This is topic How old were you when you first used a PC ? in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Rico (Member # 7533) on :
 
Thread title says it all. How old were you when you had your "first contact" of sorts with a computer? What was it like for you?

I was five years old when I first used a computer and I was simply amazed by it. Video games are what drew me to computers initially, but as I've grown up my love for video games has faded a bit but my interest in computers has only increased.

In addition, I have noticed lately that I have never been as amazed by technology as I was when I was first introduced to computers. There has been such a large amount of technological progress made since then and yet I have not even come close to being impressed. We went from tapes to CD's to MP3's and all the while my only thoughts were "oh, I guess I need to buy a CD player if I want to get more music now". The internet itself has grown to an amazing level of commercialism. What used to be a novelty when I was 12 has grown into something that everyone is familiar with and has essentially become part of everyday life.

I just think it's really weird how I throughout all these major developments I haven't even considered just how big they were, I've always just taken them for granted and accepted them as part of daily life.

Does anyone continue to be fazed less and less by technology just like me or do you marvel at these major developments as they present themselves in your lives? It's just one of those things I always find myself wondering about and finally decided to ask people to see if it's just me or if it's a more widespread phenomenon.
 
Posted by Stephan (Member # 7549) on :
 
One should state how old they are now as well.

I'm 25, and first used a computer when I was 7. One of those first home based ones where computer games were stored on cassette tapes.
 
Posted by ketchupqueen (Member # 6877) on :
 
I was 5. It was the school's computer lab. But I didn't want to go that year because I was afraid of the computer teacher. I faked a headache every week, and finally my kindergarten teacher noticed, and called my mom in, and when I broke down crying and told the truth, my teacher said that I could stay and have double free time instead. So I didn't have regular contact with a computer until I was 6, and then when I was 7 my dad got our first pc. I'm 23 now.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
I am almost 30, and I was 8 when I encountered my first computer. I wrote a program in BASIC to make a dot blink on and off, and to create a picture that was an astonishing 25 x 25 pixels.

This was my first and last foray into programming.
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
The first PC I used was a Mac 512K. I was probably 4-5 years old when my dad bought it. I continued using it through my Freshman year at college (1995). My sister related that when she was a Freshman (1992) she had seen one featured in a "technological archaeology" exhibit featuring "ancient" computer technology; then she went back to her dorm and wrote a term paper on one.

My favorite game for the 512K was Loderunner.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
We had a Tandy 1000 DOS based computer. Has to put in the 5 ¼ inch disks to boot and then each time you wanted to run something. Not much memory and no hard drive. It didn’t do too much, but it was neat to try any write programs in Basic and see what you could do. I remember this program that you could write that would draw an outline of the Statue of Liberty and play the National Anthem. I was in elementary school. So I guess that was early 80’s.
 
Posted by Noemon (Member # 1115) on :
 
My first was a TRS-80, purchased in 1978. I'd have been 7 at the time. 4 K of RAM (later upgraded to 8, and then 16 K) and a cassette drive for data storage.

Stephan, what was your machine?
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
8 or 9 (2 or 3 years after the first PCs, 1-2 years after the Apple II).

We had our own (Atari 400) by the time I was 10.
 
Posted by MyrddinFyre (Member # 2576) on :
 
My dad works with computers, so we always had one as long as I've been alive, and I have been using them for almost as long [Smile]

Our first computer that could do anything worth a darn was an IBM 386 SX.
 
Posted by pfresh85 (Member # 8085) on :
 
I was 5 or 6 when I first used a computer. It was an old IBM PC running DOS. I played Commander Keen and the Hoyle (I think that was the name) card games. Man, it's been a really long time since then. *sigh* Where does the time go?
 
Posted by Artemisia Tridentata (Member # 8746) on :
 
I was about 48. My friend was bragging that his daughter had something called a "home page". When I asked what that was, he offered to show it to me. We went to her room and he directed me through some entry activities. Then we waited. I grabbed a book off her shelf and read three chapters. Then his daughters picture appeared on the screen. I asked what good that was and he discribed "links" to all her favorite web sites. I clicked on one and read three more chapters in the book. The book wasn't holding my interest so he showed me how to turn the machine off and we went downstairs to barbercue. I had computers in my office at that time but they were not PC.s, they were attached to a "mini" frame sperry. I was not impressed with my first PC.
 
Posted by vonk (Member # 9027) on :
 
I don't know when it was, sometime between 2 and 7, because I know where I lived, not how old I was. It was an Apple 2c and it was freaking cool. I don't know if that was the computer where we got to play the first Kings Quest or if that was a later computer. Good game.

Oh yeah, I'm 23.

*Tear* I remember the old girl like it was yesterday...
 
Posted by Noemon (Member # 1115) on :
 
What year was that, Artemisia?
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
I was 14 before I managed to get a real computer into the house. (I was raised by rednecks).

Before that we had a colecovision (imagine a console game with 3 games and they were all variations of Pong) and a Telex machine (yellow paper tape anyone?)

I was 10 the first time I touched a "real" computer. It was a TI.

I am 37.

Pix
 
Posted by Stephan (Member # 7549) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Noemon:
My first was a TRS-80, purchased in 1978. I'd have been 7 at the time. 4 K of RAM (later upgraded to 8, and then 16 K) and a cassette drive for data storage.

Stephan, what was your machine?

I couldn't tell you, and I think I was even younger then 8. I recall it having a controller I was able to plug into my Atari 2600 when that controller broke. The controller had a joystick at the top, two buttons on the sides, and a number pad.
 
Posted by maui babe (Member # 1894) on :
 
I was 16 or 17. My father (who did not live with us) owned a Radio Shack PC. We played a Star Trek game on it. No graphics, just dots and *s on the screen. This was in the late '70's (sorry I really can't pinpoint it better than that) and NOBODY had home computers.

My ex and I bought our first computer in 1982. It was a Texas Instruments. Since then, I've always had access to at least one computer, every day.
 
Posted by enochville (Member # 8815) on :
 
Geez, it is hard for me to remember. It was probably in 1982 or early 1983, so I would have been 7. I am 30 now.
 
Posted by Jeesh (Member # 9163) on :
 
I think I was 4. I played those Jumpstart and Barbie games. I still do [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Tstorm (Member # 1871) on :
 
If my young memory is correct, my first contact with a computer was in my dad's classroom. He had an early Apple computer. I vaguely remember playing some game with a rabbit and a maze. Whenever the rabbit ran into a wall, he would stop, cross his arms, and tap his foot in exasperation. [Smile] Since I was only about 5 or 6 years old at this point, I don't remember much. I Only used that computer a couple of times, so aside from the rabbit game, it was entirely forgettable.

My grandpa tried to hook us with computer lessons on a Tandy 1000EX, but failed. We resisted falling for the computer revolution until he passed away and we inherited ye olde Tandy. We still have that computer in the basement, and last I checked, it ran fine.

Ah, the memories. [Smile]
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
I'm guessing the Pong unit doesn't count.

Hmmm. Probably 11 or 12 (1981 or 82), most likely the Commodore64.

----

Edited to add: Aha, I'd just turned 12 (I'm now 36). My brother insisted on going to the mall to see it.
 
Posted by Papa Moose (Member # 1992) on :
 
5th grade, 10 years old, TRS-80 model I level 1 (you thought dial-up was slow? Try CLOAD). Though two years before my 3rd grade teacher had something called a "System 80," which was used in part to teach French. I don't know that it qualifies as a personal computer.

The first computer we owned was a Sanyo MBC-1000 (with optional second external 5-1/2" floppy drive, of course). But I more often used my friend Paul's TRS-80 level II or Altos CP/M machine.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by SenojRetep:
The first PC I used was a Mac 512K. I was probably 4-5 years old when my dad bought it.

That was almost exactly my experience -- not the rest of your post, just this sentence. [Smile] My games of choice were Dark Castle, Brickles, Dungeon of Doom (which I finally finished recently, but on my G5 tower), Crystal Quest, and Moriarty's Revenge.
 
Posted by Tstorm (Member # 1871) on :
 
Oooh, Crystal Quest! [Smile] I distinctly remember how cool the color version was after playing B&W for so long.
 
Posted by breyerchic04 (Member # 6423) on :
 
I'm 20, and I was 4, my mom was in a computer Ed class and I got sat in the lab one day with Turtle, I forget what it was other than the arrow keys.
 
Posted by Artemisia Tridentata (Member # 8746) on :
 
quote:
What year was that, Artemisia?
I guess it was about 1990. So, I lied on my age, I was only 46. I do remember that the friend lived in Canyon Country CA, which no longer exists. It's Santa Clarita now.
 
Posted by Papa Moose (Member # 1992) on :
 
Lots of people still call the area Canyon Country.
 
Posted by erosomniac (Member # 6834) on :
 
I was 8 or 9, and it was a Hewlett Packard of some variety. My parents got me one of my own when I was...12? I think. I'm 22 now.
 
Posted by SenojRetep (Member # 8614) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by twinky:
Dungeon of Doom (which I finally finished recently, but on my G5 tower)

Was there some sort of orb? I remember you had to fight through like 25 levels and then fight back to the beginning. Chain mail, plate armor, paladin armor, broadsword, battleaxe...ah, the memories. Those scrolls! Those were awesome. And schweinhunds. Hah!
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
I was between 5-7. My father brought one for Christmas and hid it in the storeroom. I remember it being very exciting- it was a 286. By the time I was nine we had two or three computers, one of them a 486. It must have been about 1992?

As far as I know, I was the first of my friends to have a computer in the house.

I'm twenty now and we have *counts* eight-ish in various states of use.
 
Posted by Alcon (Member # 6645) on :
 
My first memory of a computer is about 3 years old (which is as far back as my memory goes, so I probably was around them before then). It was an Apple+ I inherited from my university professor parents. I used to play missile command and paratrooper on it (I loved paratrooper cause it opened with The Ride of the Valkries [Big Grin] ). Some time around 7 or 8 I upgraded to a IIVX which I used for some of Bungie's first games Pathways into Darkness and Marathon. It was right about then I decided I should learn to code [Smile]

And I'll be... good god... 20 in a month. Yeah yeah, I know most of you are older than that, but it feels old for me. I'm definately not ready to be in my twenties.
 
Posted by Pinky (Member # 9161) on :
 
I think it was in 1987 (or '86). My cousin had a Commodore 64. He must have had 300 games on floppy disc. Most of the time we played Gianna Sisters and Quest of Tyres. Oh, and I'll be 27 next month. (Hey, Alcon: which day? [Smile] )
 
Posted by Alcon (Member # 6645) on :
 
(July 22nd, you?)
 
Posted by dantesparadigm (Member # 8756) on :
 
My first computer was the PowerBook I bought six months ago. You really can't call the things before that computers, back in the dark days of Gates and Windows... I vaguely recall a series of massive gray boxes, each worse than the last, being updated with a more hole filled OS and a shinny new series of viri.

I'm only 15, so I've grown up with computers, so I never really had a moment were I was just amazed by the technology, although there have been lots of little individual moments.
 
Posted by Marlozhan (Member # 2422) on :
 
I am 27 and I was 7 years old. We had a Tandy EX1000, and I remember playing a text-only Star Trek game. It had a little map with coordinates and ships were marked by X's and other symbols. I always remember that dang Kelvin Doomsday Machine blasting across the screen and praying I wasn't in its path.

I loved that game.
 
Posted by Soara (Member # 6729) on :
 
This is an interesting thread...
Anyway, I'm 16 now, I was about 6 I think I first used a computer, at school. They had this program thing called Type to Learn that taught us how to type, and as a result I can type about twice as fast as my mom, even though technically she's been doing it for much longer than I have. Kinda scary, things you can learn what you start that young...
I actually remember the first time I sent an email, I was 11.
 
Posted by Elmer's Glue (Member # 9313) on :
 
I am 16, and I was like 5 probably. I don't remember ever not being able to use one. I used to just play crappy games like Play House and some Loony Toons game. The first time I went on the internet I was 8. I was all excited. But my access was extremely limited. I really couldn't do anything on it.
 
Posted by breyerchic04 (Member # 6423) on :
 
Dude, Alcon you have the same birthday as my mom, obviously she's quite a bit older, being my mom and all.
 
Posted by Steev (Member # 6805) on :
 
The year was 1982 and I was 12 years old. It was a Sinclar ZX-81.

I now design and program computers for a living.
 
Posted by CaySedai (Member # 6459) on :
 
It was around 1990, I was 29. My first PC experience was with an IBM 386, and we used WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS. I had worked with Wangs at that job prior to that, but they were switching to PCs.

Before that my computer experience was Wang, of course, and those glorified electric typewriters with a tiny scrolling screen (can't remember what they were called - I don't care if you call me old. [Wink] )

I bought my own first computer when I was 35, and my daughters were 2 1/2 years and 3 months old. So, they've had computer exposure from very young ages. I'm currently on my fourth personally owned computer and we still have two of the others. We're going to give away the HP Pavilion that is about 6 years old, and the other Compaq is 1 year old. This one is a Compaq laptop and I'm very happy with it. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Kwea (Member # 2199) on :
 
Did anyone else ever use the PET computers, by Commadore, I think? we had them at my elementary school. We were one of the first schools to get a grant for computers in the Detroit area, and I was really good at them. Sometime in 3rd grade, so I was about 8-9.

I had to choose between computers and music in Middle School though, because you could only use the computers if you were in the classes for them, and the classes were the same periods as Band and Choir.

I chose music. [Big Grin]


The first home computer I ever used was an Apple IIe, and right about the same time the Commodore 61. Both belonged to friends though. My family never had one.


I am 36 now, btw.
 
Posted by Kwea (Member # 2199) on :
 
Here is my first computer. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
I was seven years old, and it was 1982.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
My first programming experience was in 1977 on an HP 2000 Basic interpreter, when I was 19. There was no monitor, only a dot matrix printer. It was sort of like a typewriter. When you typed in a line of code, it printed the line on the printer. I was enthralled, and changed my major to Computer Engineering for a while.

Then I did Fortran and Cobol by submitting card decks and running batch jobs and waiting for printouts. It was quite interesting. We didn't have but 2 monitors in our computer room at the time. They were always taken.

My dad brought home an 8086 based PC with two floppy drives and no hard disk some time around 1981. I loved it. I remember doing Basic programming on the thing. One morning I started messing with it around 7am and got so engrossed that I forgot the passage of time, came back to myself about midnight, and realized I had forgotten to eat or drink that day. [Smile]

Later I programmed in Cobol several DEC Vaxish type computers as well as mainframe IBMs, and so on. I was an applications and systems programmer for about 11 years.

I remember going to a computer fair around 1982 or something and boggling at a personal computer with 1MB of memory. We ran a whole insurance company at that time on a minicomputer with about 1MB of memory. [Smile]

One computer I remember thinking was very cool that I had during that phase was an 80286 based PC with 512k of memory and a CGA monitor. It also had a 20Mb hard disk. Boy was that a hot machine! [Wink]
 
Posted by plaid (Member # 2393) on :
 
I'm 39 now... my dad was into computers, and back in the '70s he wrote articles and a book about the potential of what became the Internet; I remember writing an email in his office ~'77, though I can't remember what the computer was.

In '80, we had a computer lab class in 8th grade, but I can't remember the computer; 2 years later, when I was in 10th grade, we got an Apple II+ for home. (48K, mmmm...)

I'm both impressed and unimpressed by computers. I like the Internet, and I use computers as I need to for writing and work... but I've never cared enough about computers to own one. I tend to regard computers and AV stuff as expensive toys, and to let people who like to spend money buy the first-generation and second-generation laptops, digital cameras, MP3 players, etc. -- let THEM spend all the money on the expensive prototypes with all their problems, and then someday maybe I'll get one of those things when it's a lot cheaper and the bugs are all figured out and I decide that even though I've lived just fine up until now without one that I'd like one of those things.
 
Posted by Nell Gwyn (Member # 8291) on :
 
I'm 25, and I think my first computer contact was when I was 8 or 9, so in 1989/1990-ish. It was at school - for part of the "Challenge" program, I got to play Oregon Trail and Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? on a Macintosh of some sort, I can't remember exactly which. I thought they were the coolest things ever, and I remember being especially impressed when the color version of Oregon Trail came out. [Smile]

There may have been fleeting brushes earlier than that, possibly with something like an Apple IIe, but that was the definitely the first time I got to use a computer regularly.

I was in 7th grade (1993-94) when my family got our first computer, which was also a Mac since I was absolutely convinced I'd have no idea how to use a PC. (Now I think the opposite is true.) My parents tend to be rather slow to acquire new technology - I've still never had any kind of video game system, our house only had one tv until I got one for my college dorm room, and my parents didn't have a DVD player until I gave them one for Christmas about 4 years ago. And they still have (and never use) the gigantic clunky video camera that takes standard-size VHS tapes. [Roll Eyes] [Razz]
 
Posted by Mr.Funny (Member # 4467) on :
 
Hmm. I must have been around 6, I think. Though I remember seeing pretty screensavers on a computer when I was probably 3 or so. The first computer that I used with any regularity ran Windows 3.1, if I recall correctly.

Oh, and Alcon, you're very old. [Razz]

[Edit: the Alcon comment was in response to Alcon's post about feeling old, which was at the bottom of the page the last time I refreshed, which was hours ago]
 
Posted by human_2.0 (Member # 6006) on :
 
Probably 1980 or 1981 (6 or 7). It was either the Vic-20 or Atari 400. I remember typing in many games from Compute magazine and others, mostly in machine language. I also wrote a stupid game. And I spent a lot of time on BBS'es with the 300 baud modem (my first alias/handle was Speed Demon--because I liked Ferrari's)!

The first computer that was "mine" was a hand-me-down from my other brothers: a Vic-20. It was old when I inherited it, but I played on it for a few weeks at least before taking it apart.

From 1990 until 1995 I rarely used computers ever. Starting in 1995, I started using them again on a regular basis, and am now an adminstrator/programmer.

I'm not surprised by technology. To me, they are just toys to play games, draw pictures, make music/movies/animations/webpages, whatever.
 
Posted by James Tiberius Kirk (Member # 2832) on :
 
we got it in '91, I was 2. It was a DOS system, that we later upgraded to DOS 6 and then Win3.1 at some point. We used it all the way up into the mid-nineties-- I remember when they installed AOL 2.0 on it.

I remember my uncle coming over and installing all the games from my grandma's old computer here--Paratroopers, a PacMan clone, Captain Comic and some others. Later we got Reader Rabbit, Outnumbered, and some Disney-made educational game.

But my favorite was the original SimCity; my dad got it free with a copy of Turbotax or Quicken.
Started coding Ti83s at 12 or so, then QBasic, then FreeBasic, then pretty much stopped. Probably should learn C++ at some point, meh.

--j_k
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by SenojRetep:
quote:
Originally posted by twinky:
Dungeon of Doom (which I finally finished recently, but on my G5 tower)

Was there some sort of orb? I remember you had to fight through like 25 levels and then fight back to the beginning. Chain mail, plate armor, paladin armor, broadsword, battleaxe...ah, the memories. Those scrolls! Those were awesome. And schweinhunds. Hah!
That's the one, only it was 40 levels. As a kid I never even got to level 40, though. [Razz]
 
Posted by Rico (Member # 7533) on :
 
I'm surprised by the number of replies to this thread!

So far they've all been very interesting. It seems that the majority of the people who have posted here got their start with computers somewhere around ages 4 - 8 on average. That's another thing that interests me about this whole thing as well. Do you think that as computers become more and more connected to our daily lives that the average age for people's "first use" of a computer decreases? Will there be a point where someone would get acquainted with them at age 1 so to say?

I wonder if someone raised around technology from such a young age would appreciate it as much as someone who wasn't.

Oh and yeah, I LOVED Loderunner! I still do!
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
My daughter has already used our computer. She's 2.
 
Posted by jeniwren (Member # 2002) on :
 
I don't remember how old I was, but I remember what it was. My dad brought home an Apple IIc (purchased for the bargain price of $1,000), no hard drive, just a floppy in one side. I remember playing Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy on it. I didn't like it that much, because the keyboard was one of those chicklet style with sticky keys. I'm still kinda picky about my keyboards.

My brother bought a VIC-20 soon after that, and I best remember saving my little animation programs to the tape drive. I remember writing a little program to make a stick figure run across the screen, and being so impressed with myself. I must have been early teens or tweens.

I'm almost 38.
 
Posted by Sterling (Member # 8096) on :
 
Depends on what you'd call a computer. I played on an Atari 2600 (console game system) when I was 3. I was introduced to my sister's Atari 800 (computer with keyboard and tape drive) about a year later.
 
Posted by human_2.0 (Member # 6006) on :
 
Loderunner was cool. Someone mentioned Crystal Quest. I played that at my friend's house when I was a kid... and I actually have it and it still works in Classic. There was some website where you could download all kinds of old stuff like that, and I grabbed it.

Certainly the average first computer usage is dropping. I have a bunch of nephews and nieces who were all used computers from 1-4. I have no idea what affect it will have on their computer adoption later in life. Maybe the pendulum will swing the other way and they will reject computers completely. Haha, I doubt it though.
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
I think I was 5 about 1987 and my father brought home a 286 because my teacher informed him that I was helping the other kids use their computers properly in class. I used it mostly to play frogger and other childrens games that came out.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
You can also get Crystal Quest for the Xbox 360 via the Xbox Live Arcade. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Pinky (Member # 9161) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alcon:
(July 22nd, you?)

(Och, July 12th. I'm still not used to being a twen. [Wink] )
 
Posted by martha (Member # 141) on :
 
September 1984: almost six years old. My parents bought a Macintosh (it was pre-classic, I guess). I remember a tutorial on how to use the mouse -- it involved getting to the center of a maze, where a wedge of swiss cheese awaited (prize for the mouse, of course).

The cat used to like to sit on top of the computer, where it was warm. My dad was concerned that the computer would overheat, so he bought a "chimney" -- an upside-down funnel that sat on top of the computer. Now my parents have a ceramic dragon that sits on top of the monitor with its neck craning down to look at the screen. Now they have a 6500, a G4, and two iBooks in their house.
 
Posted by larisse (Member # 2221) on :
 
I remember seeing my first computer when I was about 6 or 7 in my friend's garage. It was his dad's, and I thought it was cool. Around that time, my dad brought home an Apple IIe for us to use. (I think my friend's dad's comp was a Commodore or something. It wasn't an Apple.)

Another thing I remember is that during that summer I took a summer school class in computers, which were Apple IIes. As I recall, I was one of two girls in the class. We sat by each other. Our teacher was a woman, and I remember her taking an interest in making sure we got the procedure of turning the computer on and off and using it. She kept wanting to make sure we weren't scared of the computer. I don't know how the other little girl was, but I had no problems. I even remember the steps. I didn't really use any other type of computer for years after that.

When I started at my local community college, one of the requirements was taking an introductory computer course. For some reason I was so apprehensive that I put it off for an entire semester. When I finally took the course, I was surprised at how easy a time I had working with them - my first PCs. In fact, those steps I had learned so long ago for my Apple IIe, with its bootable disk based operating system, helped me to visualize the inner workings of the DOS operating system. Good memories.

Oh, did anybody ever use those computer programs in the back of the 3-2-1 Contact magazines? I remember they used to have them for the Apple II series and then one day they switched to DOS. I would have fun typing those in and modifying them.
 
Posted by Rico (Member # 7533) on :
 
quote:
My daughter has already used our computer. She's 2.
Wow, that's really young!

Has anyone heard or seen any recent technological development and been impressed by it? The last bit that had me interested was that female android and that "mech" suit they had in Japan (I think).

I'm still holding out for hovercars though. I mean, it's the year 2000, I was promised hovercars by then. Where are my hovercars!?

*makes hovering noises*
 
Posted by ketchupqueen (Member # 6877) on :
 
quote:
My daughter has already used our computer. She's 2.
Mine, too.

She's also posted on Hatrack all by herself. [Big Grin] She wasn't even two yet when that happened...

I believe I'm raising an addict. [Blushing]
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
Grisha's son types ims to me often. He just turned 1. His ims say things like zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzwl/ or iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
but he recognizes his name when I type "Hi Aaron!" because he will point to it.

My niece Mary loved a Micky Mouse computer game when she was two. She learned her alphabet from it, and would press the K key over and over because she loved it when the kitty peeked out and mewed. Later, when she could hold a pencil and move it around, when she was about three, she wrote by making writey-looking motions with the pencil on a page, then looking at what she wrote and deciding which letter it most resembled. I've never seen anyone learn to write like that before.

I think age one or two will be the standard age for first exposure to computers in the future. I would have been exposed to them sooner myself, had they existed in readily-available form back then. My dad worked with computers in the 60s, but I never played with them then. They were room-sized in those days, and too delicate and expensive to allow children to mess with.
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TomDavidson:
I was seven years old, and it was 1982.

I was born in the same year as Tom, but I think it was 1984 when my dad brought one of these home from work. So I guess I was 9 or 10. (Apparently he had to be talked into taking it, which is ironic considering he eventually wrote articles for multiple computer magazines, and three computer books. But that was much later.)

I still remember the game that came with the computer. With Compaq briefcases . . .

And the excitement when we finally got a computer with a COLOR monitor! (That didn't happen until computer #3 or 4.)
 
Posted by MightyCow (Member # 9253) on :
 
I used to write programs on the TRS-80, which used a black and white tv as the monitor, and a cassette tape recorder to store the programs.

Man, that was fun. I still miss that a little bit. That was kindergarten, so however old you are then.
 
Posted by Orincoro (Member # 8854) on :
 
I'm 21, and we had a computer in the house since I could remember, as my parents are publishers, and at they time they were running a design company out of the house.

The first I can remember was the Macintosh 2.0, but we also got a mac 2 se, which was an early split design, which my parents bought with a very large (so it seemed at the time) screen. We actually got online in about 1994 with an 8-bod modem, which was just the most pointless thing ever, but fun for a 9 year old.

By the time we bought a Power Macintosh performa 6330, the computer revolution was on the way, and we had our first net browser (netscape). By 2002, everyone in the family had a computer except my dad, and now he has one as well.

I remember raving to my family about this new thing that was going to come out in 2003 called "itunes." I swore it was going to be amazing, and I looked forward to the day it was released. They all of course, forgot that I had discovered it several years before they jumped on board (my mom JUST got itunes and an ipod, and my dad still won't look at it, because he is a copyright lawyer and refuses to believe that they actually SELL music online now).

Actually I always had an instinct for the new hot thing- I was saying the ipod would be huge way back when I first heard about it, and I was telling people about blue tooth and camera phones years before they were commonplace. I also predicted the DVD revolution, (which didn't stop my parents from buying a tape player in the late 90s), and then made the pronouncement to my friends and family that Ipods would soon come with video, to which they scoffed loudly. (It was released about 6 weeks later).
 
Posted by Artemisia Tridentata (Member # 8746) on :
 
They weren't PC's, but, I remember the (what ever we used to call geeks) running around campus with shoe boxes full of cards under their arms. Twice I saw a box dropped and the guy (it was always a guy) burst into tears.
I took a stastics class in grad school. We had some work to do with 8 factor regression analisis. Each student had 2 hours of computer time on the University's main frame, paid for as part of the class fee. That wasn't enough time to finish the assignments. So, we pooled time to finish. The goal, as I remember, was to find a hot partner to pool time with!
I lost.
 
Posted by Astaril (Member # 7440) on :
 
We've always had computers around. My dad apparently used to lug home the PET to play with every weekend from the school where he worked, but he got a Commodore 64 just after I was born (in 82) and a 128 when it was released a few years later, so I mostly remember those. I could write Commodore programs before I started kindergarten. [Smile] I also remember many hours playing Jumpman, Mission: Impossible, and various other games. I miss the old Commodore.

The cable TV company here actually still uses a Commodore 64 for the local news channel on TV. My sister had to re-learn how to program it when she started working there last year. I find this hilarious.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:
The cable TV company here actually still uses a Commodore 64 for the local news channel on TV.
SERIOUSLY? I'd be glad to donate another computer to the cause.
 
Posted by Astaril (Member # 7440) on :
 
Seriously! Isn't that hilarious? Channel... sixty-something? on TV here is just a blue Commodore screen with a series of typed community announcements that change every fifteen seconds or so, and no sound.

And my dad offered several times to update it for them, but the boss lady knows how to program the Commodore, so doesn't want to change it. Her philosophy is very "if it ain't broke, don't fix it". I think their other office computers are a little more up to date... by which I mean running things in DOS mode.
 
Posted by TheGrimace (Member # 9178) on :
 
we had an Apple II in the house since around when I was born (82) and I was a huge fan of loderunner as well as moon rover at the time. we also had Apples of some sort in gradeschool which I loved playing the original Oregon Trail on.

The best recollection of archaic computer tech that I have however is the combination of cobol punch cards my dad had that we used as scratch paper, as well as the tape drive we had that was about 12 x 18" if I remmeber correctly.
 
Posted by 777 (Member # 9506) on :
 
My history of computers has been defined by the games I've played.

We had an Apple Macintosh when I was growing up back in 1992/93--I was about four or five when I first had fun with it. Kid Pix rocked, I can tell you.

Then I met Glider Pro, followed by Oregon Trail and this really bizarre puzzle game called Heaven & Earth. I can remember a few Humungous Entertainment titles scattered around in there.

My final favorite Mac game had to be this one bizarre space shooter called Shadowwraith. It placed you in a winding, abstract maze while you blasted enemy after enemy away with such weapons as magnum grenades and .50 caliber machine guns. And it had great music tracks, too.

But I first hooked up with a PC when my dad bought one for the family in 1998--a Dell with WIN98. It came with a couple demos: one for Descent: Freespace, and another for an arcade shooter called Expendable. Kind of heavy stuff for a 10-year-old!

I met Roller Coaster Tycoon shortly thereafter, followed by Starcraft in 2000.
 
Posted by Farmgirl (Member # 5567) on :
 
Depends on what you count as "a computer" (as someone else said.

I didn't really have any encounters with them at all until after high school (there was rumors of ONE "computer" in a special, small, dark room at the school that only a couple these geeky guys at school were allowed to mess with because 'none of the rest of you would understand it')

Worked typesetting machines, though, by age 20, that showed you like one line of type at a time as you typed, then spit it all out in a nice column to paste in the newspaper layout. Then worked on some mainframe systems.

But probably didn't get really into personal computing until my mid-20s or later. Didn't own a computer in my own home until I was mid-30s. Got my degree in computers when I hit age 40.

I am 45

FG
 
Posted by Jeesh (Member # 9163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rico:
Where are my hovercars!?

I'm working on it. Is it ok if it has four wheels and can't float?
 
Posted by Enigmatic (Member # 7785) on :
 
Does it count if your older sister is reading Zork to you and typing in your moves?

--Enigmatic
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
I don't remember the name of the thing I worked on. It was the size of a typewriter and had specific function keys. I don't think it had a set of alphabetic keys. IIRC you had the ability to enter 512 commands. In order to perform a loop you had to use a command to place a "flag," so for example, you could enter

Call
0
flag 01
+
1
enter
print 01
jump 01

This program would print numbers from 1 until the computer ran out of memory. It was also my introduction to the infinite loop. You had to turn off the computer in order to stop it.

If you wanted to print words you had to create letters out of 1s and 8s, like ascii art.

The year was 1976, and I was 11.

Later in the same year I ran a program on an IBM thing. I think it was called a "system 10." It asked my name and then printed out a bunch of "Hello Glenn! How are you, Glenn?" kind of call and response stuff.

A couple of years later we got TRS-80's (black and white) and I wrote a program in BASIC to calculate pi that increased in accuracy as you increased the number of sides in the regular polygon that was intended to approximate a circle. I don't remember if I had any way to determine how many digits were within spec.

It was probably 1980 before a friend of mine actually owned a TRS-80 color computer. That was my first experience with games. There was one kind of like ZORK, but I can't remember the name.
 
Posted by imogen (Member # 5485) on :
 
I'm 24 now and I first used a computer when I was... about 6 I think.

My Dad wrote my a birthday program for my 7th birthday that I thought was *amazing*. It sung (well, blipped) happy birthday to me, and my name appeared on the screen!

(I remember the program was saved on an old floppy - the ones that actually were floppy - and I replayed it for at least a year after my birthday. I was very impressed.)

I didn't get into games until I was 10 or 11 - and then it was Police Quest all the way!

I did get introduced to the internet relatively early (relatively because I'm a whipper-snapper) and remember having a hotmail account in late '96 - so only a few months after it was launched. I was using it to email home (I was on exchange to South Africa) and having to explain this concept of web-based email to people.
 


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