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Author Topic: Dawn of the Microcomputer: The Altair 8800  (Read 6110 times)

mouser

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Dawn of the Microcomputer: The Altair 8800
« on: July 24, 2018, 04:15 PM »
Dawn of the Microcomputer: The Altair 8800

But Popular Electronics readers were introduced to something in the January 1975 issue that they had never encountered before. Below a heading that read “PROJECT BREAKTHROUGH,” the magazine’s cover showed a large gray and black box whose front panel bore a complicated array of lights and toggles. This was the Altair 8800, the “world’s first minicomputer kit to rival commercial models,” available for under $400. Though advertised as a “minicomputer,” the Altair would actually be the first commercially successful member of a new class of computers, first known as “microcomputers” and then eventually as PCs. The Altair was small enough and cheap enough that the average family could have one at home. Its appearance in Popular Electronics magazine meant that, as Salsberg wrote in that issue, “the home computer age is here—finally.”



from http://www.osnews.co...uter_the_Altair_8800



You can play with an Altair emulator in your browser here: https://s2js.com/altair/sim.html

KodeZwerg

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Re: Dawn of the Microcomputer: The Altair 8800
« Reply #1 on: July 29, 2018, 10:55 PM »
In Germany the breakthrough of Microcomputer has started with (around 1980) Commodore 64 / C-64 / C64 where 64 dont meant 64bit, it stand for 64 kB :)