Remembering my first computer

April 9th, 2010

I bought my first computer in 1989. I was studying for a Publishing degree and we used the little, all-in-one, Apple Macs, with tiny black and white screens, for writing essays and doing page layouts in Aldus PageMaker (not easy on a tiny, tinsy little screen). At the end of first year, we were encouraged to get our own computers so that we could work at home and give the next year's first years a chance to get on the Macs in the computer suite.

Naturally, I wanted a Mac. But I couldn't afford one.*  So instead I settled for an Amstrad PCW 9512, which couldn't do page layout but, as an alternative to a typewriter, saved me a lot of Tippex by allowing me to edit my essays on screen before printing them out to the daisy-wheel printer that came as part of the package. I had a small collection of typewriters that immediately became obsolete (although, all these years later, I still have them - but probably not for much longer).

A couple of months back I had a clear out and I took the PCW - which had been sitting, unused in a big cardboard box in a cupboard for the past twelve years since we moved house - and I added it to a pile of slightly less ancient computer equipment at our local recycling centre (otherwise known as "the dump").

This weekend I had another chucking out session and I came across the PCW keyboard, a collection of the sturdily built 3" disks that the PCW used and some books, including a well-thumbed copy of the original user manual. I'd forgotten what a good piece of documentation that was. Buy almost any hardware or software now and you'll get a flimsy little pamphlet, with health and safety warnings and some basic startup instructions, printed in 23 different languages. The PCW 9512 came with a really substantial book.

PCW9512-book-cover

The PCW 9512 was sold as a "Personal Computer Wordprocessor". Its main market was small businesses that couldn't afford an IBM PC. It came with LocoScript, word-processing software, and a mail-merge program for producing personalised copies of standard letters.

But in the back of the user manual there were sections on using Mallard Basic and Logo. I immediately got deeply fascinated by BASIC and I started buying the PCW Plus magazine every month for the program listings they published. I ended up spending hours and hours, usually late at night, writing a Pacman-type game, instead of studying (or sleeping). Eventually this game got too big and unwieldy for BASIC - and the more functionality I added to it, the slower it became - so I started rewriting it in C. At this point it was becoming a bit of an obsession, with long, compulsive coding sessions, but the arrival of my daughter snapped me out of the habit and it was then several years before I did any more coding.

However, the starting point for my real interest in software - I mean writing it, rather than writing about it - came with this manual for the PCW.  So, I'm a little loathe to consign it to the dump, but it's just part of the general clutter I'm trying to get rid of, so it's got to go.PCW9512-book-spread

For more details about the Amstrad PCW, have a look at it's page on Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amstrad_PCW

* I haven't been able to find the price for an Apple Mac SE in 1989 but, from memory, I think it was almost £2000, whereas the PCW9512 retailed for £499 + VAT and came with a bundled printer.

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