I did my first one on a commadore 64 in Basic!

I should have ran with it at the time had I known where computers would be today
I was still in the Mainframe world when the world started to change with PC’s. I was recruited to a “networking” company in the very early 80’s. After spending a day at the company, the guy recruiting me, who was also new to the networking company took me out to dinner and asked what I thought.
I said, “well George, all these guys I met today said there was going to be this global network and everyone would have a computer on their desk that would talk to each other over this global network and we would all communicate with electronic mail...”. George said, “yeah, yeah, I know, pretty exciting right?” I said, “yeah, but, none of that is going to happen.”
He hired me anyway, it was a pretty lucky job change, dumb luck actually. The guys I worked around pretty much were the guys who invented the Internet, contrary to popular belief that Al Gore did it.
Some of the smartest guys I ever met, but maddening to be around. They would sit around and debate how to build a protocol that could scale up to world wide use and not break. Likely why the Internet is so reliable today, because of those guys endlessly debating what the best way to do it might be.
After getting that job, I always felt kind of like Chauncey Gardener.
PS - One of the brightest engineers there at the time was a graduate of GM Institute. I never realized how great that place was until I met that guy.