The year I became obsessed with computers. I was eleven years-old. My elementary school was gifted a computer lab (1983) with the Commodores seen in the picture (VIC-20s, PETs, C64s).

Gameloft at present comprises 22 extremely enormous game improvement studios all over the planet and they center basically around versatile gaming. Established by Ubisoft co-maker Michel Guillemot, the game studio immediately became popular, particularly for Java games. The games they make won't turn out badly, however, presently there simply zeroing in on the Android and iOS working frameworks.
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Gameloft pada masa ini terdiri daripada 21 studio pengembangan permainan yang sangat besar di seluruh dunia dan mereka memberi tumpuan terutamanya pada permainan mudah alih. Diasaskan oleh pencipta bersama Ubisoft Michel Guillemot, studio permainan ini dengan cepat menjadi terkenal terutama untuk permainan Java. Permainan yang mereka buat tidak akan salah, tetapi sekarang mereka hanya memfokuskan pada sistem operasi Android dan iOS.
Di platform permainan mudah alih, permainan seperti Asphalt 8: Airborne, N.O.V.A Legacy, dan lain-lain telah menjadikan mereka jenama dalam permainan penembak orang pertama dan permainan perlumbaan. Tetapi hari ini, saya ingin memperkenalkan kepada anda permainan yang sama sekali baru yang disebut Gangstar Vegas APK , permainan ini adalah gabungan dari siri permainan perlumbaan teratas dan permainan dunia terbuka Grand Theft Auto.
In 1972 a prototype Cogar 4 that later in 1975 the basic model Singer sold, the 1500, for $50k. Dad had the external 20MB removable HD that was the size of a washer. His programmer, Uncle Eddie, made and ported games for me to play. Hangman, Formula 1, Snake, etc. He talked about porting a game called "Adventure" to it, but never did.
Eddie was a mentor to me, and told me one thing that has stuck with me: "Nothing is impossible with computers" and I have come to the realization that Nothing (capitalized as a title) is impossible with computers.
I guess I speak in riddles. I see zero as the most important number, and hence Nothing being worth something. I believe zero is closest we can come to infinity in a measured system that once you measure infinity, it is no longer infinite.
I think I was like 8 or 9 years old, somwhere in 2002 - 2003 if I remember correctly. Got some AMD processor that had like 1 Ghz and 256Mb of RAM.
My first computer was an Oric-1, quickly replaced by an Atari 520 STe. I kept that one a very long time and I am still missing it nowadays. I learned programming on it, it was GFA-Basic. What great memories...
DOS using 5" floppy discs at work. Then a Mac SE at home with one mb ram and 20 mb hard drive.
A TRS80 Coco 3 with 64 Kb of ram with a 5" floppy drive. Coco was short for colour computer. I had a lot of fun on that one. I used "basic" on it.
I was 10 or so and got a hand me down computer from my dad. It was running Win 95 and I mostly played Duke Nuke em’ 3D on it
First computer in the house was an XT with a 20meg hard drive, 300baud modem and a yellow-on-black monochrome monitor. My mum was a journo and used it to file stories from home, very advanced for the time! I used it for typing up assignments and some very primitive games.
First computer of my own was an Amiga 600, although I still mostly used it for assignments and games; I also started messing around with graphics software. Unfortunately I got my Amiga just in time for Amiga to go down the tubes, so it became impractical quite quickly.
First computer I really geeked out with was a 486DX2/66 MMX which I think started with Win 3.11, then went through Win 95 and 98. That was the one that I started hacking around with memory profiles, bat files, 4DOS cli extension, etc... I bought a 14.4k modem to go with it and everything changed from there.
We had a different but related thread a few weeks ago: What age, machine, and language did you start programming?
Not the same thing, but there’s a lot of overlap ;-)
I mention this because I would write the exact same thing here ^-^, here’s an edited version of my reply:
My first contact with a computer: ZX 80... but I remember the machine, not even what we ran with it!
Then in the early teens Amstrad CPC 464 (later with an external floppy drive), and Basic (but hardly really getting into programming, the fun was to copy pages and pages of listing to copy the code of small games). My big brother and I spend so many hours with this thing in our teens!
A few years later (teenager), a x86 something (no hard drive, only black and green screen), many different DR-DOS setups to start the thing. An RPG (forgot the name and Deluxe Paint II consumed so many hour son this machine ;)
I got my first PC when I was in class 11 (2011), I was probably 15 years old. It was an assembled PC with 512 MB RAM and 80 GB of HDD running Windows XP with Intel Pentium Core 2 Duo. It was too slow but I was happy that I got one. It opened the world of internet for me and I got to know that you can write lines of code and create stuff. I was so obsessed with this idea which finally led me to Computer Science.
Although this wasn't the first PC I used. We used to have computer labs in schools since we were in class 6 (2006) but that was limited to learning Microsoft Office and Paint (playing Alladin on Saturdays).
It was so much fun back then.
I made my own at around the age of 8.
It was made of two wooden planks, one of them full of nails (those were the keyboard buttons), the other had a rectangle with rounded corners drawn on it (that was the screen). We played a lot with it on our imaginary space station (a pile of firewood) with my cousin.
You can imagine how big of a change came to my life when my mother got a C64 from somewhere. Those buttons… clicked! And when i pressed them something happened on the screen! This was when i was 10, so around 1993; PCs were already available but we couldnʼt afford one.
I remember having a vinyl disc from the band KFT. The cover had the source code of a game on it which i enthusiastically typed on the C64 only to find out it doesnʼt work as it was written for the ZX Spectrum. Nevertheless i learned a lot about programming during that time. It was awesome.
Around 1991 we got a Macintosh II which I almost ruined (the software) because I tooled too much with it at an age of 5 😂
And I was among the first to get unlimited internet (flat rate) in 1999 😎
In my school when I was in 5th standard, I used Pentium 3 processor which was from HP, used to play lots of games rather than learning the computer itself. Along with this , I was a huge fan slideshow how it automatically just slide itself to reveal a new wallpapers. Mind Boggling.
Sinclair QL :D I also had to learn how to build a TV out of a VHS-recorder the sinclair monitor and some aluminum foil ;D when my parents - once every few weeks - went out for a date night ;D .... oh and i was 6
good old times ;D
I was 6 years old when I got my Pentium III with Windows 98. I was playing GTA 1 like a maniac 😂😂

I still got it packed in a box and it's somewhere on the attic in our house.
I think I was 12 when I got it. It was Windows XP with Pentium III processor. We just called them Pentium III or Pentium IV at the time, we didn't go into details like now.
I even lost my eyesight on it because I discovered ebooks at that time 😂
Fun fact . . . IT STILL WORKS. I shined it, cleaned it, maintained it inside and out. Unfortunately, I had to throw it out recently because it was taking up space. (Yes, you can say I was emotionally attached to it.)
I remember we talked about how cool it would be if it was 3D... then GTA 3 came 🤩
Perdosrak
srutyeu
Gameloft currently consists of 21 very large game development studios around the world and they focus primarily on mobile gaming. Founded by Ubisoft co -creator Michel Guillemot, the game studio quickly became famous especially for Java games. The games they make won’t go wrong, but now they’re just focusing on the Android and iOS operating systems.
On mobile gaming platforms, games like Asphalt 8: Airborne, N.O.V.A Legacy, etc. have made them brands in first-person shooter games and racing games. But today, I would like to introduce to you a completely new game called Gangstar Vegas, this game is a combination of the top racing game series and the open world game GTA Vice City Mod APK.