We played in the streets, we rode our bicycles, came home when the street lights came on and well, you know the rest of the story. :) I was 12 when the first ever home computer invaded my home and I was hooked! It was a Tandy Radio Shack Color Computer II with a Tape drive and joystick. It was fantastic! My favorite game on there was a text adventure titled “Bedlam” in which you escape a mental institution. (https://www.figmentfly.com/bedlam/)

My first ever modem was a 300baud modem. I ran up a $200+ phone bill in long distance charges when I was able to magically find all this wonderful software for my computer. I remember being a teenager when AOL was staring to be popular and I used GENIE from General Electric for their WWW Multi user BBS. (I still remember my username, xky06729,publish (Second part was my assigned password) I also ran a few BBS’s on Atari 8-bit computers and Atari ST computers. I was rockin’ the 1200baud modem and remember the time when I hooked up a brand new out of the box 14,400baud modem. I was speeding along until about 45 minutes later and someone let the magic smoke come out! I was in high school when a fellow student bragged about getting online in AOL ('91-'92) and sat amazed listening to his stories. I still remember the dial up sound especially on the 56k modems with error correction.

I was in my early 20’s when I first got my “Always on” internet connection from the cable company and it’s never been the same! I have two grand kids which I plan on boring with my stories of the time before the Internet and how much better life was when they get a little bit older. (one’s 2 and the other is 6).

Anyone else grow up playing on your home computer which hooked to the TV?

  • ccunning@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    It was an Atari 400 for me which my single mom stretched to buy me for Christmas when I was 4 thinking it would help me “learn computers”. I never coded a single line of code on it; only ever got game cartridges.

    My uncle had a TI-99/4A though, which lived at my grandmothers house. We would write code on it and save the games we wrote (from a manual) to audio cassettes.

    I did end up with a career in IT so I like to give my mom credit for that even if it’s a tenuous connection ☺️