|
Welcome to the Australian Ford Forums forum. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and inserts advertising. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features without post based advertising banners. Registration is simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. Please Note: All new registrations go through a manual approval queue to keep spammers out. This is checked twice each day so there will be a delay before your registration is activated. |
|
The Bar For non Automotive Related Chat |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
20-01-2006, 08:58 PM | #61 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Victoria
Posts: 266
|
My first PC was an Apple IIc back in 1984. Here are the specs.
NAME APPLE IIc MANUFACTURER Apple TYPE Transportable ORIGIN U.S.A. YEAR April 1984 END OF PRODUCTION 1990 BUILT IN LANGUAGE AppleSoft BASIC KEYBOARD Full-stroke 62 keys with arrows keys CPU MOS 65c02 SPEED 1 MHz RAM 128 KB ROM 16 KB TEXT MODES 40 or 80? chars. x 24 lines GRAPHIC MODES (only the full screen modes are listed here) : 40 x 48 (16 col) / 80 x 48 (16 col) / 280 x 192 (6 col) / 140 x 192 (16 col) / 560 x 192 (mono) COLORS 16 maximum SOUND one channel. Built-in speaker SIZE / WEIGHT 29(W) x 31(D) x 6(H) cm. I/O PORTS Monitor, Joystick/Mouse, RGB, Floppy Disk, RS232c (2) BUILT IN MEDIA one 5.25 OS DOS 3.3 or ProDOS POWER SUPPLY External 12 volt power supply unit Now I work in IT full time ... and lovin it... |
||
20-01-2006, 09:28 PM | #62 | ||
An Old Boss™©
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,145
|
C64 for a few weeks, shortly to be replaced by the almighty and then-new Apple IIE. Ours was by far the most Pimpin' PC in the area because we had TWO floppy drives and a COLOUR monitor!!!!! Oh the amount of old games I played on that thing back in the day (grade 5 onwards).
Let's ring a few memory bells here... Aztec, Frogger, Lode Runner, Swashbuckler, Moon Patrol, Carmen Sandiego, Castle Wolfenstein / Beyond Castle Wolfenstein, Spy Hunter, Donkey Kong (of course!), Conan The Barbarian, Bards Tale II, Summer / Winter / California Games, Choplifter / Rescue Raiders, Karateka, Bruce Lee, Tiapan, Test Drive 2, the list goes on and on... Choplifter Conan Karateka Yeah baby! Loved this one
__________________
Where did I go? What was I doing there?™© |
||
20-01-2006, 09:28 PM | #63 | ||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
MSX, can't recall all the specs although i think i still have it packed away with all my other old electronic antiques.
Circa 1984 Many pc's since then. An oldie but a goldie |
||
20-01-2006, 09:45 PM | #64 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Victoria
Posts: 266
|
Quote:
|
|||
20-01-2006, 10:07 PM | #65 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: ACT
Posts: 11,647
|
My first computer was an Amstrad CPC 464. The processor was in the keyboard. The tape drive attached via the keyboard. Took 8 minutes to load golf. Power failures on the 18th hole were not very funny I can tell you
|
||
20-01-2006, 10:13 PM | #66 | ||
" Let there be Rock "
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: QLD
Posts: 849
|
B-1B, , , you say you had a microbee.......................................... ..
I had one of those in 1986, , , and still have it tucked away in the roof of the shed.. My old man said "it will be a collectors item one day", , , as they were an Australian made computer... Had a look on ebay one day, , , and there was the old mircobee for - - - - -$20.... worth keeping dad for 20 years eh ! AC/DC |
||
20-01-2006, 10:20 PM | #67 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 206
|
The mighty Microbee 16 (1982). 2MHz Z80 Processor, CPM OS, 16K of RAM, monochrome & yes, the ever reliable cassette machine. Word processor was in EPROM (thank heavens) as would have taken forever to load reliably.
Learnt to code in Z80 Pneumonics, Basic, Fortran & Db2. This machine was a hackers dream. Upgraded to 32K RAM, then 64K with RGB colour (56k really as 8K was for colour). Then onto twin 5.25" floppy drives, man they were fast (& reliable) at the time. The rest is history, usual migration path from 8086 thru to Pentium 4 (3GHz) with all the bells and whistles. |
||
20-01-2006, 10:48 PM | #68 | ||
Boost Addict
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: North Brisbane
Posts: 1,151
|
386 Laptop (yes u read right), one o fthose bricks you could use as a weapon, worked up until a few months ago (yes u read right again), not that it could do much. Had a whopping 60MB HDD (I have no idea what i could fit on there) and even bigger 16MB RAM. One of those tiny 10" screens and was one of teh evry few ones with a floppy drive - yippi - Windows 3.1 the OS
upgraded to a 486 desktop (one of those where you need a crane to lift them) with colour monitor!!!!, a staggering 400MB HDD!!! and whopping 32MB RAM, upgraded to 64 later on. I bought the very first CD ROM generation as well. Win 3.11 was compulsary. Next came a Pentium 233MHz 64 MB Ram standard, later upgraded to 128, a CD ROM stock and a 1.5gig HDD (wow). Win98 FE, upgraded to SE shorty after. This computer was in use up until a few weeks ago, using 2x20gig HDD and XP with 128MB Ram. I have no idea how it worked but it did. Shortly after a Pentium 666, 128 MB (upgraded to 32something odd), 40gig HDD, Win98 SE upgraded to XP later on. This computer is still working andis used for games onle and some net surfing. It was also put on ISDN for starters and now i hanging of ADSL wireless. Then i bought a Pentium 1.2GHz, 60 gig HDD, 512 MB Ram Clone, which was more often modified than my car, oh and the computer store didnt get it managed to boot and tried telling me it wasnt possible and sold it to me not booting (i told em to adjust HDD JS to suit new system). I set the JS and bingo she was goer (idiots) after that i bought some type of celeron with 2 13" screen - yay --- cant really remember the specs now I bought myself an IBM laptop R50e, 1.4 celeron, 512MB Ram, CDRW/DVD, 14.1" TFT, 40gig HDD, etc etc
__________________
N12 Pulsar - sold Gen1 Liberty Turbo - sold VP Commodore Turbo - sold LN65 Hilux Turbo - sold EL31 Corolla Turbo - sold Ford AU Ute Turbo - sold Ford AU XR8 Sedan - 5.4l V8 Turbo (in the build) Ford BA XR6T Ute - daily driver Ford FG XR6T Sedan - cruiser do you see a general trend? I DO Can't live with it, can't live without it! |
||
21-01-2006, 01:28 AM | #69 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 442
|
I had an 286 laptop, 40mb (i think) hdd, greyscale screen (with a whopping 16shades of grey), 9600baud modem, and 2mb ram (i think). that was arround 93-94 (i cant remember)
compared to my beast now AMD Athlon XP 2800+ @ 2.2Ghz, 1024mb DDR400, 120Gb ATA, 200Gb ATA, 16x DVD-RW, Nvidia GeForce 6600GT Turbo |
||
21-01-2006, 01:40 AM | #70 | ||
Grinder+Welder = Race car
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Briz-Vegas
Posts: 3,937
|
Commodore 64, although 1st real computer was a....
Microbee! (Of course I'm working off the Old Skool definition of PC = Personal Computer)
__________________
"No, it will never have enough power until I can spin the wheels at the end of the straightaway in high gear" - Too much power is never enough....Mark Donohue on the Can Am Porsche 917. |
||
21-01-2006, 01:45 AM | #71 | ||
XR5 Pilot
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Perth, Ex NSW
Posts: 1,455
|
My First PC
IBM 386... 3.5 Floppy External 3 1/4 Floppy 4MB RAM 14' Monitor 2nd PC IBM Compatible (Cirrus 120Mhz) 16MB RAM 6X CDROM 15' Monitor Windows 95 (Alpha Edition) 3rd PC P3 933 Pentium 128 Mb RAM (Originally) now 512 32x CD ROM (Now a Burner too!) TNT 16MB Video Card ASUS Motherboard 17' Diamond Monitor 4th PC and Current P4 3.0ghz 1GB DDR 533 RAM Geforce 6800GT Graphics 56x CDROM 56x DVD-ROM with Burner Abit IC7 Motherboard 17" Flat Screen Sony CRT |
||
21-01-2006, 08:39 AM | #72 | ||
Cobblers!
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: The Shire, NSW
Posts: 4,489
|
My First Computer.
Apple Macintosh LC575 680LC30 CPU, 33Mhz 200Mb HDD 20Mb Ram Price of just over $10,000 My Families Apple IIe Motorola 6502 - 1Mhz 64Kb Ram NO HDD About a million Floppies. I got the LC in Uni, and the IIe was the families computer until 1990
__________________
Ego BFII Ghia Titanium Silver E53 X5 4.4i Gunmetal EF XR6. Now retired from active duty. Roses are red. Violets are blue. OS X rocks. Homage to you. |
||
21-01-2006, 10:59 AM | #73 | |||
Starter Motor
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 28
|
Quote:
My first home PC was in 1996, it was a P75 with 1.6G HD, it cost $3300 with the printer. I think the modem was a few hundred then as well. I do remember in the early 1980s a TV game console I had called Intellivision (Sega?) had an adapter that acted as a computer, very large block letters, you could only write about three words accross the top of the TV screen.
__________________
Previous cars: 1989 Ford EA 'S' Wagon (1992 -2004, 300,000kms) 1981 Ford XD 'S' Wagon (1981 - 1992, 240,000kms) 1978 Toyota Corona (1980-81) Current: 2003 Ford BA Fairmont Sedan (2004 - ) 2002 Ford KQ Laser (2002 - ) 2002 Ford Focus (Company Car) |
|||
21-01-2006, 12:58 PM | #74 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: brisbane
Posts: 2,039
|
First computer was an Amstrad 286,then a386,486 dx2 66 8mgs of ram which cost $140.00, 30 pin. 50 mgs of hard drive space, huge. I could actually put DOOM on it and link up. I remember when the first p1 chip came out the computer shop had it in a glass case and wanted close to $950.00 for it. Those were the days I was 15 back then so i have mum and dad to thank for the computer. :eclipsee_
|
||
21-01-2006, 02:35 PM | #75 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 83
|
My first computer was an Atari XE:
Followed by an Atari 1040 STE. Followed by Samsung 286/1mb RAM/40mb HDD Then a Dick Smith 486 DX4/100 w 8 MB RAM, 500mb hdd. And CD-ROM COOL! Then P75/16mb/800mb cd-rom I lost track after that.. |
||
21-01-2006, 09:24 PM | #76 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 34
|
Quote:
|
|||
21-01-2006, 09:53 PM | #77 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: In A House
Posts: 2,467
|
atari
but real computer it was a P2 200 on dialup :( : :P which i had on the old forums then updated to this computer got cable and yeah really only had a handful ones my kids ones mine a few spares and thats it. |
||
22-01-2006, 02:50 PM | #78 | |||
351 cubes of power
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Central Queensland
Posts: 59
|
Quote:
lmao..i had trs-80 too....flash on with 64k of ram,colour basic and tape drive...still works to 10 Print "holdens suck" 20 GOTO 10 HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
__________________
:sm_headba NO RICE AND NO RAP :sm_headba |
|||
22-01-2006, 10:18 PM | #79 | ||
Nitro Funny Cars rule
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Western Sydney
Posts: 39
|
The first computer I owned was an XT clone dating back to 1986 or so. I was impressed by the huge ( at the time ) 20MB Hard Drive.
The first computer I used was at Sydney Uni in 1979 where they had a Cyber something-or-other. In the days before keyboards you had to type individual punch-cards where 1 card equalled 1 line of code in a programme. The language we learned was Fortran and those days were a real hoot. I have some funny memories of poor sods who; 1. Made an error in their code and sent the computer into an infinite loop. This meant that the computer endlessly processed your programme and got absolutely nowhere. The effect of this would be to burn an entire box of the old A3 continuous feed paper and used up all of your monthly allowance. OR 2. Dropped all of their cards on their way to the card feeder machine. This meant that you had to spend about an hour resorting them into the exact code order for the programme to work. Ah the good old days....... Cheers |
||
22-01-2006, 10:39 PM | #80 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 12,077
|
My first computer that I owned was a Microbee 16 kit. It came is pieces, not like todays stuff with mother boards and cards but with a blank printed circuit board that you had to solder each IC, resistor & capacitor etc. Its monitor was a 10 inch second hand black & white television that I modified to accept composite video directly at the video rectifier diode and the mass storage was a portable cassette player that I modded to run at 4 times normal speed e.g. C120 lasted 15 minutes and tuned the audio filters to get 4800 baud (oh the POWER).
This was in 1982. Shortly after buying it I did my first MOD. I found a cheap source of 2k 2112 static RAM chips (2716 eprom compatible), purchased 4 of them for about $20 each and for a mere $80 I upgraded from 16k to 32k. I have no idea where it is now.... shame really. The first ones I used were the Digital PDP 8/E and PDP 11/20 at CIAE in 1977. Paper tape and card readers...... |
||
22-01-2006, 10:47 PM | #81 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,710
|
we had an Amiga 1000, and still have it!
It cost $3000 in 1986, which would be equivelent to what, 8000 now?!! and a colour 9 pin printer which cost at least 1000! We upgraded from 512k ram to 1.5mb, and the side port ram uprade cost 500! Also have a 2nd disk drive. No hard drive. |
||
23-01-2006, 08:14 PM | #82 | ||
Paulie
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Bentleigh VIC
Posts: 901
|
VZ200 here with a cassette drive lol
__________________
"i was wondering why the frisbee was getting bigger.....then it hit me!" .... My Website www.freewebs.com/xwgs :disco: 302 XWGS FAIRMONT C10 9" : 302 XW FAIRMONT 4 SP 9" : Fact: an XW had a shaker before any XY did...... :Up_to_som Should a 302 Cleveland really be called a 302 Geelong?? No 302's with a Cleveland block where built in Cleveland |
||