Hmm, interesting. I was born '69 but a lot of that applied to me.
I learned to program on an Apple II+ in 6th grade - one of a group of 6 kids in programming. We learned to blink random dots random colors, and we played Pong. The computer was hooked to a TV set because monitors weren’t a thing yet.
I played Castle Wolfenstein at a friend’s house on her Apple II+.
My brother and I had a TII computer in high school. We had one or two cartridge games we quickly tired of. We studied the programming instructions in the 3 ring binder that came with it - what else would one do with a computer but programming? - and we programmed a stock market game in BASIC. We even learned to program arrays.
My mom was the one who introduced Oregon Trail to us. She was a school teacher and she had it as part of her gifted ed classroom. We would sometimes play it on our TII, or maybe it was at her school? Vague memories of journeys West and ASCII graphics.
Typewriters were the norm when I entered college, but some kids had computers. By the time I left, more and more kids had computers, and I would use the computer lab more often than my typewriter.
I learned PASCAL in college and learned email when I was given access to the mainframe computer. I had a weird email relationship with a guy who volunteered for the video production club with me - a guy I would hardly give the time of day to in person. My friends and I used to start chain emails and then the head of the Computer Department would get mad at us because it would hog up too much data.
I got onto CompuServe at my first job through dialup, and had a programmer co-worker who would show us how he accessed BBS sites, though that seemed too techy to me. My brother, meantime, was seriously into AOL- spending about $300/mo on access to chat rooms.
I first got on a fast connection and into the WWW when I was 27. Most people didn’t have it, but I worked at BellSouth Cellular’s R&D Lab, so we had a T1 connection. I don’t think there was much to find then. It wasn’t until a couple of years later that I was living in the DC area and it seemed like more and more people were getting online. My yahoo email address has only 7 characters - I still have that email address. I moderated the largest and longest running discussion board related to yoga - in the years before Facebook came around and message boards were all the rage.
Guess you could say I’m an Oregon Trail Pioneer.