User:Amycjgrace
Clayton Grace | |
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Clayton Grace | |
Born | March 4, 1973 |
Alma mater | University of Utah |
Occupation | Pharmacist |
Home town | Lehi, Utah, USA |
Website | https://www.facebook.com/clayton.grace |
My name is Clayton Grace. I am the creator of the site TI-99/4A-Pedia. I was born in American Fork, Utah, USA, one town over from where I currently live. I live in Lehi, Uta, USA.
Sometime in the mid-1980s, my parents gave my family a TI-99/4A home computer system with a handful of games for Christmas. At first I don't think I was all that interested. All the cool kids living around me had Atari 2600s. Among the handful of games, however, were titles like Munch Man, Parsec, TI Invaders, Chisholm Trail, and Hunt the Wumpus. Playing those games quickly helped me to realize that the Atari offering really didn't offer anything. Not long after, mine was the home where the neighbors came to game. We continued to acquire other games. The ones we owned while I was a child include:
- A-MAZE-ING
- Addition and Subtraction 1
- Alligator Mix
- Alpiner
- Beginning Grammar
- Blasto
- BurgerTime
- Car Wars
- Centipede
- Chisholm Trail
- Defender
- Donkey Kong
- Early Learning Fun
- Facemaker
- Hopper
- Hunt the Wumpus
- Jawbreaker II
- Microsurgeon
- Munch Man
- Parsec
- Picnic Paranoia
- Super Demon Attack
- The Attack
- TI Invaders
- Tunnels of Doom
Our little TI-99/4A was the best system amongst all my friends up until one of them was able to get a Nintento NES. However, most of them still agreed even then that the TI held its own even against a purely gaming machine. We honestly used it mostly to play games.
We eventually dabbled in programming a little bit. When I say we dabbled in programming, we didn't actually create our own programs. We typed programs from some of the manuals that came with the computer itself (I remember one called Bo Jangles or something like that) and then we bought Compute!s First Book of TI-99/4A Games and typed in every singe basic program from that book, recording them onto cassette tapes for later play. We didn't own extended basic, so those games always remained a mystery to us. That was a lot of fun, but took an excruciating amount of time since we were all young, and none of use knew how to type. I remember it was usually myself and my brother Ken. We took turns, one reading the instructions while the other typed. It took us forever to get one program typed and saved, and then usually several more hours to days troubleshooting lines we mistyped.