back in about 71-73 I was at school, playing with a prototype PC from Philips - loaded from a tape drive, it had almost no RAM, and only 200 bytes of addressable memory.
A couple of the guys still managed to get it to play tic-tac-toe
I can't find any pictures of the beast..
It required a professional-grade monitor (Black&white!) to display the I/O - and the 'Keyboard' was a set of capacitance switches (so no moving parts).
IIRC, Philips manufactured about 10 of these - my school had 2(!), one of which was rumoured to be kept under the head of the Maths department's bed!
They were apparently 'worth' about £5000 each in those days.
The school also had access to Oxford Uni's mainframe for an hour or so a week - which required booking well in advance.
When I started work at ICI Slough, I started using teletype terminals for accessing the company's mainframe...
From that I gravitated via the IBM PCXT, COmmodore PET, C64, and Amstrads, to all sorts of IBM-compatible hardware at work, but the first machine I actually owned was a Dragon 64...
Dragon 32/64 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (my wife had a Commodore 64)
My first IBM-compatible was a Gateway2000 machine - based on the infamous P75 chip with the floating-point error. When I claimed a swap of the chip, Intel demanded that I put a £400 deposit with them until my chip arrived back at their shop (I'd elected to do the swap myself).
That got replaced by another Gateway2k machine based on a PII/300 - which I had until 2007 after maxing out the RAM (384MB, and adding three or four extra HD's)
Aaah - the memories!

A couple of the guys still managed to get it to play tic-tac-toe
It required a professional-grade monitor (Black&white!) to display the I/O - and the 'Keyboard' was a set of capacitance switches (so no moving parts).
IIRC, Philips manufactured about 10 of these - my school had 2(!), one of which was rumoured to be kept under the head of the Maths department's bed!
They were apparently 'worth' about £5000 each in those days.
The school also had access to Oxford Uni's mainframe for an hour or so a week - which required booking well in advance.
When I started work at ICI Slough, I started using teletype terminals for accessing the company's mainframe...
From that I gravitated via the IBM PCXT, COmmodore PET, C64, and Amstrads, to all sorts of IBM-compatible hardware at work, but the first machine I actually owned was a Dragon 64...
Dragon 32/64 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (my wife had a Commodore 64)
My first IBM-compatible was a Gateway2000 machine - based on the infamous P75 chip with the floating-point error. When I claimed a swap of the chip, Intel demanded that I put a £400 deposit with them until my chip arrived back at their shop (I'd elected to do the swap myself).
That got replaced by another Gateway2k machine based on a PII/300 - which I had until 2007 after maxing out the RAM (384MB, and adding three or four extra HD's)
Aaah - the memories!

My Computer
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Asus K52F or Lenovo B51-80
- OS
- Win 7 x64 Home Premium (and x86 VirtualBox VM)/Win10
- CPU
- i3 370M/i7 6500U
- Motherboard
- Asus/Lenovo
- Memory
- 8GB - finally :)/8GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- it's an i3, dude!/dual Intel&nVidia
- Sound Card
- onboard
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 15.6" built-in
- Screen Resolution
- 1366x768/1920x1080
- Hard Drives
- 750GB Seagate internal
Sundry external drives attached to other computers on the local network
1TB SSD on the Lenovo
- PSU
- n/a
- Internet Speed
- as much as I can get - usually on a dongle/phone, so <1MB/s
- Antivirus
- MSE/Defender
- Browser
- IE11/12/Edge/Chrome/FF(if I must)
