• Hi Guest - Come check out all of the new CP Merch Shop! Now you can support CigarPass buy purchasing hats, apparel, and more...
    Click here to visit! here...

Computers in 1989

Had a commodore 64 when I was a kid.

My first PC was a Packard Bell 480sx (?), 25mHz, 1 meg ram, 20 meg hard drive. I remember I was excited when I bought DOS 6.0 because it had double space! Double your hard drive.

It cost 4 times what my P4 3.2ghz gaming machine cost me.
 
Bought a Tandy 1000 for my business in 1990, paid around 2500.00 for it. My first home computer was a Gateway 133 MhZ for 2400.00 in 1996 with all kinds of stupid software.

That Gateway lasted a long time and it was great when I got my first cable modem in the beginning of 1997. Back then I was hooked up to @Home.
 
Vic-20 for me. Then I used Wang Word Processors in the Army. Bought a Mac Classic around '89 or '90.

I remember when WIndows first came out thinking, "This is just a s-l-l-o-o-o-o-w Macintosh."
 
I had a Commodore VIC 20. Taught myself Commodore BASIC, then 6502/6510 assembly language on it. Also had a C64 and briefly, a C16. Got my first PC sometime around '93...a Packard Bell 486sx-something-or-other.
 
My first computer was a 486sx25 with 4 mg ram from Packard Bell. It cost me $2500 without printer. It was 1992 if memory serves me right.

I took a desktop puplishing class at MATC and wanted to impress the teacher with a color project (all the printers were B&W at school), so I spent $600 on a Canon color printer. My $50 Canon printer today has better resolution than that one.
 
My 1st PC was a Texas Instrument TI99A
Image37.jpg


I remember having to write code for days if not weeks in order to play games

Edit* I think I still have the external cassette deck somewhere
 
in the mid 80's, we got an apple II-gs instead of a mac. it was supposedly "better". it definitely looked really cool, especially compared to the apple II, but that thing was a bear to use, especially because all development $'s were going into the mac. just the thought of it gives me chills...
 
AVB said:
I had one of these in 1975.

Holy cow! I remember those from Popular Electronics among other models (IMSI, et al.) that I lusted after as a teen. There was even one with a 4-cassette storage device and a tiny monochrome screen. Never had the scratch to put any of 'em together, though.
 
I think it was $475 delivered in kit form and it didn't do a whole lot but was fun to play with. The already assembled version was $150 more.

PetersCreek said:
AVB said:
I had one of these in 1975.

Holy cow! I remember those from Popular Electronics among other models (IMSI, et al.) that I lusted after as a teen. There was even one with a 4-cassette storage device and a tiny monochrome screen. Never had the scratch to put any of 'em together, though.
[snapback]264428[/snapback]​
 
AVB said:
I had one of these in 1975.

Pic of Altair 8800 removed for space...

I remember drooling over the write up they got in Popular Electronics. It looked sooooo cool. All those switches and blinky lights :)
Alas I was 10 years old, and didn't have the money to purchase the kit, but I dreamed about it.

edit:
hehe!, I just echoed PetersCreeks' post
 
Don't remember the year, but was a 286 put together by a local computer company. No hardrive, 31/2 and 5 1/4 floppy drives, B/W monitor, operated on dos. Asked the guy about a hard drive, he told they were $800.00 for 10 megs and I didn't need it. They were only selling HD's to factories using computer run machinery. Price was $3800.00
 
Like some of the others mine was an Apple IIc.

apple2c.gif


I have never owned a Windows PC or any other brand for that matter.
 
AVB said:
I had one of these in 1975.

altair8800.jpg

[snapback]264382[/snapback]​

Oh, God!!! I remember playing football and artillery on that computer!!! You did everything on a thermal printer (we went through ROLLS of paper at the company I worked for...) Throwing all the switches to "boot" the computer up (get it ready to accept commands... That thing brings back GREAT memories!!!
 
1985 Apple IIGS

Turn on that bad boy....leave, get some coffee, eat breakfast and when you are done, maybe just maybe it might be loaded.

appleiigs.jpg


Ohhhh the memories!
 
I had a Commedor 64 with a 13" tv as the monitor. Had a AV switch in the back to go from TV to Computer. I learned how to run repeat with dirty words I felt like a computer king
 
Top