This is a list of devices I've had over the years. It's here for reference. There isn't much here that I haven't talked about before. I will reference this list in other articles, and I will keep it updated.
Apple IIGS - This is the apex of the Apple II series. It could have been much better if Apple would have allowed the microprocessor to work at it's base clock. It was a great system that was upgradeable. Our IIGS had an 80 Megabyte hard drive, 4 Megabytes of RAM, a graphics card upgrade, a 3.5 diskette, and 5.25 floppy disk drive.
Performa 410 - The Family's Mac.
Macintosh Quadra 605 - My private machine.
PowerMac 8500 A/V This is the computer that hurdled me into media and graphics production.
PowerComputing PowerTower Pro 180 - The family PowerMac. While the PowerMac 8500 A/V was my private system, the PowerTower Pro was the family machine. It died a gruesome death when my sister's fiance decided to clean the carpets, and didn't put the tower up on the desk.
Dell Optiplex Pentium II - The family computer given to us by my uncle.
PowerMac G3 Desktop - Replaced my PowerMac 8500, and got the A/V card from my 8500 as well.
iMac (2nd Gen) - The family's Mac.
Dell Optiplex Pentium 4 - My private PC.
PowerMac G4 - Replaced the PowerMac G3 Desktop.
2006 MacPro (First Gen) 2.66 4-core - This was the Mac I used through my Masters Degree.
2009 21.5" iMac - Replaced my 2006 Mac Pro. Got dropped by a technician during repair.
2011 21.5" iMac - Replaced the 2009 iMac. I passed that along to a friend when I was finished with it.
PowerMac G5 - Given to me by a friend. Still in use for projects that need a legacy Mac system that can run Mac OS 9.
2011 27" iMac - My second design system. I sold it around the same time I passed the 21.5" iMac to a friend. I used the money to build my PC computer.
Custom Built Intel Xeon Workstation I did a ton of articles about this build on this BLOG. I am not going to reference them though.
Custom Built AMD Ryzen 9 3900X workstation - My current workstation.
Toshiba Satellite Pro - The first laptop I used during my college career.
PowerBook 3400 / G3 Kanga - It started out as a PowerMac 3400, and I used it for a couple of years. I then paid $800 to upgrade it to a PowerBook G3 Kanga. I passed this computer on to my sister when she started college.
PowerBook G3 (Lombard) - Replaced the PowerBook G3 Kanga. It got passed on to a friend.
iBook G3 (Ice White) - This was the iBook G3 with technical issues which caused the GPU to become un-soldered. It was replaced by Apple with an iBook G4.
iBook G4 - This was a great laptop ... It was stolen from the computer lab I worked in.\
17" MacBook Pro (1st Gen) - Replaced my iBook G4.
2012 MacBook Pro - This laptop is still in use for Mac only projects.
Wacom Cintiq Companion 2 - Recently retired. The pen digitizer became too glitch-y.
2017 HP Spectre X360 - My current laptop.
Atari 2600 - Is there an American family from the 80's that didn't have one of these.
Nintendo Entertainment System - We purchased this and a box of games from a yard sale ... It was supposed to be broken, but the seller told me she thought it needed a new RF adapter. We already had a couple from the Atari 2600.
Nintendo GameBoy / Pocket / Micro / Color - My favorite handheld game console to this day. I had several devices and over 100 games. My favorite GameBoy in particular is the original GameBoy DMG.
Sega Genesis / Sega CD / Sega 32X - My favorite game console, excluding the 32X. I only have about two dozen games. That was because our Video rental store specialized in Sega Rentals. Well at least until the Sony PlayStation was released.
Sega GameGear - It was a good game system with a decent library. It had several problems though. Poor battery life, expensive peripherals, and many of the games were overpriced.
Panasonic 3DO - A very short-lived game system. I only had 10 games. My favorite 3DO game was SNKs Samurai Shodown. It was way overpriced.
Sony PlayStation - It made sense since the local video rental place had a ton of games to rent.
Sega Dreamcast - By this time our video rental place stopped renting games for newer systems. The DreamCast was an awesome gaming system. I purchased mine from a used electronics store.
GameBoy Advance - Everything I loved about the GameBoy only with better graphics.
Nintendo GameCube - This one is simple. Metroid Prime (GameCube) + Metroid Fusion (GameBoy Advance). Other than the Metroid Prime Series I had about a dozen other games.
PlayStation 3 - Got it and a bag of games from a friend.
XBOX One S - I only have a few games for this system. I really purchased this as a replacement for an Apple TV.
Nokia N80 ie - My favorite Symbian phone.
Apple iPhone 3GS - One of my favorite iPhones.
Samsung Galaxy Nexus - My first Android phone.
Samsung Focus - The phone that made me hate Samsung.
Apple iPhone 5C - The phone that changed my mind about the Apple ecosystem.
Sony Xperia 5C - My favorite Android phone so far.
OnePlus 7T - My current phone.
Oregon Scientific AM888FL organizer
Cybiko - All of the kids in the house had one. Too bad it was obsolete before my parents purchased them at Big Lots.
Apple iPad Mini Retina - My favorite Apple iPad of all time.
Wacom Cintiq Companion 2 - Recently retired. The pen digitizer became too glitch-y. Yes, this was also in the laptop list.
Asus MemoPad 7CX - My first Android tablet, and an excellent tablet as well.
Nvidia Shield Tablet K1 - Highly regarded as one of the best Android Gaming tablets of it's time
Apple iPad (8th Generation) - the 128 GB model. You can read the review my review here.
Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 - My current favorite tablet of all time.
Raspberry Pi 3B - Used for several learning projects. I also used it as a test board for kiosks I was designing for companies
Asus Tinkerboard (first gen) I used this for my PiHole ad blocker. It has a gigabit ethernet port where the Raspberry Pi 3B had megabit ethernet. I passed it on to a friend when the 4th gen Raspberry Pi released.
Raspberry Pi Zero W - This will be at the heart of my RetroFlag GPi case.
Raspberry Pi 4B - I have a few of these. One is a testing board for Internet projects. One is running a PiHole, and one is currently the mainboard of a retro gaming machine.
Raspberry Pi CM4 - The upgrade for my RetroFlag GPi case.