well since the Radio Shack TRS-80 doesn't count, I'd have to say freshman year of high school my parents bought me a 486DX2 (early '94).
full specs:
486DX2 66MHz
8MB RAM
720MB Western Digital Hard drive (most people only had 420MB at the time)
original Sound Blaster 16 ISA card
double speed CD-ROM (ooooohhh... aaaaahhhh)
2MB old school graphics card, ( I wanna say it was a Trident card for a VESA slot)
14" monitor
Canon Bubblejet 4000 printer.. (what a hunk of junk that turned out to be)
OS: DOS, XTreeGold, & Win3.11
after primarily serving as a $3000 video game system to play DOOM with, I finally got a little more serious by the end of high school. Senior year (96/97) my parents let me build my own computer out of parts purchased at a computer trade show, so my first "self-built" PC was a Pentium 200mmx w/ 64MB EDO RAM, 2.1GB hard drive, Diamond 4MB stealth graphics & 10 speed CD-ROM. Building that thing took me like a month b/c I only "thought" I knew what I was doing and had to learn several things the hard way..
Once I got up to college, that little 200mx ran like a champ and by early '98 I had already slapped a 5.1GB hard drive in it, and filled the sucker with these new type of audio files known as .MP3's which were purely ripped from CD's myself.. no downloading yet.. and in mid '98 I bought a $500 DVD-ROM drive from Creative Labs just so a bunch of us young/dumb college kids could sit in a dark fogged out room and watch 1 of about 60 or so DVD titles that had been released. Suddenly about 6 months later they upped the quality of DVD production and my primitive DVD encoder couldn't keep up.
man, has technology come along way or what!? Gotta love Moore's law..
