Dad bought a RS TRS-80 way before the schools got them. I'm not sure how/why because we were pretty poor. I was all excited and enrolled in some programming classes to learn BASIC. I then discovered a text-based Zork game and had no time for learning anymore!Not mine, but this was the first computer I used in HS.
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Not mine, but this was the first computer I used in HS.
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My company gave me a computer back in the 90s so have no attachment or recall. But for my kids, I got an AT&T, which my wife got from her company at a steep discount in 1998. I used it a lot.
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Mine looked a lot like the one pictured above but per my son, it was an AT&T Globalyst 360 (?). I could not find an image of that but the Gateway looks so similar I went with it.My parents bought our first computer (Gateway) and it looked a lot like this. It got a ton of use.
I bought my first PC in 1998 (39 years old). Never had a reason to have one prior to that even though I had been thinking about it for a long time.I don't think I got my first computer until I was 28, so it was probably Windows 95.
I had a word processor my first year in Ames. My (now) wife admits she was jealous because she only had a typewriter.Does this count?
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Yeah, only thing that would have been cool before that would have been games, but I had my various game systems. Really just got my first one once the internet was something I thought I needed.I bought my first PC in 1998 (39 years old). Never had a reason to have one prior to that even though I had been thinking about it for a long time.
Ahh. The old Wordperfect and Lotus 1-2-3 programs.oh and I hated Word Perfect ... DOS and Window versions....
Lotus 1-2-3 doesn't get enough credit for how much it increased productivity. Changed history.Ahh. The old Wordperfect and Lotus 1-2-3 programs.
You were in "the cloud" then and didn't even know it!Yep, those were terminals connected to AEA "computers" in the base cities (ours was in Davenport). 1980-82 ish. You are correct, initially there was no screen, only dot matrix printout.
Scene:My company gave me a computer back in the 90s so have no attachment or recall. But for my kids, I got an AT&T, which my wife got from her company at a steep discount in 1998. I used it a lot.
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First computer tales: Mine was a 486 with 4Mb of RAM, 200Mb hard drive and 17" COLOR monitor for $2800 in 1990 (yes, monochrome monitors were still a thing back then). Well, technically I had a Commodore 64 in the 80's but rarely used it, and when I did it was video games only (and it was green screen only). I had to wait a couple of years after graduation to save up enough money to buy a "real" computer.
First computer I saw at junior high school was also a teletype like set up with pin drive paper roll printing out what was happening at the actual computer at the Community College a couple of counties away.Sit around the fire youngsters, while Cascade regales you with tales from the Dawn of the Computer Age.
Dad taught math and got selected to have "the computer" in his portable classroom - this was late 70s/early 80s. It was shoved into a small closet in the portable classroom.
Young Cascade recalls that the initial computer did not actually have a computer. You typed stuff in, it went via phone to the actual mainframe in Dubuque, then it responded. TBH I think it initially didn't have a monitor either, it just printed out "the screen" on a dot matrix. But not sure if I remember that right.
Later the school got Apple II, IIc, II+, IIe of course.
Dad finally got an Apple IIe for home. Upgrades included 2 floppy drives (for faster copying of files), amber monitor, and (the big splurge) 128 kilobytes of Ram. This would have basically been Alienware in 1984(ish). I think it cost right about $2,000, which frankly, was a fortune for a guy making about $20k a year at that time. It would be around $10k in todays dollars.
I think it was a great investment though. I learned how to program (AppleBasic!), how computers worked and thought, word processor, spreadsheet, and really fed my desire to learn. So it was great from that aspect.
And of course all the games. Super Star Trek (look it up), a text-based football game, Bagels, Oregon Trail. Later recognizable video games like OG Castle Wolfenstein, Lode Runner, Silent Service, Kareteka.
I was NOT a good typist in college. It saved me when we got one of these. I wrote several papers on it and had three lines to catch and correct mistakes before it printed. What a lifesaver.Does this count?
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