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Survey Results

At what age did you start programming?   [Edit]

Survey period: 2 Feb 2004 to 8 Feb 2004

Some of us started later than others. (suggested by Alexander M.)

OptionVotes% 
less than 10 years old34211.52
10 - 15 years old1,09736.96
16 - 18 years old63921.53
19 - 21 years old45315.26
22 - 25 years old2367.95
26 - 30 years old1244.18
31 - 35 years old311.04
36 - 45 years old331.11
46 or older130.44



 
GeneralRe: Adam anyone? Pin
Glenn E. Lanier II3-Feb-04 6:32
Glenn E. Lanier II3-Feb-04 6:32 
GeneralRe: Adam anyone? Pin
Chuck M3-Feb-04 16:25
Chuck M3-Feb-04 16:25 
GeneralRe: Adam anyone? Pin
Tom Archer3-Feb-04 16:33
Tom Archer3-Feb-04 16:33 
GeneralNo C=64, a VIC-20! (Oh, and a "Trash-80"... :) Pin
James R. Twine2-Feb-04 4:24
James R. Twine2-Feb-04 4:24 
GeneralRe: No C=64, a VIC-20! (Oh, and a "Trash-80"... :) Pin
The Whiz3-Feb-04 0:32
The Whiz3-Feb-04 0:32 
GeneralZX-Spectrum Pin
Phil.Benson2-Feb-04 4:16
professionalPhil.Benson2-Feb-04 4:16 
GeneralRe: ZX-Spectrum Pin
Andrew McCarter2-Feb-04 6:23
Andrew McCarter2-Feb-04 6:23 
GeneralRe: ZX-Spectrum Pin
Rob Caldecott2-Feb-04 12:50
Rob Caldecott2-Feb-04 12:50 
Me too! My dad got me a 2nd hand 48KB rubber keyboard Speccy. This was 1983. I started with ZX-Basic and was onto Z80 machine code a few years later. I remember writing some basic Z80 windowing code (to allow text "panels" to be displayed, saving the contents of the screen underneath) ON PAPER before laboriously typing in the machine code. I even had a C compiler (by a company called Zortech). It couldn't compile anything much better than printf("Hello, world!") but knowing some C gave me the edge at college and when I started work.

I had a little thermal printer for mine too (the official Sinclair one for which obtaining paper was a nightmare - it usually involved a visit to a computer show!). In fact, I got special permission to do my 'O' level computer project on my Speccy instead of on one of the school BBC 'B's! I printed out said program and pasted the thermal paper onto A4 sheets with glue! he he.

I also had a 3.5" disk drive - I knew of no-one else that had one - made by a company called Miles Gordon Technology. This thing was great - you plugged in the interface and, mid-way during a game you'd loaded from tape, you could hit a button and a menu popped up allowing you to save the game to disk! WOW! I was a true hobbyist (said disk drive regularly needed repairing too!). Having games on disk made me the envy of my other Speccy owning chums.

Other things spring to mind - the intense rivalry between Spectrum and Commodore 64 owners (they had better graphics and sound. Bastards.). The proliferation of computing mags with programs you'd stay up all night typing in before you realised there was a spelling mistake. Some mags even printed blocks of machine-code hexadecimal that you typed in - and a single mistake could lead to tears. The amount of independent shops that appeared in towns all over the UK was phenomenal - Newbury had 3 or 4 - I even managed to get a replacement rubber keyboard from one (all Spectrum owners took their machines apart right? And we all knackered our keyboards - always the bloody LOAD or PRINT keys!).

Eventually I upgraded to a 128KB Spectrum (the Sinclair one with the plastic keyboard, not the Amstrad abomination). Wow. I even wrote a commercially available program (a database called "File Master") that was marketed and earnt me some pocket money in royalties! I finally finished my love affair with the ZX Spectrum in 1989 when I was first introduced to the PC.

I has loads of kit (even some original Microdrives!) which I stupidly lent to someone in 1989 and have never seen since. Sigh.

Happy days. Being a computer nut was a massive advantage. It also meant I knew I wanted a career in computers within minutes of owning my first Spectrum and at 12/13, this is quite rare. I left school still feeling the same, so went and did a computer course instead of a couple of useless A levels and have never looked back. I just wish I'd thought of bloody eBay first.


The Rob Blog
GeneralRe: ZX-Spectrum Pin
Phil.Benson3-Feb-04 2:32
professionalPhil.Benson3-Feb-04 2:32 
GeneralRe: ZX-Spectrum Pin
Nemanja Trifunovic3-Feb-04 5:14
Nemanja Trifunovic3-Feb-04 5:14 
GeneralRe: ZX-Spectrum Pin
ManiB4-Feb-04 10:15
ManiB4-Feb-04 10:15 
GeneralMicrotan 65 Pin
Mike Puddephat2-Feb-04 4:05
Mike Puddephat2-Feb-04 4:05 
GeneralThank you Commodore 64 Pin
J Hurrell2-Feb-04 3:50
J Hurrell2-Feb-04 3:50 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Cambalindo2-Feb-04 7:28
Cambalindo2-Feb-04 7:28 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Joshua Quick2-Feb-04 7:29
Joshua Quick2-Feb-04 7:29 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Robert Spivey2-Feb-04 16:45
Robert Spivey2-Feb-04 16:45 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Joshua Quick2-Feb-04 18:13
Joshua Quick2-Feb-04 18:13 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Sam Woodward3-Feb-04 20:33
Sam Woodward3-Feb-04 20:33 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
J Hurrell3-Feb-04 2:57
J Hurrell3-Feb-04 2:57 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Brandon Haase2-Feb-04 18:07
Brandon Haase2-Feb-04 18:07 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Emilio CL2-Feb-04 21:30
Emilio CL2-Feb-04 21:30 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
J Hurrell3-Feb-04 2:58
J Hurrell3-Feb-04 2:58 
GeneralRe: Thank you Commodore 64 Pin
Anonymous5-Feb-04 8:23
Anonymous5-Feb-04 8:23 
GeneralMemories.... Pin
Navin2-Feb-04 3:14
Navin2-Feb-04 3:14 
GeneralRe: Memories.... Pin
fabulous2-Feb-04 8:18
fabulous2-Feb-04 8:18 

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