this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2024
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TL;DR It was an old Wang system, 286 processor(I think, anyway), with no hard drive, a 5.25" floppy drive, and a lovely green monochrome monitor. I didn't have it long enough to reach the point where I could have identified the actual hardware/specs.

Back in 1993, I was 10, and the internet really wasn't a thing yet(yeah, yeah, I know. But for most of us, the internet didn't exist until the mid-late 90's). You'd probably have difficulty even finding someone in the neighborhood who could tell you what a computer was, nevermind having used one. I was out running around the city, as you used to be able to do at 10 years old, when I passed by some local business/office/who knows I was 10. Big pile of trash out front, waiting to be picked up. When you're a kid, and you're poor, you go picking. Trash picking, I mean. You can get all sorts of cool shit, especially from the wealthier neighborhoods. Maybe it's different nowadays, but back in the day, people would toss out perfectly good toys, bikes, electronics, furniture, and as they became more commom, videogames, computers, etc. A ton of the shit I owned as a kid is stuff I picked straight out of the trash. Even after that, I picked trash for years. Resold a metric FUCKTON of stuff that other(presumably wealthier) people deemed to be garbage.

Back to this business/office/free stuff location, I obviously start eyeing what's in the big pile out front of this place. Among the stuff, I see a big, beige, metal box, a weird looking TV, and something with a big coiled wire hanging off of it. Now, it's not like there weren't computers in movies/TV at that point, and I had just read Jurassic park the same year, so I did recognize, vaguely, what it was. So I start looking at it, poking around, It had a name on it. "Wang". Don't know what that means, but I'm 10; that's hilarious. I decide I'm taking it. Tried to pick it up, and yeah, that shit is heavy. Nevermind the TV thing, and the keyboard. So as you do, I look around for a stary shopping cart, and sure enough, there's never one far away. Grab the cart and start lifting my haul into it, when someone comes out of the business/office/treasure-hoard, and yells "HEY!" Thought I was about to be in trouble, but instead, this guys walks over to me and says "you're gonna need this." Handed me a bundle of wires, and a square envelope, and just went back inside. So I toss that in the cart, and start pushing. And push I did. A shopping cart full of early 90's computer hardware, pushed by a 10 year-old, down the street, on and off of curb, up and down hills, from the other end of the city, is hard work. But eventually, I got home with it. Not to worry though, I only lived on the 3rd floor of a three-story building.

So I get home, and I start unloading my haul, one piece at a time, and start dragging it up the stairs. Thankfully no one was home, so I could bring everything into my room without anyone complaing about what I'm doing. That was also one of the only times I actually had a bedroom, so that worked out. Once I get it in there, I put the big metal box on the floor in the corner of my room, I take my monitor and decide that I'm pretty sure it's supposed to sit on top, so I put that there. The keyboard was next. After I untagled that cursed coiled cable, I obviously checked the back of the monitor, looking for where I need to plug the keyboard in. Figured out that no, it gets plugged into the big metal box. What next? Oh, right, that bundle of wires the guy gave me. It tuned out to be a couple of power cables, and a (what I now would assume) was a VGA cable. So I get to work plugging all of that in, and when it comes to the VGA cable, that's when I realize that oh, everything plugs into the metal box, that seems important. That must be the part that is a "computer." So what the hell is the TV thing? Took a minute, but I eventually remembered my NES, and realized that oh yeah, the box is where everything happens, and the screen is just where you see it. Again, I was 10, and all of this technology was still new to the average person. Give me a break here.

And last up was that square envelope. Would you believe it had a black plastic thing inside? It's really floppy. Weird. What the fuck is this thing? It has a white sticker on it, and some illegible scribbles. Nintendo to the rescue again. This black plastic thing sure does look like it would fit into the slot on the front of the metal box. Oh shit, it did! Now I just have to turn this thing on. How the fuck do you turn this thing on? Spent a while on that one, flipping the obvious big red power switch in the back. Took a while before I figured out there was a second power button on the front. TWO power switches?! What is this nonsense? Whatever. It's on now.

I sat and watched as bright green text started popping up on the screen. Various numbers, and phrases that I'd never heard in my life. Clearly, this stuff could only be understood some secret government agent, or that one kid I read about Jurassic Park, who was obviously like, a genius hacker or something. The slot where I shoved that floppy plastic square sure is noisy. What the hell is it doing, anyway? It loads in just like my Nintendo games, maybe it's a game?! Maybe a game is about to start. It sure was, friends. Maybe the greatest game ever made. We called it... DOS.

Man, did I love that game, DOS. I spent the several hours, typing random shit on the keyboard, as the command prompt did absolutely nothing of interest, since I had no idea what I was doing. But after those couple of hours of typing swears and random nonsense, I finally started to get bored, what with all of the nothing that was happening. And for whatever reason, I thought maybe someone could help me. Or, why not the computer itself? Maybe it will help me. So I typed the work "help", I hit the enter key, and sure enough, something finally happened. Holy shit, it's doing something. It's telling me how to DO stuff.

And so, before this novel goes on even longer, yeah. I found the help menu, and spent many more hours needlessly using very basic commands to create, copy, move, rename, and delete empty files and folders. Truly, I was now an elite haxxor man.

Over the next couple of years, I pulled many systems and parts out of various trash piles, and cobbled together different systems. Many, many different 386 and 486 systems. Until finally, when I was 15, I managed to get my hands on an obscenely slow, but absolute magic at the time, dialup modem, and a pile of "free hours" of AOL.

And they all lived happily ever after... Until social media was invented. The end.

If people like/want to read/discuss such poorly written nonsense, maybe I'll write up some nonsense about other technology-based shenanigans from over the years. And if people would rather make fun of my poor writing skills; fair.

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[–] A7thStone@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Atari 520ST. I was eight. My father got a good deal on it because one of his co-workers was upgrading to the 1040ST that had just come out. It had a beautiful paper white monochrome monitor that did 640x400 resolution, or I could hook it up to the television and do 320x200 with 512 colors.

[–] meyotch@slrpnk.net 3 points 1 year ago

A Tandy Color Computer 1. I grew up in a small town and my first β€˜job’ was hanging out at the local drug store (it had a soda fountain, god Im old) demo’ing the new fangled contraption to local yokels (imagine trying to sell a personal computer to Lyle from Napoleon Dynamite).

The deal was i spent two evenings a week after school giving demos and then I could take the unit home on the weekend.

[–] Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

All I remember is that it ran Windows 3.1 and had a 'Turbo' switch on the front. To this day I have no idea what that did, but was told not to touch it.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbo_button

One of our computers had one of those. We just left it on all the time.

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[–] dotslashme@infosec.pub 3 points 1 year ago

Vic 20. I used it to learn basic programing and play games.

[–] Fondots@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Ours was a hand-me-down power Mac, I believe a 6100, I don't remember the exact year but would have been no earlier than '95 or '96, making me about 5, maybe a couple years older.

Didn't have the internet on it at the time but did eventually get it after a couple years.

At some point we managed to turn on a screen reading function and never figured out how to turn it off, and it was on some sort of singsongy voice setting, there was an error that would come up every time we turned on the computer that is still sealed into my brain from hearing the computer sing it who knows how many times

The globalfax software has successfully installed, however, since no fax device control panels were loaded faxing has been disabled

We had a bunch of CDs with demos of various games, I'm pretty sure they were freebies from some magazine we acquired somewhere. In particular I remember having a demo for Bolo, a tank game, a warcraft -like game (maybe actually warcraft, I can't remember) and some sort of point-and click adventure game.

Other than that, we had mostly educational games, a lot of jumpstart type games, widget workshop, adventures with oslo

Around 2001 we eventually got a PC, a Compaq Presario, never really went back to Mac after that, but I do remember that old Mac fondly

[–] saigot@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago

It wasn't my first computer, but the first that was exclusively mine was a asus eee, I remember it was the smallest laptop I had ever seen, so small that I pretty much exclusively typed one handed. It ran some weird linux distro, I remember I mostly had it running with this tiled app setup rather than a more normal desktop environment.

[–] rzlatic@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

commodore 64 with tape drive. later i got 5.25 floppy drive for it, which was the size of C64 itself.

then amiga, which i sold later to get money for my first intel/dos based pc (486dx2), but i regret selling that amiga to this day.

[–] d00phy@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

First one I ever messed with was a TRS-80. Can’t remember what I did with it, but it was in a box & I figured out how to get it running. First one that was mine was a Commodore 64 on a Christmas morning long ago.

Can’t remember how old I was, but it was before we moved out of that state. That happened in the middle of 6th grade.

[–] MossyFeathers@pawb.social 3 points 1 year ago

The first PC I used was a 400mhz Celeron running windows 95. Can't remember how much RAM, but at some point I upgraded the hard drive and I loved swapping out the GPUs on it for shits and giggles (my dad had multiple GPUs for some reason, two pci, one agp, and I wasn't even 10 yet and couldn't really tell the difference they made in my games, it just made me feel smart which was all that mattered). Mostly played Need for Speed 2 and 3, Age of Empires 2, SimCity 3000, Zoo Tycoon, Rollercoaster Tycoon and some magic school bus edutainment stuff. By the time I got rid of it, it was running windows 2000.

SimCity 4 made me upgrade to a 3200+ AMD Athlon (socket 939, with an ASRock motherboard that supported dual channel memory, wow). Originally it had a 128mb Nvidia MX 4000, but by the end of its life it had 4gb of ram and an Nvidia 9600 GSO. It could play Crysis at 1280x1024@10-15fps with everything on low. At the time I considered that playable. Since I'd already been forced into sharing it with my sister, she took it after I upgraded again and eventually it got sent to Goodwill.

Now I have an old XP machine that belonged to my grandparents (2200 sempron w/ 2gb ram and the old Nvidia MX4000 I had put in it so I could play games at their house) and wish I hadn't let my sister get rid of my Athlon PC because I've been thinking about upgrading that PC to an Athlon.

[–] AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Macintosh 128k. I don't remember a time when there wasn't a "spare/family" computer in the house. My father also had an Apple 3, and we had various 286/386/Pentium machines by the time I left the house permanently.

There was also an IBM 5110 in the barn that he bought from NYIT for $100.

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[–] Labtec6@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Mine was a MC-10 with a tape drive. We ended up getting a 16K expansion module for it and it was great. Then got a TRS-80 and then a Tandy 1000. Oh those were the days. $800 for a 10MB hard drive module for the Tandy! My dad always made backups of the hard drive on floppy disk because he thought the hard disk was going to stop working if we lost power. Took a while to convince him that it won't lose the stuff on the drive . I unplugged the computer and he lost his mind that we lost everything and yelled. Plugged it in and turned it back on and all the data was there. Never apologized but at least I was right. Lol

[–] DLSantini@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Back in the day, people(old people lol) were willing to pay you to make a custom screensaver with pictures of their grandkids, their cat, and that one time they did that obviously hilarious thing in that one picture. Whip up a quick screensaver, stop by their house, copy it over and set it as the screensaver in Windows, here's $20. Well, I used my grandmother's desktop one time to make a quick one, because she asked me to for one of her family members, and when I popped a disk in to make a copy, she asked me what I was doing. I explained I was copying the file to give it to the person in question, and she proceeded to have a meltdown, throwing a fit about how I was "taking something out of her computer" and how "it wasn't [my] computer" and I had no right to "sell things out of it." As you can imagine, I was wasting my time when I tried to explain that copying a file was not removing something from her computer. She spent a good 45 minutes on her tantrum, and never did change her mind. The other person did get thier screensaver, though. So I guess she just continued to believed that I literally ripped a piece of hardware out of her computer and gave it away.

[–] darkl1nk@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I am 40 years old. I inherited an IBM PS2 Model 70 with a 386 processor from my cousins. I used it to play games like Skyfox, Indiana Jones, and Prince of Persia, create birthday invitations, and write documents in WordPerfect 5.

I still have some commands memorized to uncompress stuff with ARJ.

[–] FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

When I was in high school, I used to hang out in the computer labs at the university. I'd hunt through the university networks and download games people had on their networked hard drive because I was such a l33t h4xx0r. I made a whole bunch of college-age friends one day when I gave them all copies of Prince of Persia and I felt like I was super cool. (I was never super cool.)

[–] jordanlund@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Commodore 64, carried it all the way through college until I could afford an Amiga 500.

[–] Carighan@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I'm 41 years old.

My first experience with a computer was when I was 5 years old, playing Squirm on my granddad's C16 (from tape drive no less!). I got my first own computer - well, own-ish, it was our family's - at 8 when we got a C64, at that time massively futuristic because we had a disk drive!

[–] 0xtero@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

My first computer was an old Sinclair ZX81. It was my friends dad's old computer, I got to borrow it over school summer break as they headed to India during the summer. Spent most of that summer learning the basics of BASIC, but you couldn't really do terribly much with it.

I think this was 1982.

Got my own ZX Spectrum 48 couple of years later. Glorious times gaming and programming.

[–] orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts 3 points 1 year ago

An old 286 (I think) running MS-DOS. It was a pretty tall tower. Had the CD-ROM drive where you put the disc into a cartridge and then shoved the cartridge into the slot. My first foray into the internet was Prodigy.

[–] chahk@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

My introduction to the world of computers was back in the late 80s when my stepdad brought home a Pravetz 8D. It was an 8-bit Oric clone made in Bulgaria. It hooked up to our TV and we had a cassette deck to load/save data. I was 13 or 14 at the time living in Ukraine. Playing games and learning BASIC on it got me interested in coding and started me on the path to a now 30+ year career in IT. Technically it wasn't mine though.

After we emigrated to the USA in the early 90s I went to college to continue studying programming. With my very first paycheck from a part-time job I bought my very own first PC. It was a 486DX2-66 with a ginormous 40 megabyte hard drive.

[–] Roldyclark@literature.cafe 2 points 1 year ago

Windows 95. A Dell I think? It was in our dining room lol. Played a lot of Lego Island and Hot Wheels Stunt Track Driver.

[–] NorthWestWind@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

My father's laptop. I was like 2 or 3. I pretended to be working. I dropped it onto the floor and broke it.

[–] CrushKillDestroySwag@hexbear.net 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I wanna say "my" first PC was an intel 486, with a hard drive and a floppy drive, and whatever cheap monitor/mouse/keyboard came with it from the Post Exchange. I was in elementary school so it was all a bit over my head, but my mom had gotten it for work because they were moving all of their records to digital and she didn't want to get left behind, and I used it to instantly improve my failing "penmanship" grade at school by doing all of my homework in a word processor. I think I had a Genesis at this time so I never played DOS games much beyond the Lemmings and Dragon's Lair demos.

My first PC was an early Celeron, and I remember upgrading it with a Sound Blaster Extigy, and then later an early Radeon. That PC later got RAM and hard drive upgrades too, I really pushed that hardware for as long as I possibly could before upgrading again, running everything at the lowest settings and just "dealing with" under-thirty framerates for just about everything from Lego Island to the first Harry Potter games. I didn't really care though because my jam pretty much that entire decade was Starcraft, with Jedi Knight 2 coming in close second.

[–] Pietson@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

I want to say I was around 16 when I bought my own pc? Pretty sure it had an AMD r9 390

[–] andrewta@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

1993 acer tower computer. I'm not sure of the model. It ran windows 3.1 or maybe it was 3.11. I had nothing but problems with that computer but it gave me the first real ability to look into how a computer was put together. I built my own for years after that.

[–] Shimitar@feddit.it 2 points 1 year ago

An 8088 compatibile system. It had a NEC v30 CPU which was a full replacement for a real Intel 8088, but clocked at 8Mhz instead of 4.77. I had 640Kb of ram and a CGA video card & monitor. I remember playing Eye Of The Beholder 2 (I had 20mb hard drive) toward the end of its life (after my father bought a mouse, which was novelty) and it was so slow (like 30seconds between movements) that on more difficult combats I had to copy the savegame to a friend 286....

I remember the upgrade to msdos 3.2....

I had both 3.14 and 5.25 floppy drives, but the latter I never really used.

[–] UncleStewart@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago
[–] SuperSpruce@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 year ago

This was in the days I didn't know much about computers. I paid $1700 for a new 2017 4K iMac, with 16GB RAM and 1TB HDD. I was about 14.

I now regret that choice. The HDD made things slow and MacOS limited the games I could run. I could've gotten 3x the GPU power and 1.5x the CPU power plus expandability if I just built a PC instead.

I got it because my friend at the time had an iMac, my family and school almost exclusively used Macs, and I've never actually seen a gaming PC at that point. I even had no idea what a GPU was at the time.

Luckily my next computer was one that I did extensive research into and am very satisfied with. It's an Asus ROG Strix G15 Advantage Edition. For under $2K, it had a high end CPU, GPU, good battery life for a gaming laptop, and replaceable storage and RAM.

[–] HipsterTenZero@dormi.zone 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I got an emachines tower and a bunch of secondhand peripherials. I was thrilled to have my own computer at the time, but in hindsight it didnt really meet any of the system requirements of the games i wanted to play. I remember getting a smooth as gravel 3 fps in Ironforge. Miserable, but i didnt really know any better

[–] corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

Tandy Model 1 level 2. 2k RAM. Cassette drive.

[–] TheSlad@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I got a double hand-me-down laptop (4th child) in 7th grade.

I watched stupid shit on albinoblacksheep, played stupid games on addictinggames, and looked at porn.

A lot of porn.

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A friend of the family built it for us. I think it was '96 or so. I was maybe 13 or 14. I had used computers a little at school and at friends' houses.

It was a pc clone that ran win95. Cyrix p166 cpu (which actually ran at 133 mhz), 16 mb of EDO RAM, 800ish MB hard drive, a 4x cd rom drive and a 33.6k modem. I loved that thing and learned everything I could about how it worked.

We didn't have internet access at first, so I started dialing in to local BBSs. I eventually found a local board running wildcat that shared it's ISDN internet connection to users. And I would download pornographic images and save them to floppy disks to sell at my all boys catholic high school.

My mom needed a computer for her job. Gateway with Window 95 on it. It ran Tomb Raider at like 5fps and I played the shit out of it.

[–] TootSweet@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

My grandmother let me use and play a couple of games on her Apple IIe.

But the first computer that was mine was a Windows 3.1 386. I think I remember it had an 80MB hard drive. I played games and eventually found qbasic.exe and wrote lots of toy programs and a couple of very simple games in the QBasic language. I owe a lot to that old 386 machine.

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[–] iAvicenna@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

I have half expected that computer to come pre installed with Doom (since that was also released on 93). Wouldn't that be swell, though probably hard to find from DOS for a kid. Nevertheless I bet if you saw a folder called Doom, you would likely try to start the shit out of every file in that folder.

My first computer was a hand-me-down Toshiba T3100. I was around ten years old at the time, in the late 90's. The portable computer, was way far different from any computer I've seen thus far. It also came with a printer, but I don't think I managed to make it work. The portable computer only had a 20MiB hard drive, and memory that can be measured in kibibytes. Its hard drive has already been reformatted, and had MS-DOS 6.21, Windows 3.11, as well as some DOSβ€Œ games installed in it.

I didn't really bother with the DOSβ€Œ games, but I've had a lot of fun playing Chips Challenge on Windows. However, a huge chunk of time went into me just messing around with QBasic. Later on, when I had programming classes, I installed Turbo Basic, Turbo Pascal, and Turbo C in there for homework and projects.

It could have lasted far longer but I couldn't resist myself opening it up. I didn't have a lot of trouble opening it up, but had a bit of trouble putting it back together. It didn't survive my prying though, and it got shoved into the storage.

Just recently, a few years ago, I found out that it's a bit of a collector's item, and was even expensive back when it was new. I couldn't have known it at that time, nor would I have cared, but I still regret not taking care of it a bit more.

[–] Manmikey@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

1 was 18 and bought a Commodore 64 and cassette drive, I played games, Fairlight, Psi Warrior and Elite (my god the hours I spent on elite, I've craved that experience ever since and never quite equalled it. Plus I dabbled with basic programming, quickly moved on to an Atari ST, WOW that was a quantum leap! Then the first PC computer a 386 DX40 and Doom changed my world forever......been a PC gamer ever since

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