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what was the first true ( business) computer u trained on. mine was a ibm system 32 w 3741 data station. (Original Post) AllaN01Bear Apr 22 OP
First was a 'dumb' terminal EYESORE 9001 Apr 22 #1
Don't remember the machine but what a pain it was to use. dreamland Apr 22 #2
eww, keypunching. gah. AllaN01Bear Apr 22 #4
A clone. I hadn't thought of that term in a long time! CrispyQ Apr 22 #3
Mainframe with big boxes of punched cards, even for simple programs. Silent Type Apr 22 #5
GE 635 in 1968 lapfog_1 Apr 22 #6
Color this tech impressed. cayugafalls Apr 22 #8
the company that bought it didn't know what to do with it lapfog_1 Apr 22 #10
you could get those side panels in any color(s) you wanted lapfog_1 Apr 22 #11
ohh , ohhh, the holy grail of computing. AllaN01Bear Apr 22 #16
IBM 360 Model 20. The year was 1965. sinkingfeeling Apr 22 #7
In the newsroom, mid-late 90's... FirstLight Apr 22 #9
Commodore's Amiga Earl_from_PA Apr 22 #13
Two types of computers LogDog75 Apr 22 #12
I joined out HS science club just to access the TRS computer Torchlight Apr 22 #14
Not 100% Sure, To Be Honest ProfessorGAC Apr 22 #15

EYESORE 9001

(28,172 posts)
1. First was a 'dumb' terminal
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 11:31 AM
Apr 22

connected to a DEC server. Plus a Compaq ‘portable’ computer roughly the size, shape & weight of a sewing machine. It had an Intel 286 processor.

dreamland

(1,099 posts)
2. Don't remember the machine but what a pain it was to use.
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 11:48 AM
Apr 22

We wrote our Basic program, then used a punch card machine to generate the code for the computer to read, then fed those punch cards to compile the program. One little mistype was enough to throw the whole thing out. I guess it was fun and frustrating.

CrispyQ

(39,557 posts)
3. A clone. I hadn't thought of that term in a long time!
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 11:49 AM
Apr 22


It was big & clunky with an even clunkier monitor with orange text. Yuck. At the same time I purchased Lotus 1-2-3 & Word Perfect & big instruction books on them & DOS. Ha ha. For awhile, it was my DOS skills that impressed coworkers the most. Simply moving, copying, deleting files mystified people but when I could find a file they were looking for, well that was magic! 🪄

lapfog_1

(30,840 posts)
6. GE 635 in 1968
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 12:16 PM
Apr 22


but real first computer was IBM 360/40 in 1971.



but my real real first computer ( that I got to actually "own" ) was a Cray 1 ( always important to say "serial number 7" ) in 1980.

cayugafalls

(5,792 posts)
8. Color this tech impressed.
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 12:46 PM
Apr 22

Not many technical people can say they owned an 8 million dollar computer.

Peace from an old techy

lapfog_1

(30,840 posts)
10. the company that bought it didn't know what to do with it
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 01:41 PM
Apr 22

so they gave it to the "new guy" right out of college to use.

lapfog_1

(30,840 posts)
11. you could get those side panels in any color(s) you wanted
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 01:43 PM
Apr 22

I wanted mirrors... but the ones we got were like in the computer history museum ( pictured )

FirstLight

(15,018 posts)
9. In the newsroom, mid-late 90's...
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 01:04 PM
Apr 22

It was a fist gen Mac. black and white screen. If you didn't "save" throughout your writing, the "bomb" would go off and crash and you'd lose it ALLLL... it sucked! Bt the Graphics dept loved Apple, supposedly better for graphics programs etc... THEY had the Color ones with fancy big screens, lol...

https://images.app.goo.gl/83SdDe2g4xiaAM7WA

Earl_from_PA

(241 posts)
13. Commodore's Amiga
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 02:51 PM
Apr 22

Had better graphic capabilities.
Almost all graphics for weather broadcasts of the time were done with the LightWave 3D software on amigas. As was Max Headroom, and the first season of the TV series Babylon 5. The Amiga 3000 was a true 32 bit computer. Wish I still had mine

LogDog75

(413 posts)
12. Two types of computers
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 02:29 PM
Apr 22

Late 80s, our AF Medical Logistics flight was transitioning from keypunch card and centralized base processing to an in-house standalone computer system allowing us to directly input data and get real time information.

Also, at the same time, we received IBM "clone" computers which were used mainly for word processing. The computers weren't connected to the internet until the mid-90s.

Torchlight

(4,572 posts)
14. I joined out HS science club just to access the TRS computer
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 03:30 PM
Apr 22

The sponsor, our physics teacher, had the only computer I knew of anyone owning at the time (I think this was '82). We'd spend every second Tuesday in his den playing what was to me the most incredible, amazing war simulation ever imagined (though it was a text-only game with the weird green dos type on a fuzzy black screen).

Digital has coopted the world like nothing I can think of since Gutenburg.

ProfessorGAC

(72,474 posts)
15. Not 100% Sure, To Be Honest
Tue Apr 22, 2025, 03:42 PM
Apr 22

We had a dumb terminal and a 600 baud phone connection to a mainframe at a local university. I basically just learned Basic & Fortran on it, but I don't recall doing anything technical or useful on it.
I had a Commodore 64, but that was mostly a game machine.
The first programming I did was on a CP/M based computer. I don't remember what brand. I wrote some programs that could partial out a chemical formula to estimate heat capacity & thermal conductivity from the Hsu method.
Then in '84, we switched to Mac in our department & I became just a user.

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