Abene's first contact with computers was at around 9 years of age at a local department store, where he would often pass the time while his parents shopped. His first computer was a
TRS-80 MC-10 with 4
kilobytes of
RAM, a 32-column screen, no lower
case, and a
cassette tape recorder to load and save programs. As was customary at the time, the computer connected to a television set for use as a
monitor. After receiving the gifts of a RAM upgrade (to 20K) and a 300
baud modem from his parents, he used his computer to access
CompuServe and shortly after discovered the world of dialup
BBSes via people he met on CompuServe's "
CB simulator", the first nationwide online chat. On some of these BBSes, Abene discovered dialups and guest accounts to
DEC minicomputers running the
RSTS/E and
TOPS-10 operating systems as part of the
BOCES educational program in Long Island, New York. Accessing those DEC minicomputers he realized there was a programming environment that was much more powerful than that of his own home computer, and so he began taking books out of the library in order to learn the programming languages that were now available to him. This and the ability to remotely save and load back programs that would still be there the next time he logged in had a profound effect on Abene, who came to view his rather simple computer as a window into a much larger world. ==Legal tribulations==