow ๐Ÿ™‚

    I submitted my program, and got an A ๐Ÿ™‚

    Our school was a bit behind the times in terms of hardware. At home, I had one of these

    amstrad.jpg

    This is the machine that I actually learned BASIC on. For those interest in what BASIC stands for, itโ€™s Beginnerโ€™s All Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code

    I spent HOURS writing code on this machine. One of the โ€œapplicationsโ€ I wrote was over 5,000 lines - at the time, this was unprecedented, and in fact, the computer crashed because it ran out of memory as soon as you typed runโ€ฆ

    Oh, those were the days. Seriously though, looking back on this now, itโ€™s amazing how far technology has advanced.

    What systems did you use ?

  • My first system I use is an Atari Mega STe.

    I played games with it and work on mathematic software ๐Ÿ™‚

    0fe66d7c-2095-43a7-8534-5c0ad2d8da85-image.png

  • @downpw wow. I definitely remember the Atari ST. One of my favourite games was R-type ๐Ÿ‘

  • me i twas :

    • North & South Les tuniques bleues
    • golden Axe
    • The Secret of Monkey Island
    • Ghosts 'n Goblins
    • โ€ฆ

    R-type was a very good shoot 'em up ๐Ÿ™‚

  • @downpw yeah, loved R-Type but Golden Axe brings back so many memories !

  • My first system was hp 4000 , then followed by hp folio 9470m, i have used hp for a very longtime. Its the best ever machine i learned windows with it, 25 yrs in same background.

  • @Sala An era I recall well. I used the predecessor, before HP acquired Compaq - and this was back in 1997 ๐Ÿ˜ฒ

    s-l1600.jpg

    Pentium I 166mhz MX

  • @phenomlab lol dont make me laugh, pentium ๐Ÿ˜„
    The cd drive was in high demand ๐Ÿคญโ€ฆ php was not so popular. XML was the main thing! Pentium has been a walkthrough for all of us.

  • @phenomlab do you still have it? The picture looks fresh. It could sale big maybe in 2050โ€™s ๐Ÿค”

  • @Sala heh, MMX technology was bleeding edge at that time! And yes, the CD-ROM was king until the DVD came along and stole itโ€™s crown. I distinctly remember running Windows 95 on these machines, then (with a memory upgrade) Windows NT4 Workstation with service pack 3.

    They also made a small form factor model with no floppy disk (yeah, Iโ€™m that old) and the only 2 ways to get an operating system on it were network boot or cloning a hard disk in another system then installing that into the one without the floppy.

    We avoided those like the plague.

  • @phenomlab thereโ€™s one guy who i knew back then, he was able to collect all torn pieces of floppy black disc and put them together and make it read.

    Computer skills

  • @Sala impressive. Thatโ€™s actually a lot harder than it looks. I once worked for a trading firm in the 90s and a trader came to me with a corrupted floppy disk demanding I get it to work.

    Evidently, it had all of his trading positions on it and he had no backup ๐Ÿ˜ง and he wasnโ€™t impressed when I told him that the chances of data recovery were less than zero.


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