Reply 21960 of 56721, by spiroyster
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In the UK, we had ZX spectrums and Horace goes skiing or some Chess game o.0. UK schools gave a good introduction to computing due to the "BBC Computer Literacy Project" which started back in 1982 (the BBC Master, ModelA, ModelB etc... its where the RPi got it's naming convention). As a result you would have been hard pressed to find a school in the UK which didn't have at least 10 BBC's and at least one valliant roamer, meaning pretty much every student between a certain age was exposed to computers.
Who from the UK remembers this guy?
By 1990 the BBC's were piled up in the corner a replaced by Acorn Archimedes, which were as good if not better in some respects than the Amiga (which a lot of people had at home, including myself). In fact there were a lot of games which came out on both Archimedes and Amiga in the UK (psyclapse/psygnosis), and tbh the Archimedes version were always pretty good (loads of colours, they were fast responsive machines for the time).... The Amiga was the exotic gaming platform with a plethora of titles available and a massive PD (Public Domain) library... it was the home computer to have late 80's/early 90's for gaming. Apple was the uber exotic 'business machine' and not common place at all (ime). [EDIT: A bit of trivia relevant to this site... it was Douglas Adams who lays claim to being the first Apple computer owner in the UK 😀].
The Acorn lives on in ARM (Acorn Risc Machine 😀)...
I think it was about 1995 that I started to see PC's appear in schools (PS/2), and usually only one or two which weren't actually used by students (expensive... and IT teachers who grew up with Acorn Electrons/Atoms obviously know much more about IBM computers than students o.0).. Windows 3x (probably WFW) was still found on many computers in school even in 1998 (i-defo-rcc on that).