ANSWERS: 70
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NEC.
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Gateway
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IBM PC in the mid 1980s. +5
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compaq presario.
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Digital Equipment Corporation
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A clone
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Commodore 64. I learned basic programming when I was eight years old.
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Amstrad
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Commodore 64.
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TRS-80 Color Computer w/4k of ram and a black and white tv for a monitor
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Atari 800.
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A Micron Plus, it cost approx 2,500 and was actually one of the few at that time that was upgradeable. In fact I still have the original tower with new everything however I only use my laptop now.
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I have already asked this question, but it doesn't show up as a dup - oh well!
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It was a BBC model B micro with, I believe, a whole 16K of RAM.
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Gateway
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The first I owned was a Gateway. The first I worked with was an IBM.
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Gateway was the first. Dell was the second. From then on, I built my own.
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A Northstar Advantage http://www.old-computers.com/museum/computer.asp?c=652
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Edison-Ford gateway. Came with a free buggy whip.
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The first computer that my family bought when I was a kid and the first one that I bought for myself were both Apple computers.
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Timex-Sinclair. But it was hardly a computer by today's standards.
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Gateway.
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Some ADAM thing that also played Colecovision game cartridges. My cell phone does more, almost. It had a typewritier function that would also act as a real typewriter. Programming the thing took 50 lines of whatever it was called to make a square turn.
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My first computer was Apple II Plus bought in 1981.
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Toshiba, a laptop I bought in about 1993...
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some random thing that ran win95. i think my cousin put it together for us
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The good old IBM Personal Computer XT with the whopping 8088 processor!! Blisteringly slow!! I miss DOS!!!
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IBM PS2 with 640 meg of RAM (a real upgrade from 512) and a 20 Meg hard drive. I now have a 200 gig hard drive and that's small. Black and white monitor, no color.
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Hewlett-Packard with Windows Millenium on it and 64 MB of Ram, haha. It cost nearly $3000 at that time...what a sad, sad waste.
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IBM 286 30 mb HD I think it was a 12 or 15 mhz cpu
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Commodore. That Vic-20 was a lot of fun :)
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Hewlett-Packard. +5
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Packard Bell
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IBM
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Gateway.
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Hewlett-Packard
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486 lulz. But my dad had this ancient thing, where the monitor only displayed black and orange. I played "Where in the World is Carmen SanDiego" on it.
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Gateway
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Hewlett-Packard
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Compaq presario desktop.
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Dell! +5
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1993 pieced together from old puters lasted 5 years lol
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I believe it was an IBM
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Macintosh. All my computers are Macs.
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Acer!
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e-Machines.
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The first one I ever used was an IBM, at work. The 1st one at home was a 286 Acer.
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It was an Edison Company "Electric analytical engine" model 2. Later I traded it in for a John Logie Baird "Electronical tabulation & International wire services televisor" model 12, ( It had a 2x3 inch green screen driven by a Paul Nipkow scanning disk,). I used that for years - then I bought an IBM 360 and nearly died from the electric bills associated with it.
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an atari 400 running basic,my friend had an amstrad computer and a vic 20 my stepdad had a apple 2 all were back in the early to mid 80s so its been interesting to see the power and technology grow with me,now I have an apple intel imac.
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Texas Instruments
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Fujitsu
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Apple Lisa.
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gateway. NEver again by the way, gateway is a pain to me.
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Sinclair
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First computer I ever worked with was an IBM (mainframe) First computer I owned was a Timex-Sinclair. A gift. First computer I bought was a Commodore Amiga 1000.
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It was a Gateway computer
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One o' dem 486's. If that's the right term...I forget. It was old as Egypt.
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I had a Sinclair Spectrum
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Amstrad
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Atari =)
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ICL PC in about 1983.
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The first computer I ever used was an Apple II way back in 1982/1983, that was in secondary school. Then I purchased a Sinclair ZX Spectrum, it was crap but it was my first real computer. My first IBM PC compatible was an unbranded computer I got a guy to build for me.
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An abacus: http://www.thetechland.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/Inventions/abacus.jpg I had an earlier model with a maximum capacity of two stones. The stones were expensive in those days, so we hobbyists used beans. I had an Osborne Two-Bean Rock Jockey. - Later I upgraded to a Babbage Difference Engine, which made a big difference: http://www.computersciencelab.com/Images/DifferenceEngine.jpg
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TRS-80 was the first computer my family ever owned
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Packard Bell
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TRS-80 Coco 4k ram, tv for a screen
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ibm
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WebTV. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSN_TV
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IBM
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HP
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