Hi All,
In 1982 I convinced my dad to buy me a BBC Micro Model B cassette model for school work - £399 in those days was a big amount of money (equivalent to about £1800 today) and cheaper micros were around (e.g. ZX81, VIC20, Dragon 32...). Of course I had fun playing games on it, some of which were laboriously typed in from magazines - remember that? That was my first experience of learning a computer language. Later bought the DFS 0.9 disc interface and installed it - my first experience in handling such stuff. I still have that computer and happily it still works. I still occasionally play games on it, although my son is not overly impressed from his gaming perspective!
Cheers!
Hello from Essex
- Multiwizard
- Posts: 2667
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2012 9:03 pm
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Re: Hello from Essex
Hi,
welcome to this great Forum...
Greetings from my little Dutch Atomic Attic, Wim...
welcome to this great Forum...
Greetings from my little Dutch Atomic Attic, Wim...
- flaxcottage
- Posts: 5717
- Joined: Thu Dec 13, 2012 8:46 pm
- Location: Derbyshire
- Contact:
Re: Hello from Essex
Welcome, 8BitGo.
Tell your son he has no sense of adventure.
Tell your son he has no sense of adventure.
Re: Hello from Essex
Welcome, I started with avic-20, then cassette and a beeb but sure to all the save issues, swapped it with a cousin and that second beeb will be with me forever
Re: Hello from Essex
Welcome!
Aww, memory lane...
... I formed a computer club in 1979, the only reason was to use my mates fathers Pet computer. They were far too expensive for me, so I had to spend as much time as possible on the Research Machine 380Z at school. I got my beeb in 1983 as the RAF sort of paid enough for me to 'invest' in it. Def good days. I imagine every one on here remembers their first computer, and the first program they wrote that actually worked. My first one was on a sheet of paper, written in CESIL LOL!
- Neil
Aww, memory lane...
... I formed a computer club in 1979, the only reason was to use my mates fathers Pet computer. They were far too expensive for me, so I had to spend as much time as possible on the Research Machine 380Z at school. I got my beeb in 1983 as the RAF sort of paid enough for me to 'invest' in it. Def good days. I imagine every one on here remembers their first computer, and the first program they wrote that actually worked. My first one was on a sheet of paper, written in CESIL LOL!
- Neil
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We live for the one, we die for the one!
We live for the one, we die for the one!