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I had:-
ZX80
ZX81
TI 99/4A
Atari 1040ST
Awesome days ๐
I have an amstrad pcw green screen thingy in the attic all safely stored awaiting it become and antique worth millions
Didn't everyone with a BBC become a MAC owner?
That's the burden of owning a bbc, all that superiority is too difficult to let go of. You can't possibly just go and own a PC now.
Mix it up with the commoners? Mother of titan, give me something that shows I'm better. I don't care how much it costs.
No-one has yet mentioned the Mighty Acorn Atom. Best keyboard ever, proper clicky. Accept there were only about 9 games for it, but even so.
Someone lent me an original Apple II with a green screen. I was so traumatised with its rubbishness, it was 20 years before i could bring myself to buy a mac.
Dragon32, Oric-1, Vic-20 - classics of their time. Anyone remember the even earlier "home computers" - Sharp MZ80? Pet?
BBC Micros? Pah, Johnny come lately types. I think my Acorn Atom is still sat somewhere in my parents loft.
*high fives with thepurist* I knew someone else had bought one ๐
@bb - i had one of those and wrote a mate's best man's speech on it. God Alive, it'd have been quicker to chip it out of slate.
Was Elite a Spectrum or C64 game? Nothing before or since has come close.
BBC B, originally.
We had a Pet, Alex. It even had games on it.
I had a ZX80 too which came out a bit later (1980). Won a hundred quid on the premium bonds and bought a computer with it. My parents said it was a waste of money.
I seem to have done alright out of getting into computers early.
Amiga > Atari ST
C64 > ZX Spectrum
That is all
'Mastering machine code on your ZX81' by Toni Baker.
I had that book ๐
Used an Atom at school, a really bright lad (he must have been about 13 years old!) wrote a very good space invaders game on it in his lunchtimes, all written in assembler (which the Atom/Beeb had built in of course!)
Well I did a thesis on it, took forwever mind but it was a stunningly simple and easy piece of kit I'd ever used. Networked too...
jeeeze is this argument still going on.i thought i'd settled it with my fist waving smilie (C64/amiga A500+ for the win ๐
Raceface > I had Astro Wars, Scramble and Firefox F-7 (and a Big Trak), but that one passed me by I'm afraid.
And we're all forgetting the beast that was the RM 380-Z
That was what our school equipped our "computer lab" with (mid 80s). Five machines connected to a single pair of 5.25" floppies for storage. With all five going at once, the lesson was over before anything had loaded.
You can't post things like C64 and Spectrum saying that's the end of the argument when those were mature devices. Loads of home computers along before them and even more rudimentary devices before that.
We had one of those Atari devices with pong on it and a gun game.
Anyone ever have an EMMA?
Used an Atom at school, a really bright lad (he must have been about 13 years old!) wrote a very good space invaders game on it in his lunchtimes, all written in assembler (which the Atom/Beeb had built in of course!)
A lack of built in assembler on the C64 was a bit of a pain, I ended up writing my own!
And we're all forgetting the beast that was the RM 380-Z
First computer I used ๐
I'm having so many flashbacks, it's like being in 'Nam ๐
I once had a job of making 500 copies of some software using the two RM drives. Only after about 450, did I realise I'd been doing it the wrong way around.
EMMA? Nope. But I did see someone actually pay real money for an Osborne-1. The first not very portable computer.
I still remember Manic Miner taking ages to load off tape on the C64 (whilst displaying crazy flashing graphics that would surely now be banned for triggering epilepsy) and the sadness that came with hearing the tape click having reached the end and the game failing to load (think it was 16 minutes which was a lifetime at that age).
A mate had an Oric 32 - how I laughed :p I remember being blown away by an Archimedes the school got though, I'm sure I wouldn't be if I saw it's graphics today though :p



