donald wrote: 2025-01-22 06:11What specific hardware/manufacturer did you start computing on and what path did you take to get where you are on now?
disclaimer: This is gonna be long
My first PC was made by Mattel in the mid-'80s. Mattel's Aquarius was a small PC with a chiclet keyboard and 4MB of RAM - had a cassette drive for data storage and everything. I wrote my first BASIC program on this machine.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mattel_Aquarius
Next was a couple of Atari 800XL - during this time I was buying "Compute!" magazine and typing pages of assembly code to get the game of the month working.
Then I made the move to Intel - had a 486DX2-66 and then an AMD 120Mhz 486 that was my first successful overclock; running at 160MHz I used it to embarrass my friend with his shiny new Pentium 75. The AMD 486 was also my first Linux machine as I installed Yggdrasil Plug and Play Linux on the box.
Next came a long period of what I call intellectual masturbation; my finest hour was a dual processor P2 with hardware wide SCSI RAID5 using three 10k rpm enterprise drives (and yes, this was a home PC). This machine was a quad-boot monstrosity that ran Win 3.11, a Win95 pre-release build, OS/2 Warp and a pre-RHEL Redhat install. The whole mess was held together with a boot manager called System Commander and I spent more time fixing things than actually using the machine
Next was a dual CPU P3 and my first and last experience with a watercooled PC.
Then I quit building my own machines and had a pair of Dell desktops, one running Windows, the other running Linux and connected them with a KVM switch. I dual booted both machines, I have no idea why. In 2008 I quit running Windows at home and switched to Linux exclusively. In 2012 I converted a Crunchbang Waldorf machine to pure Debian Wheezy; Wheezy was Testing at the time, I've never run a stable build of Debian. TBH it would have been easier to reinstall and restore from backup, but that intellectual masturbation thing had me convert the machine without wiping the drive which is something I wouldn't recommend
Since them I've been buying refurbished business machines from dellrefurbished.com and currently have a Fujitsu Stylistic tablet that's my backup PC, a Latitude 7390 (8th gen i7) and a Precision 3450 desktop that's my home server (10th gen i7) all running Debian Unstable.