Asymptomatic

There must be intelligent life down here

Happy FFAF

Don’t belive I have posted here before. I really like your site and think that your idea is great to get people to participate. I can barely remember my first computer. I think it was an old Apple or something. I do remember that the screen was black and the letters were either a lime green or a light gray(I need to mention that I was about five). Things have come a long way.
My first computer I ever purchased was a crapy desk top I got through an employee purchase program through work. It was a peoplepc computer and it didn’t hold very much memory. I didn’t care since I mainly used it to type papers for school.

That’s enough boredum for you. Have a palm tree.

Happy FFAF

Don’t belive I have posted here before. I really like your site and think that your idea is great to get people to participate. I can barely remember my first computer. I think it was an old Apple or something. I do remember that the screen was black and the letters were either a lime green or a light gray(I need to mention that I was about five). Things have come a long way.
My first computer I ever purchased was a crapy desk top I got through an employee purchase program through work. It was a peoplepc computer and it didn’t hold very much memory. I didn’t care since I mainly used it to type papers for school.

That’s enough boredum for you. Have a palm tree.

I was such a geek that I skipped the whole parade

Every summer when I was a kid, we used to go to my aunt and uncle’s house for the annual TroutFest parade. (Yes, you read that correctly) The highlight of this parade was typically the town’s ChamberMaids – members of the chamber of commerce who would dress in drag, march and play bad polka music.

Since my aunt and uncle lived on the parade route, this was always a fun family event – I always thought it was cool that we got to park on their back lawn. Given that this particular uncle was an engineer by trade, he always had cool electronic stuff. This one particular year, that cool new electronic toy was a Radio Shack TR-80 Color computer (I might have the specific model wrong).

IBM

My first computer experience, that I remember, was with this old IBM of my mom’s. She’d originally bought that thing for work (she was a court reporter) and it was HUGE. Of course, I remember the disks it took, actual floppies. Those large disks of which I saw a number melted from the sun or warped because a child grabbed them one time.

I remember three things about this computer: word processing, the draw feature of word processing, and my game.