My first family computer was an Osborne One. Now, let me hear about yours.
@vwbusguy First one the family owned was an IBM PC XT, with 640KB of RAM, a DSDD 5¼" floppy drive, a 10MB hard drive, and a CGA card and matching monitor.
@vwbusguy One of these lovely beasts:
Man I loved that computer. I still have the gutted case around, because I like it so much :P
@vwbusguy my first was the TI99/4A.
This one wasn't the original, but the one I recently got running with the PEB underneath it - something I would have loved to have back in the day.
@vwbusguy an IBM PCjr. Wikipedia tells me it was a market failure, but they sold at least one. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_PCjr
@vwbusguy
First family computer was a DEC Rainbow that my dad brought home from work … after it was surplused in 1990 or thereabouts. Early adopters my parents were not.
@vwbusguy we had a Compaq Presario 5000. I'm pretty sure it was the AMD duron model with 64mb of ram. I just remember thinking that color on it was cool because the only computers I had seen before that were completely beige lol
@mos_8502 I'm guessing that was back when you had to "park" the hard drive before moving the machine?
@peter My uncle just told me last week that he first learned on a TI99.
@jdd I don't think I've ever seen one of those, but now I'm curious about the dual Z80 and 8088 CPU setup.
@Mirppc The distinct sound of those ][e floppy drives will forever be etched in my memory.
@the_skotts We had one of those for our 3rd family computer. Came with Windows 95 and we eventually upgraded it to 98SE. I remember playing Final Fantasy 7 on it. Ours had either a Pentium 2 or Pentium MMX, I can't remember which.
@vwbusguy The issue with the TI was that it was so slow due to it's architecture.
Processor was actually 16 bits but for some reason only 256 bytes of ram on the base machine - the 16K was in the video chip so the cpu couldn't access it directly & it was 8 bit.
Then the expansion memory was on a 3rd 8 bit bus, but at least the cpu could access it directly.
A shame as it could have been better
@vwbusguy
Dual CPUs didn’t mean anything to me at the time, so I couldn’t tell you anything about that feature … or pretty much anything else. I vaguely remember playing Zork on it but that’s about all
@jdd Dual CPUs with Zork just means you're twice as likely to be eaten by a grue.
@cy The person who replied with a pic of an emachines box certainly made me feel old.
@vwbusguy yeah, exactly. the keyboard was so bad that even the spectrum's rubber keys were an improvement
@sanityinc @vwbusguy same, except the US version Timex Sinclair 1000. No 16kb expansion pack. The keyboard was such a pain to type on! And saving to cassette wouldn't always restore properly.
Let's also not forget how the #zxspectrum Z80A at 3.5MHz ran circles around C64 when it came to vector graphics :)
(now who could ever guess what was my first computer...)
@jarkko @vathpela @timojyrinki @ikkeT Yup. Clock speed isn't the full story since 8080 was much less efficient than the 6502 instruction based stuff. It was a roughly 4:1 ratio.