- Joined
- Jul 17, 2015
Some sort of 8080 breadboard kit my dad picked up. Programmed it in machine language in octal with a numeric keypad. It had three banks of display LED's linked to some registers.
While I don't work in IT, I have no fear of computers because of my early exposure to how they work deep down.
The first recognizable modern computer I had was a Sanyo clone of an IBM Portable, which was IBM's answer to the Compaq. It was an 8088 beast in a luggable case with a built-in CRT. By the time I replaced it, I had installed a memory upgrade on an ISA card, a processor upgrade (80286, baby!) with a sketchy vampire clamp to the original processor, and a 20 meg hard disk in one of the floppy bays.
While I don't work in IT, I have no fear of computers because of my early exposure to how they work deep down.
The first recognizable modern computer I had was a Sanyo clone of an IBM Portable, which was IBM's answer to the Compaq. It was an 8088 beast in a luggable case with a built-in CRT. By the time I replaced it, I had installed a memory upgrade on an ISA card, a processor upgrade (80286, baby!) with a sketchy vampire clamp to the original processor, and a 20 meg hard disk in one of the floppy bays.