Hello forum! I'm Scott in Southampton, UK, and I started watching Terry's YouTube videos about a year ago.
When I saw Terry's video on the Commodore 16 I was over the moon! I was about 9 years old when my father bought me a Commodore 16 for Christmas (probably Christmas 1985, perhaps 1984). It was my first computer and I remember vividly the box and the polystyrene packaging. My C16 came with datasette, some introductory tapes and a book on CBM Basic.
It was interesting because the computer was bought from the UK department store chain Alders (since closed down) and was offered at a massive discount even thought the machine had only recently been released. I remember well the "Made in England" sticker on the base of the machine, so it wasn't a US import for offloading on the European market (unless it was originally destined for the US market...).
Of course as a 9 year old I didn't appreciate the chronology of CBM at that time but in retrospect it fascinates me that the C16 actually post-dates the Vic-20 and C64! At the time I felt very left out as all my friends had C64s and Vic-20s and none of their games were compatible. I think I maxed out at about 10 games total for the C16.
It wasn't all games though: I went on to study computer science at school and acquired an Acorn Electron (for which I obtained a Plus 1 interface clone - not the real thing - and even attached a mouse!), a BBC model B+ and subsequently a Commodore Amiga 500 (into which I placed an adapter card mounting an 8086 chip to run PC-XT MS DOS software!).
I was an avid computer programmer spending many nights in my bedroom writing software. Initially these were text-based games on the Electron. I grew into graphics (lots of user-defined graphic characters "UDGs") and tried writing primitive flight simulator software etc.
When I came towards the end of my school studies I took A-Level computer science and acquired a PC 486 DX with probably 120MB hard drive. I was then well into object oriented programming using Borland's OWL libraries and produced route-planning software with traffic simulator for emergency services in my home town of Cardiff, South Wales. This was my A-Level project.
I studied computer science majoring in software engineering on a sponsorship with IBM and after graduating worked in many IBM software engineering roles. I am now a technology lawyer specialising in patents and the like for a telecoms company in London.
Terry's videos are excellent and I thoroughly enjoy every single one. They are extremely well researched and most informative.
While I have no association with New Zealand it is somewhere I fully intend to visit - my wife was there about 20 years ago and speaks very highly of it. It is interesting that somewhere so far away can seem so European (and there seems to be much commonality on the vintage computing front too!)
Keep up the excellent work on YouTube Terry.