Comment by matthewsinclair
12 hours ago
Ah, the TI-99/4A. My first computer. What a mercurial beast of thing that was. I desperately wanted a C64 for Xmas but my Dad was somehow convinced to buy one of these. It had about 4 games (including “Hunt the Wumpus”) and so instead of playing the myriad C64 games that all my mates were playing, I was forced to learn BASIC and try to write my own! 45 years later, I’m still programming.
The TI-99/4A was the first computer around here that was affordable (wanted the Apple II but that was priced way out of my league). I never got any cartridges, used the family TV as a monitor (so no evening computing) and for the first month or so had no tape deck (so programming on paper and retying at every session).
The included manual for programming BASIC was extremely well written, and it's sprites made it very easy to write your own games. I remember starting with a multi-player 'snakes' variant, a 'defender' clone, an unfinished chess game (ran out of memory), and top down microcar racing game.
I also remember longing for the UCSD/Pascal cartridge as all (library) books I read used Pascal in their coding examples, but it was too expensive.
I later switched to the ZX Spectrum for which I had HiSoft Pascal, and a burnt in bare black&white monitor sold for scrap from an old arcade game.
Wow...I learned UCSD/Pascal on the Amiga in High School, that takes me back.
Edit: Hmmmm, might have been the Apple II. Not seeing the Amiga in the Wiki...We started on Apples, then migrated to Amigas Junior Year
> used the family TV as a monitor (so no evening computing)
I was allowed to program during ad breaks, typing in code I wrote out while the family was watching a show. :)
I too remember the manual as being very well written. As I recall, it had tables on the back with frequencies for different notes, and foreground/background colors which went well (and not well) together.
I still see "INCORRECT STATEMENT" in my dreams.
Same!
My earliest memory of anything computer programming is from the early 80s, when a snow day had the two neighbor kids, whose parents were teachers in another district, over to our house with their TI-99/4a. The oldest showed me the entry and running of the sample program Mr. Bojangles. I was enthralled.
A few years later I had one of my own, though at that point it was very long in the tooth. But I still learned its limits, playing (yes) Hunt the Wumpus, Tombstone City, and others, programming, and doing things like composing the Jeopardy! theme song in BASIC.
I have one of these again, with the stuff I had as a kid, and more (like the voice synth) and it's so limited even for the era, but still iconic.
> I have one of these again, with the stuff I had as a kid, and more (like the voice synth) and it's so limited even for the era, but still iconic.
Growing up I had a retired uncle who'd collected and restored a few classic cars of the 1950s to cherry condition. He kept them in a separate four car garage out back where he'd work on them in his spare time and then take them out for a drive on Sundays. Being a nerd kid, I couldn't really relate. Those old cars couldn't go very fast, weren't very comfortable and didn't have important features like an 8-track tape player (oh, and seat belts). Even the radio was only AM! I was more interested in the latest Amiga computer, so my Uncle's deep affection for these old old cars was just a quirky eccentricity.
Starting in the late 90s I gradually began acquiring classic 8 and 16-bit home computers of the 1980s when I'd hear of someone throwing one away. To me, that now-useless trash was still a treasure! At first I just "saved" the ones I'd actually owned but once I had those, I expanding to the models my teenage self had lusted over in Byte Magazine but could never dream of affording. eBay and thrift stores circa 2000 were overflowing with them for $5 or $10.
Once I had all those, I just kept going and picked up every model I'd ever even heard of and then a bunch of foreign ones from Europe, Japan, South America, Eastern Europe and Russia I'd never heard of. And I never paid more than $25 for any of them. They were just so interesting, I couldn't resist. Each platform was a unique evolutionary branch with its own opinionated design choices, operating system and vision of what 'personal' computing might be.
So... now I can finally understand my Uncle's fascination with his weird, old, not-very-good cars. :-)
I'm pretty sure my Dad got ours because they were being sold off very cheaply after TI pulled out of the home computer market. Like you I ended up learning BASIC on it because as an abandoned system all we had was a few cartridge games, some user-group programs, and typed in BASIC. It worked out pretty well really. (Later we got an Amstrad CPC 6128, which had a much bigger commercial games market.)
This was my first computer too! I loved it - that’s where I learned LOGO. In my home country, games (and basically everything) were incredibly expensive, but my father still bought it from a friend who was selling it to upgrade to a C64.
I remember playing Parsec, and Space Invaders. I am sure I had 2 or 4 more games. But don't remember which ones.
Parsec still rocks hard. I got good enough to roll over the score on it: http://dos486.com/misc/parsec.jpg
I had the same exact story. My dad chose the TI instead of the C64 and the lack of games forced me to learn programming.
same story here :-)
Uh... brother?!
Just kidding... That sounds like my journey as well. I had friends in the neighborhood who also had the TI-99/4a. We all had Cub Scouts and Boy's Life magazine listings to key in.
Did you have the data cassette recorder? We used to try to "load programs" from Michael Jackson's Thriller album.
I had a C64 and learned programming on it. I guess it's a question of destiny at this point :)
My Dad was convinced by the marketing that its 16-bit CPU was the wave of the future, unlike those old-fashioned 8-bit CPUs.
It had a smidge more than 4 games. I broke several joysticks playing TI Invaders, and my favorite was Parsec, which was also one of the games which supported the optional speech synthesizer. I also had Tunnels of Doom, Car Wars, and Tombstone City, and remember playing Alpiner.
That's 6 games right there, ... or in other words, a drop in the bucket compared to my friend's Apple ][. Alas. And he could use a floppy disk, while I only had cassette tape or cartridges.
One of my game cartridges was Extended Basic. That probably got the most use.
I distinctly remember my dad too choosing for the TI-99/4A over the competition because of the 16-bit CPU. Little did he, let alone the little boy that I was at the time, know of the limitations of its weird design.
>My Dad was convinced by the marketing that its 16-bit CPU was the wave of the future,
I think my mom was convinced because of bargain bin prices after it was more or less dead as a platform. But I'm not sure, she's not around to ask anymore... I've read though that after TI gave up on it, some department stores were dumping them for well under $100, and sometimes closer to $50.
I think I only once, ever, got it to load a saved program from cassette. I don't know if I was just a moron as a kid, or if they were actually that horrible for storage.
Tape save and load seemed pretty reasonable on our system. It does depend rather on the tape deck you're using and also on getting the volume and tone settings right, though. We had the official TI tape deck for it.
I am so, so sorry.