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How much did you pay for your first computer?

         

MrSpeed

1:20 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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In 1989 I bought all this for $1,789.00

AT-Turbo-286 12MHZ
80286 zero wait state motherboard
640K Ram
Socket for math coprocessor
42 Meg Hard Drive - autoparking!
1:1 controller
Paradise VGA System (640x480)
14" VGA Monitor

and it was 100% IBM compatible!

I thought I got the deal of the century because my in-laws paid $3,000 for their used IBM XT which had a 10 Meg drive.

supermanjnk

1:31 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I paid 1000 for my first computer (19 inch monitor included) this was four years ago... my second computer I paid 700 for including monitor, (2 years ago) my third computer (6 months ago) I paid 500 for. built a computer for my sister as a wedding present (no monitor) 500 dollars. Linux box... 900 mhz p3 :D free... for my parents first computer it was a 486 and they paid over 2000 for it.

frup

1:53 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think my Timex Sinclair was $99?

photon

2:41 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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A Commodore 128 on clearance for US$100.

On which I eventually installed GEOS, an early GUI created in part by our own Mr. Tabke.

Sarah Atkinson

2:46 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



my dad baught my first computer in the mid 80's i think for over 3,000. it didn't have a hard drive.

the first one that was mine and soly mine was his office hand me down. secvond one was also a offcie hand me down (my favorit a gateway tower 90mhzx pentium tower). then he baught me another one around 1999 he spend near 2k on in. the one i have now which is the first one I have ever baught i paid i think $600 for.

grandpa

2:58 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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My first one was at the time that the 20meg HD was introduced. I opted for the less expensive 10meg HD, and the machine still set me back about 2 grand. It was a generic creation.

Surfing the Web was sure was a lot different back then.

nancyb

3:14 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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my first computer, although I didn't pay for it was the first IBM desktop, I think that was before they called them PCs - or dekstops. My company bought it and I imagine it was a lot-o-bucks. Everything had to be run from and saved to a floppy. Came with 56K (I think) which I filled up in less than 3 months so they had to upgrade. OOps, not filled up, I had to use upwards of 10 floppies to do my work - cost/schedule related stuff.

My own first, was a Vic20. I can't remember how much I paid for it, but under a couple hundred. In '87 I spent about $1500 for a smallish one - about 20MB HD, monitor and s/w included. In '89 I spent about $2100 on a Toshiba laptop - no color, that I could afford, so it was the blue and gray screen with 20MB.

Since then there have been a number of them and I want a new one again :)

Broadway

3:16 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Mid 1980's, possibly 1985. $2500 or so.
An IBM (8088 chip), monochrome, I guess 64K memory, no hard drive, two full height floppies.

No one ever had more fun with a machine than me with that one. I put in a Hercules card (increased the monitor's resolution), a Quadboard (to boost the memory and so the machine actually had a clock in it), and a hard drive (probably 10 Meg or so, back in those days you had to park the head of the hard drive before you turned the machine off). I think it ran on DOS 3.0? I think DOS included BASIC back then, although some where along the line I started using TurboBasic (Borland). I loved those years.

Dogza

3:29 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Tandy 128
On Sale at Radio Shack for $129.95. Don't remember the year.

"Socket for math coprocessor" - OMG, totally forgot about stuff like that, to funny!

jecasc

3:55 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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A Schneider PC 1640, with 8 MHZ 8086 Processor, 640 k RAM, two 5 1/4'' Floppy Disks.

And a 720 x 348 monochrome screen .

For about 2000 Deutsche Mark (about 1000 EUR) I think

It came with MS DOS 3.2, and the graphical user interface GEM. GEM was much better than Windows, but unfortunately quality does not always win.

Found a picture on the internet.

[benser.net...]

MrSpeed

4:30 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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"Hercules card"
Hehe..I remember that. It was a big deal to get the Hercules Card.

I thought we were reaching back the other day discussing the good ole days of Viper and TNT video cards.

So you guys really ran the OS off of floppies?
That's crazy talk!

nancyb

5:47 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



no, on mine, the os was installed, but if I remember correctly, there wasn't room to run anything else so floppies got a lot of use (:

Sarah Atkinson

6:16 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



am i th only one who started with an apple? (pre-mac too)

jsinger

6:18 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Am I the oldest here?

Radio Shack TRS-80 with worthless AUDIO tape drive. About $900 around 1978. A few years later added a pin-feed dot matrix printer for about $900.

TRS80 Model II came around 1982 for base price of $3599. You could actually do something with it.

Murdoch

6:19 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Tandy 128

I think this was the same one I had. Tandy Color Computer, had a disk drive and keyboard, ran programs in BASIC and general binary, you had to attach a television to be your MONITOR!

Oh the days of if a$=inkey$ then awesome...

MrSpeed

7:32 pm on Oct 28, 2005 (gmt 0)

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TRS80 Model II came around 1982 for base price of $3599. You could actually do something with it.

Like what?

I think I learned Fortran on one.

lgn1

3:28 am on Oct 29, 2005 (gmt 0)

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I bought my first TI 99/4 computer in 1980 for around a thousand bucks. I bought a second one in 1983 for $50.00. And you thought cars depreciate fast :)

AlexK

5:13 am on Oct 29, 2005 (gmt 0)

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grandpa:
I opted for the less expensive 10meg HD, and the machine still set me back about 2 grand

Same machine for me in the 80's, but at an auction for about £600. The first computer for me, however, was an Amstrad twin-disk-drive "portable" for something less than 100 GBP.

The one that I am proud of is my twin-xeon rack-mount server (in 2003 and about 3,000 GBP). The reason that I am so proud is that, shortly before this, the company that then employed me got a single-cpu rack-mount server, and it cost them about 35,000 GBP. Also, about 7 years earlier I was helping to install 20+ Compaq Proliant NT4 twin-Pentium-Pro rack-mounts at a bank, which also cost 35,000+ GBP each. Just one of the differences between Linux and Windows.

grelmar

7:43 am on Oct 29, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Had a Vic 20 and a Timex Sinclair, circa early eighties.

But the first real (*cough*) computer I had was a PC-AT knockoff with an 8086 processor running at 10 Mhz (when most PCs were running at 4.77, and a few were running at 8), the aforementioned Hercules Graphics Card, which had both serial out and RCA video out (which I used primarily to run to my VCR, so I could record my games of Ancient Art of War, then play them back and try and figure out where it had all gone so woefully wrong), a 20Meg Hard Drive, 640K of RAM, DOS 3.2, a 5.25" floppy. Also picked up a Roland DG-PR1011 printer at the same time, and a 15" monochrome (amber) monitor, even though the graphics card could do color (color monitors just weren't as "crisp" as the monochrome ones at the time.)

The whole package came in at just under $3000 CDN in '87.

I loved that machine and kept it running until 1998, long past any usefulness. I kept it around out of sentimentality, and to go back and play AAW every now and then, until the hard drive finally imploded. (This was the first, and hopefully last, time I have ever heard the banshee wail of the read/write head coming into contact with a platter at full spin.)

Piles of machines since. And no, I'll never again be able to rattle off the stats of any machine like I can for that "first golden baby" - including the one I'm sitting at right now.

Tropical Island

11:42 am on Oct 29, 2005 (gmt 0)

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We bought our first one in 1995 in Miami at Office Depot for close to $2000 and then lugged it back to Venezuela along with the CRT.

I had bought some golf programs to play on it.

Unfortunately the salesman obviously didn't know any more than I did and sent me off with only 4mb of ram. In those days Windows needed 3½mb to run leaving nothing for the golf game. It used to take about 5 minutes for the golfer to complete his swing.

As there was no other way to do it in those days I jumped on a flight to Miami with no luggage, raced to the OD store, bought 12mb of ram for a ridiculous price ($400 seems to stick in my mind) and raced back to the airport in a taxi and caught the same plane home.

Now it worked!

snowman

10:10 pm on Oct 29, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



First PC I got was free from a friend, it was a 8086 which I upgraded to a 286 with a co-processor (287). It wasn't very usable for anything but I learned a lot about DOS and batch files on it.

First real usable computer I got was for $100 from my friend, it was a little one piece Mac 512Ke with a printer! Neat computer, I really liked it!

jsinger

4:21 am on Oct 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Got in some fights with computer owners in the late 70s. Even then, I thought those early costly machines were worthless for anything more than learning their considerable limitations.

Glad to see that just about everyone here agrees with that view.

PS: Does anyone actually keep kitchen recipes on their home computer, even now? That was the Killer App of 1977 LOL.

Lipik

10:33 am on Oct 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Around 450 euro in 1983 for a Commodore-64. Only computer, no monitor (used old B/W tv), no HDD, no floppy, only tape recorder.
one year later I bought one Floppy-drive for something like 300 euro. Amazing, saving over 300 kilobytes on one floppy! ;-)
In the same year I also bought first printer (8-pin matrix) for 750 euro!

MatthewHSE

1:22 pm on Oct 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Our family paid around $1500 for a "Maximus" in 1992. The thing had a 40 MB hard drive, which is really the only spec I remember (I was only eleven at the time and not really into computers much yet). It came with a whopping 15" monitor, and Windows 3.1. My clearest memory of that computer was letting a screensaver run all night on it once to see if it would finally black out the last section of the desktop. It ran for over 36 hours and never did.

Did anyone else ever play the Dr. Brain games? We had the first (and best) one - Castle of Dr. Brain - and I remember being amazed at the graphics. Actually, from what I remember, I'm still amazed at the graphics. Not that they were really that great, by today's standards, but how on earth did they manage to get the entire code and graphics for the game on the single installation floppy? Or maybe it had two disks, but either way, it seems like a ton of data to get into a maximum of 3MB or so.

Oh, I forgot, we did have a Kaypro something-or-other back in the '80's. Black, with a tiny screen that would only display that hideous lime-green, and the monitor built right in to a lunker of a case. That goes back a long ways, and the only thing I ever did on that one was play "Wumpus." Then there was also the Commodore 64, which was given to us, and had the tape drive built right in to the back of the hugely-thick keyboard.

Essex_boy

6:16 pm on Oct 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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an Amstrad twin-disk-drive "portable"- I used to sell these in teh late 80's they were laughable then, no one took them seriously.

I recall the sales staff (thats me as well) getting a ticking off from the business owners for slating these machines.

My first machine cost £49.95 back in 1981 must have been a fortune a good weeks wage was £150 then, how times change.

First Pc was circa 1997 impulse buy really, oh did I want a modem as well? why not at tleast I look and laugh at this new internet thing which is bound to fail....

ann

6:26 pm on Oct 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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first one in 1997 was a heinz 57 my son bought me for fifty dollars gifted me with it and a 5oo. monitor.

I was scared to death to touch it because I was afraid I would "break"it. LOL

Went through 2 more used ones until I bought my first new one for about 1000 dollars, about 2 computers ago. :)

I wear them out!

P.S.

The monitor still works well, been through the family and still in use.

weeks

8:52 pm on Oct 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Am I the oldest here?
Radio Shack TRS-80 with worthless AUDIO tape drive. About $900 around 1978. A few years later added a pin-feed dot matrix printer for about $900.

TRS80 Model II came around 1982 for base price of $3599. You could actually do something with it.

I don't think you're quite the oldest one.

In 1972 I bought a calculator with a memory function for $210. It used three D batteries. In 1970 during Chemstry I class, we had to walk down the hall to use the calculator, so having your own that was the size of a small telephone directory was realllly cutting edge.

So, in my first job in 1974 some marketing VP comes walking down the hall passing out TI calculators with this little memory card on plastic and all of these buttons--wow!

Someone in the building bought a Radio Shack computer in and thought we should sell them to farmers. In the beginning there was a lot of discussion of "What would you DO with a computer?" A "personal computer" was a weird idea.

Bill Gates really did have real vision.

jsinger

2:55 am on Oct 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Singer (the sewing machine company) sold a huge electronic calculator with a memory or two for about $1800 in the mid-60s. It has a small CRT screen built in. I'm not sure whether it was progammable in any sense. The grandfather of basic calculator you buy today for $10.

I remember mechanical calculators, costing about $1,000 in the 1950s. Could add and divide. Like adding machines only vastly more complex. Very loud.

Dad bought an office digital calculator sometime in the early 1970s for about $250. No print out.

AlexK

4:43 am on Oct 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

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jsinger:
I remember mechanical calculators, costing about $1,000 in the 1950s.

I used one of those for a few months in the early 70's at Carborundum, Trafford Park, Manchester! They had an arm on the side (like the old-fashioned slot-machines) which caused it to make the calculation. Boring job, but well paid.

jsinger

8:09 am on Oct 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

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Picture of a Burroughs #1 Machine from 1905 with glass sides to show of the innards ala modern game computers. This 63 pound monster would have looked great with neon lighting:

[xnumber.com...]

As I recall, the big selling point for electronic calculators was their quietness. A large room full of mechanical machines could be deafening.

--
Some mechanical calculators were powered by hand crank like the Burroughs above. The one I played with as a kid had an electric motor.

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