Okay, I know that we had (somewhere) a discussion going about old stuff that was primarly spawned by memories of the C=64. But then I got to remembering my first 'IBM Clone'. (And you have no idea how hard it was for me to type that ... ICBM kept wanting to come out and that's just <i>not</i> the same thing. Heh heh.)
Anywho, my first x86 computer was actually an old Tandy. It had a whopping 80088 processor, 640KB of RAM (<i>after</i> an upgrade), PC speaker sound, Tandy Color graphics (Anyone remember Tandy Color?), a 3.5" drive, and no hard drive. Since it had no hard drive it had onboard MS-DOS2. Strangely enough, this version of DOS didn't even have a format command so I had to buy pre-formatted floppies.
Oh those were the days. So many QBASIC programs, so little processing power.
Sadly my C=64 was a much better gaming machine...
"<i>Let's see what <b>Paragraph 84-B</b> has to say about it.</i>" - Thief from <A HREF="http://www.nuklearpower.com/daily.php?date=030724" target="_new">8-Bit Theater</A>
Anywho, my first x86 computer was actually an old Tandy. It had a whopping 80088 processor, 640KB of RAM (<i>after</i> an upgrade), PC speaker sound, Tandy Color graphics (Anyone remember Tandy Color?), a 3.5" drive, and no hard drive. Since it had no hard drive it had onboard MS-DOS2. Strangely enough, this version of DOS didn't even have a format command so I had to buy pre-formatted floppies.
Oh those were the days. So many QBASIC programs, so little processing power.

"<i>Let's see what <b>Paragraph 84-B</b> has to say about it.</i>" - Thief from <A HREF="http://www.nuklearpower.com/daily.php?date=030724" target="_new">8-Bit Theater</A>