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Rogmeister
07-10-2006, 08:52 AM
So which classic computers have you owned? I never owned a VIC-20 or a Commodore 64, but I did own...

Atari 400 (remember the membrane keyboard? What fun!
One of the Atari XL computers...forget which one, maybe the 1200.
Atari 1040 ST

Kind of a puny list, I guess...

Lady Jaye
07-10-2006, 09:17 AM
I grew up with the TI99/4a, which my dad still has, CIB, including the books and the tape recorder (and some tapes of programs typed in TI BASIC).

Edit:

Actually, depending on the cut-date for classic computing, I can add that we also had a few old Macs: Mac SE/30, Mac IIcx (which died only a couple of years ago), Mac Quadra 650 (2 models, including one with a PowerPC card in it).

The Shawn
07-10-2006, 09:20 AM
TRS-80 model 3 (which i learned the most on back in the early 80's)

TRS-80 model 4
TI-99/4A

neuropolitique
07-10-2006, 10:25 AM
I've an Atari 130 XE, an NEC Exec-mate, and an Apple ][ e which has been in my trunk for several months.

I also have a Poqet PC, which my or may not be considered classic, but is pretty darn neat anyway.

Darth Sensei
07-10-2006, 10:29 AM
I had a couple of Model 3's which I learned to program on. Dual 5.25 disk drives baby.

I also have a lot of experience with Apple 2's, TRS80 Coco, and Commodore 64.

AdamAnt316
07-10-2006, 10:52 AM
I have a nice collection of these things going. I'll try and start with the oldest:
1. Apple ][+ (one of the first computers in our household...in 1993...)
2. TRS-80 Color Computer (two of them; one with the original 'chicklet' keyboard, and another with a more-standard keyboard)
3. VIC-20 ($2 flea market find)
4. TI-99/4A (have a bunch of these, in both silver and beige)
5. Timex-Sinclair 1000 (sorta works)
6. Commodore 64 (took me awhile to get one that fully worked, but it was worth the wait!)
7. Apple //e (the first computer I ever used...again, in 1993...)
8. TRS-80 Color Computer 2 (did lots of BASIC programming on one of these)
9. Coleco Adam (has a busted printer, but the unit itself works)
10. TRS-80 Model 4 (yard sale find...and a heavy one at that!)
11. Tandy model 102 (neat little laptop)
12. Atari 800XL (updated version of the Atari 800)
13. Commodore SX-64 (luggable version of the Commodore 64)
14. Apple Lisa 2 (very rare...runs as a Mac, when it runs)
15. PCjr (heavily modified by the previous owner)
16. Tandy 1000SX (a PCjr clone)
17. Apple //c (quasi-portable Apple //e)
18. Commodore 128 (underrated little gem)
19. Amiga 1000 (cool graphic OS)
20. TRS-80 Color Computer 3 (last of the CoCo line)
21. Commodore 128D (Commodore 128 and a floppy drive all in one box)
22. Macintosh SE (neat little compact Mac)
23. Commodore 64C (Commodore's longest-lasting product)
24. Apple //gs (last of the Apple // line...mine has a warped case)
25. Macintosh Classic (as seen in schools everywhere)
26. Macintosh Classic II (ditto)
27. Macintosh LC III (like the pizza box LC IIs I used in middle school, but not quite as crappy)

As you can see, classic computers are a favorite subject of mine. Maybe I should set up a museum someday...
-Adam

Damaniel
07-10-2006, 11:03 AM
For my 8th birthday, I got an Atari 65XE from my grandfather. No disk drives -- not even a tape drive(!) -- but to me it was one of the greatest things ever. At the time I got it, the PC world was marching steadily into 16-bit computing, but I didn't care. I spent hours playing with it, typing in programs and learning how to write my own.

Currently, I own a number of classic computers, since I actively collected them before concentrating on video games. Some of the highlights (though by no means exhaustive):

- Commodore 64 and 128 with lots of *original* software
- TRS 80 Model 100 (a battery powered portable PC)
- Amiga 500 and 1000
- Atari 520ST
- Timex Sinclar 1000 (actually, I have about a dozen of these -- don't ask :))
- Apple IIe

No Atari 65XE though. I'd actually like to pick a complete one up someday... ;)

YoshiM
07-10-2006, 11:41 AM
We were pretty much a CoCo household until we marched into the world of IBM/PCs.

In order of acquisition:

1. CoCo 1 (chiclet keyboard, factory upgraded to 16K with "Extended Color Basic")
2. CoCo 2 with 64K(after Dad's buddy blew his CoCo 1 after upgrading the RAM)
3. Timex Sinclair 1000 (garage sale buy-a curiosity purchase)
4. TI 99-4a (for me, so I wouldn't hog the CoCo)
5. TRS 80 Model 3 computer (given to my Dad by his boss, who thought it wasn't working but it did-user error, didn't use it much)
6. CoCo 3 (for me: purchased it with my cash from work to be my main computer)

After that we got into IBM PC compatibles.

j_factor
07-10-2006, 12:52 PM
My first computer was a Commodore 64. It was a hand-me-down, and it was significantly after the C64's time had come and gone. I still loved it.

I got another hand-me-down soon after. It was one of the later Atari 8-bit computers, but I can't remember exactly which one.

I eventually got an Amiga, yet another hand-me-down, and once again after its time had passed. Although I think Amiga wasn't quite officially dead yet when I got it, it was close. I loved it anyway.

I didn't get an "IBM compatible" PC until people stopped using that phrase. My first Windows computer was a K62 450MHz with Windows 98. That computer is still around, in the possession of my mother, but I think it's finally on its way out. I don't plan on saving it; it's from that post-Quake era but has no 3D card, and it's hard to find old 3D cards. And it's not terribly easy to find games from that "late" era. I suppose it would be a good machine for DOS gaming, but meh.

I've never had an Apple, Spectrum, Atari ST, Sinclair, TRS-80, TI, Vic-20, Adam (lol), Tandy, or anything else. Although I did use Apple ][gs's and Power Macs in school. Strangely, my schools never had Macintosh Classics.

Pantechnicon
07-10-2006, 01:28 PM
When they were contemporary machines:

-Timex-Sinclair 1000
-Tandy MC-10
-Commodore Amiga 500

As a collector:
Commodore: 64, 128, Vic-20, SX-64, plus/4, C-16, Amiga 1000
Tandy: Models 100, 102, 200 and 600
Atari: 1040ST, XE
Compaq Portable II
TI-49A
HP? (No longer have this: I forget the model. But it had a printer built into the top of a touch screen CRT and ran CP/M for an OS)

There have probably been more, but I've been at this for a while and it's easy to lose track.

Jibbajaba
07-10-2006, 02:34 PM
Well I have the DOS box that I built, which is a 486 DX4/100 with 32 megs of RAM and a 1 gig hard drive, I have a boxed and barely used C64, and then I have my beloved Apples:

1 Apple ][+
1 Apple \\e with a bad power suppply that I need to replace
2 Apple \\c+ computers
1 Apple IIgs with Apple RGB monitor

Plus tons of drives, peripherals, cards, joysticks, a monochrome Apple monitor, and disks for them.

I found an Apple \\c at a thrift store last weekend, but I didnt grab it and I should have. I'll probably get it the next time I go over there. The guy keeps that kind of stuff stored away in a barn, so unless someone else asks for it specifically, it will still be there the next time I go.

I would really like to pick up an Atari 800 as well, but I have never found one for a good price that came with a power supply.

Sometimes I am really tempted to get rid of a shitload of my classic console gaming stuff and set up a couple of these computers and just collect for them instead.

Chris

Saabmeister
07-10-2006, 05:34 PM
The first computer our family ever owned was a Commodore 64 sold to us by a friend of my dads who used to crack games in the '80's. That 64 was the only computer we had until 1999, when my dad bought an iMac.

2 Commodore 64s, both boxed (one the aformetioned 64, one given as a birthday gift)
1 Commodore 64c "Test Pilot" package (64c, 1541ii, Joystick, and 5 games, $20 at a flea market)
1 Commodore SX-64 (about $100 from an area computer recycler)
1 TRS-80 III (needs DOS, in a combo deal with the IIc below for $15)
1 Apple IIc (no power supply)
2 Mattel Aquarius (w/ expander & printer on at a thrift, the other off eBay))
1 Commodore 16 (no power supply, w/minty boxed tape drive, $10 at thrift)
2 Macintosh SEs (one at an Apple auction, one here)
1 Macintosh 128k (no OS :( , at a thrift for $10 w/ keyboard, mouse and printer )
1 IBM P70 (thrift for $5)
2 IBM PS/2 56 486SLC2's (bought from the police for a buck each)
1 IBM PS/2 77 486DX (bought from the police, $1)
1 Macintosh IIsi ($3 at a thrift)
1 Macintosh Quadra 700 ($1 at an Apple auction)
1 Powerbook 1400cs (free because a guy my dad worked with couldn't turn it on)
1 Macintosh LCII ($2 at a thrift)
1 Macintosh LCIII (free from a friend of my moms)

Although I'm Really jealous of my brother. He works at a graphic design company that designs the cardboard boxes that products are shipped to grocery stores in. He's made friends with the tech guy at his work, and he constanly brings old Macintosh computers and accessories home. He's probably gotten like 30 or 40 computers from them, because it's cheaper for the guy to dump them on him then paying for disposal.

pseudonym
07-10-2006, 05:57 PM
My first computer was an Apple II. My school used to have a computer class in the evening when I was in junior high where they would show you how to run and use different programs for the Apple II. It was mostly just an excuse to play games though. LOL

Later on, my uncle (he worked at the school) sold my parents a few of them plus the monitors and most of the copies of the Apple II software since they were starting to replace them with PCs. Both of the monitors were the old monochrome variety and the software was really old but I loved using them.

One of my friends had one of the Atari computers, I don't know which one but it would be the second computer I used after the Apple II. After that, I really got into PCs.

ubikuberalles
07-10-2006, 06:07 PM
Off the top of my head:

- 3 Altair 8800 series computers (one 8800, one 8800a and one 8800b).
- 2 Altair 680's
- 2 Atari 400's
- One each of Atari 800, 600 XL, 800 XL, 1200 XL, 65 XE and 130 XE.
- 1 Atari 1040 ST
- 1 Atari 1040 STE
- A couple Apple ][e's
- Two classic Macs
- 1 Vic-20
- 1 Commodore 64
- 2 TS1000's

The computers listed above are all in working order (the Atari ST's are a little flaky because the floppy drives need aligning). I have another half-dozen computers that are not working including an Altair 680, Altari 8800B and a couple Commodores. They're fixable (the Commodore, for example, needs a chip replaced) but I haven't taken the time to repair them yet.

ghostangelofcky
07-10-2006, 09:11 PM
Apple IIe & the Ti/99.

I would like a Atari st though some day

Dave Farquhar
07-10-2006, 09:54 PM
C-64
C-128
Amiga 2000
Apple IIc
TRS-80 CoCo Model II
A couple of different PC/XT clones, if those count

boatofcar
07-10-2006, 10:26 PM
Classic Computers I've owned but no longer have:

C64 with brown monochrome screen
Some kind of Franklin (!) computer
IBM 8088 clone
Atari 130XE


Classic Computers I still own:

Atari 1200XL (my first computer!)
Mac Plus

I'd like to get an original Apple ][, but I just don't have the shelf space.

SeiruKoji
07-10-2006, 10:49 PM
I own a C64 with all the cables, box, books, 5 1/4 drive, and monitor. I have some stuff from the Atari 400, Atari 800, and TI99. I also have a ton of 5 1/4 game for the C64 and DOS.

Flack
07-12-2006, 04:58 PM
Hm ...

TRS-80 Model III
TRS-80 COCO
Franklin Ace 1000 (Apple II compatible)
Apple IIe
Apple IIe (Black Bell and Howell Model)
Apple IIc
Commodore 64
Commodore 128
Commodore SX-64
Commodore 16
Commodore Plus 4
Atari 800
Amiga 500
Amiga 1200
TI-99/4A

PC XT
PC Jr
PC 286/12
PC 386 DX2/40
PC 486/33
PC 486/66
PC 486/100

I've got three or four Macs but I'm not sure what the models are. I've got a Mac Plus staring at my on my desk right now.

kainemaxwell
07-12-2006, 10:59 PM
C=64 and Atari XE.

Pantechnicon
07-13-2006, 06:53 PM
Just remembered a couple more oddballs I've got knocking around in the back of the house:

- Signetics Model I - Assembly language device with an integrated LED character display. I bought it because I used to work for the company that Signetics became - Philips Semiconductors.

-Commodore Colt, PC-10 III - These are actually x86 architecture, so I wouldn't usually be inclined to mention them but for the fact that they're Commodore-manufactured PC's :eek 2: . I think the PC-10 may be a 286. It has a hard drive in it. One of these days I'll probably dust it off and load up MS-DOS 5 and Windows 3.0 (yes, I have shrinkwrapped copies of both). How's that for a classic Dosbox 8-)?

Niku-Sama
07-15-2006, 02:49 AM
only got 2.

IBM compatable 80-88 XT based desktop
Timex Sinclair ZX80

the 80-88 works, has a tv out on the vidrocard along with a XT monitor out, i have the XT monitor and the Switched keyboard to go along with it. boots, posts no OS though

the ZX-80 is unknown

i have some TI-99/4a carts too 2 games, some doubles of finance or house software that was the last thing i bought at the flea markent and i havent been able to go back since. mabe this weekend

bangtango
07-15-2006, 04:49 PM
Hm ...

TRS-80 Model III
TRS-80 COCO
Franklin Ace 1000 (Apple II compatible)
Apple IIe
Apple IIe (Black Bell and Howell Model)
Apple IIc
Commodore 64
Commodore 128
Commodore SX-64
Commodore 16
Commodore Plus 4
Atari 800
Amiga 500
Amiga 1200
TI-99/4A

PC XT
PC Jr
PC 286/12
PC 386 DX2/40
PC 486/33
PC 486/66
PC 486/100

I've got three or four Macs but I'm not sure what the models are. I've got a Mac Plus staring at my on my desk right now.

All of those and never a Vic 20?

My own answers would be the Commodore Vic 20 and 64. I wouldn't mind playing one, or both, of them again. The 64 I had is history and the Vic 20 is missing some of the hookups.

icbrkr
07-15-2006, 06:24 PM
Pretty much all of em in the US: http://www.particles.org .. I'm too lazy to list em :)

Flack
07-15-2006, 09:20 PM
All of those and never a Vic 20?
Maybe my view of history is skewed, but I always thought of the Vic 20 as simply a predecessor of the '64. Once I had a C64 I never thought about buying an older, less-capable version of the same machine. Maybe they aren't as similar as I thought, I just always assumed that since they look almost identical. Are there any Vic 20 games worth picking up the system for that weren't ported to the C64?

Damaramu
07-15-2006, 11:25 PM
My first computer, highschool graduation present back in '94:

486DX 33mhz

I loved that computer and did a lot of gaming on it when I could. A friend brought me a copy of Wolfenstein 3D the day I got it. Did a lot of local BBS-ing on my 2400 baud modem. Good times. :rocker:

Steve W
08-05-2006, 02:10 PM
My first computer was a Texas Instruments Home Computer, given to me for Christmas 1983. A year or two later, my brother picked up a Timex Sinclair 1000 (or pilfered it from work), didn't care for it, and gave it to me. I didn't care for it either, so it went on a shelf.

For years, it was just the TI and me, until around 1989 or 1990 when my brother gave me an old Commodore Amiga 1000. He also had some friends who pirated games, so I ended up with loads of stuff for it. I found out that a friend of a friend also had a lot of games, so in the end I probably have around 500 disks with probably 700 games on them. I did actually purchase a good amount, but it was so hard to find stores that still sold Amiga software around here. I bought what I could and then borrowed copies from my friends to fill out my library.

I stuck it out with the Amiga until late 1995, when this whole 'Information Superhighway' thing started picking up steam, and I wanted a newer machine to access it. My best friend was working for the IT department of a small oil company, and when I told him I was considering getting a PC, he (a pacifist) told he he would come over and beat the living crap out of me. He had gotten to the point where he couldn't stand to look at a PC if he wasn't working. I ended up buying a Power Computing 100 Macintosh clone. That was the beginning of my Mac life. After the Power Computing 100, I bought a UMAX C500 clone, graduated on to an eMac 800 (which is my current desktop), and now a 1.5Ghz G4 Powerbook.

Along the way, i've bought several other computers, but I haven't really gotten into them too much. I've got 3 or 4 Atari 8-bit models, an Atari 520ST and a 1040STFM, an Amiga 1200 (without power supply, so i've never used it), a VIC-20 (also without power supply), an Apple IIc (no power supply, this is becoming a recurring theme), several TRS-80 Co-Co models, a Texas Instruments CC-40 portable, a TRS-80 Model 100, and even a Mattel Intellivision Computer Module, if you count that one as a real computer (most wouldn't). I've started passing on computers when I find them in the wild, mainly because i'm beginning to run short on storage space now. I've got Rubbermaid storage tubs all over the place, filled with classic gaming stuff and computers. I left a $5 Commodore Plus/4 in a store last month because I knew i'd never fool around with it. I have to really want the machine now for me to pick it up.

Kid Ice
08-05-2006, 03:42 PM
Are there any Vic 20 games worth picking up the system for that weren't ported to the C64?

Did they port the Scott Adams adventure games?

Also, for whatever reason, I liked Radar Rat Race and Miner 2049er better on the Vic.

I went directly from the Vic to the 128. Actually, that's not totally accurate...I owned a Commodore 16 for a few days. When I found out it wouldn't work with my 1541 drive and game controllers, that got kicked to the curb.

In my collecting years I've had several TI99s, Atari computers, and Vics and 64s. No Tandy or Apple machines, I just never saw them around (I did have a Mac IIci as my "real" computer for a year or two before I got a PC).

VintageVGMR
09-05-2006, 05:22 PM
Well,

I had a Vic-20 when I was in my ealry teens.

I now have a Commodore 128 with no games. :(

My other dinosaur system was a 286 with a whopping 10 Meg hardrive and a hercules video card. :D

I think all three of those count.

idrougge
09-09-2006, 10:22 PM
I started out with an Amiga 500 in 1992. Got a C64 with it.

Right now, I've got:

C64s all over the place
VIC 20 (old and new)
C128
C128D
C128DCR
Atari 130XE
Loads of Atari ST models
Dragon 32
Spectrum 48k
Spectrum 128k (not working)
Spectravideo SV328
Sord M5
Spectravideo 728 MSX (several)
Sinclair ZX81
TI-99/4A
Vtech Laser 200
ABC 80
ABC 800
ABC 806
Some old workstations and a 68020-based minicomputer
All kinds of Amigas for various uses


I also have some antique PDAs. It's great to collect PDAs when you run out of space.

LAGO
09-11-2006, 03:59 PM
The only one for me is the C64, which I still own. Although I did get to play an Apple II regularly at school back in the day.

norm8332
09-29-2006, 09:06 PM
Computers I have All fully functional:

Apple: IIc qty 2

Atari: 1040st

Commadore : PET 4032 w/4040 disk, VIC-20 qty 8, C64 brown qty 2, C64c qty2, C128, Plus4

Sinclair: ZX80, ZX81 qty 2, Timex 1000,ZX Spectrum+

Tandy: COCO2, Micro COCO

TI 99/4a qty 2

Various IBM compat. from 8088 up.

My favorite is the VIC 20, I somehow ended up with 8 of them. I have had to repair about half of the commodores by replacing chips etc. The sinclairs also break easy. Also tons of disk drives, printers, etc, ect. to go with it all.

willowmoon93
11-13-2006, 01:44 AM
Well I originally owned a TI-99/4A, an Apple ][e, a Commodore 128, & an Atari 520ST. All of those computers wound up going to other people or thrift stores later on (-what was I thinking?-)

Fast forward to the present -- now I own:

(2) Vic-20's
(2) Commodore 64's
(1) Apple ][GS
(1) Timex-Sinclair 1000
(1) Coleco ADAM
(1) Atari 400
(1) Atari 800
(2) TI-99/4A's

Wish I owned an old TRS-80 Model I or III. That model I was the very first computer I learned on. Ah, the memories...

6502
11-15-2006, 08:14 PM
First computer was an Atari 800XL. My dad bought it at the Ft. Hood PX in 1984. Also bought a tape recorder, a crappy Commodore branded joystick, and "Fraction Fever" on cartridge. Whoop! Yeah, Fraction Fever. My parents had resisted my pleas for a 2600 for years. They finally relented for a "real computer" (which seemed to be the big thing to do in those years, everyone trading up from the consoles to home computers). But for awhile there they would only buy me edutaintment software. Fortunately, my father started letting me get whatever software I wanted when we finally got a disk drive in 1985 to replace the abysmal tape recorder (which I nicknamed "the Black Hole" since any programs I typed in disappeared into the tape recorder never to be seen again).

Lots of great memories of that Atari 8-bit. Learned Basic, 6502 assembler, and dabbled a bit in C, which helped me out (or perhaps pointed me in the right direction) years later when I went to college and got a CS degree. Used it for word processing (good ol' Paperclip!) and even convinced my father that the purchase had been worthwhile after all by writing an inventory program for his gun collection. :P Of course, I played a ton of games on that thing, from all the great arcade classics to RPGs (Ultima, Phantasie, and Alternate Reality being my favs) to wargames. Actually, lots and lots of wargames, something my father took an interest in too.

Unfortunately, my faithful Atari died in 1991, so I moved "up" to an IBM-compatible (a monstrous 386 with 2MB of RAM, woo). It's never been the same since though, modern PCs just don't have the personality those early home computers did.

I haven't had any other classic computers since that Atari. Of course, I used Apple IIs a lot in school, but many other computers I never even saw outside of commercials and the like (such as the TI or Timex computers) or stores (like C64s or Tandys). I wouldn't mind having a working Atari 8-bit setup again, but I don't have much interest in other home computers. It's hard for me to get excited about computers/consoles I didn't own in their heyday.

Nature Boy
12-06-2006, 03:51 PM
My classic computer lineage is all of two machines long:

Atari 400
Atari 800 XL

Started off with the 400 because the 800s were too much money for my dad to spend. Also started with a 410 Tape Drive for the same reasons (mind you *everybody* started with tapes back in the day.

I know we had an 810 Disk Drive because my dad had Archiver for it. We also ended up with a 1050 Happy Drive. But I can't remember how long we suffered loading tapes (I *do* remember how fantastic it was to have something load correctly and quickly, as opposed to waiting 5 minutes and then having to start all over).

That took me through high school, and I didn't have another computer until I got a 286 PC.

What a great series of machines though (the 8-bits). Most of my favourite retro games come from those machines. River Raid (which had balloons and tanks that fired at you, unlike the VCS version), Star League Baseball, MicroLeague Baseball, M.U.L.E., Blue Max, Bruce Lee, Encounter, Kennedy Approach, Last Starfighter, Miner 2049er, Jumpman, Zenji, Shamus, and, uh, Strip Poker...

SuperPsycho
12-06-2006, 05:17 PM
I've had but don't have:

Amiga 2000
Atari 1200XL

I have:
Commodore 64
Commodore SX-64
Commodore Amiga 1200

Atari 130XE

Apple IIe platinum
Apple //c
Apple IIgs

Epson PX8

Colecoadam(no printer/ps unit)

I'd say the Apple IIgs (http://www.thecowsaysmoo.org/superpsycho/Pictures/iigs/MVC-009F.JPG) is my favorite.