Vic-20

That was decades ago. It had a whole 5K of RAM expandable to 32K. You might find this difficult to believe, but I did write a few useful programs with it. Oddly, however, where I found it most useful was as a super calculator.

It had what they called an immediate mode. I could type print 4+5 and press enter and the computer would display 9. In that day, scientific calculators were very expensive and the little Vic-20 could not only handle the most complex calculations, it was simpler and faster.

My first “PC compatible” type of computer was a little better. It had a 16 MHz 80286 processor, one MB memory and forty MB harddisk. I originally ran MS DOS 4.1, eventually 6.2. The system barely ran Windows 3.1 so I mostly ran stayed in DOS.

Truth is, the little 286 ran about as fast as the new machines, the way they have the new machines all loaded down with all that new stuff. They’ve put a lot of new stuff on them to make them easier and more powerful.

As for me, I would just as soon have a 486 with Windows 3.1 with but one more thing, USB interface. It’s one thing they did right. The rest is far more difficult and complex. It was intended you know. It takes the control out of our hands. Something goes wrong and a phone won’t suffice for help. It could get expensive in a hurry. I speak from experience.

Oh, and by the way, things are far more apt to go wrong. I’m guessing in my case it’ll cost me a couple hundred.

Hint, keep all your data files on external storage. You can keep copies on the main disk but, if you’re smart, you’ll keep the working files separate from the system.

Daily writing prompt
Write about your first computer.

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