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  • The Apple Lisa (1983) was the first successful computer with a graphical user interface (GUI) and a mouse. It cost $10,000.

  • The GRiD 1101 is the grand-daddy of all modern-day laptops. It cost over $8000 in 1982.

  • Their new VIC-20 (1980) was so embarrassing to parent company Commodore, that they considered giving them away. Instead, it sold over 1,000,000 units within just a few years, making Commodore hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • The first portable Macintosh computer, the Macintosh Portable (1989) weighs 16 pounds and had a 16MHz processor.

  • The first-ever handheld/palmtop MS-DOS "PC" was the Portfolio, sold by --- Atari, in 1989.

  • The first "IBM" computer to run on batteries was the IBM Convertible PC from 1986.

  • The Timex Sinclair 1000 was the most successful computer ever, that cost less than $100, that is.

  • The Commodore 64 (1982) retains the record as the most successful single computer model ever, selling over 10 million units.

  • The portable version of the Commodore 64 is the SX-64 (1984). It weighs 23 pounds, and has a built-in 5-inch color CRT screen.

  • The Coleco Adam (1983) will not run without the printer attached and plugged-in. The computer's power supply is in the printer.

  • The Jupiter Ace (1983) was advertised as "Probably the fastest microcomputer in the universe!".

  • Apple Computers sued the maker of the Franklin ACE 100 (1982) for copyright infringement. The Franklin company copied the Apple II operating system, changed a few words, and sold it as their own.

  • In 1981, prior to the famous PC, IBM sold a desktop computer called the Datamaster.

  • The Osborne 1 (1981) is considered to be the first practical and useful "portable" computer. It weighs 25 pounds.

  • The first great flop for "Apple Computers" was the Apple III in 1981.

  • The Radio Shack Pocket Computer from 1980 was the first programmable computer to fit in a shirt pocket.

  • Possibly the heaviest desktop computer ever may have been the IBM 5120 from 1980 - it weighed 105 pounds, not including the 130 pound external floppy drive.

  • The custom CPU (central processor) of the HP-85 from 1980 runs at 0.6MHz.

  • When fully expanded, the "Texas Instruments" TI-99/4 from 1979 can be over 3 feet wide.

  • In 1979, Apple licensed the Apple II to Bell & Howell to sell to public schools. The beige case was painted black.

  • NorthStar, which built and sold computer in the late 1970's, was originally called "Kentucky Fried Computers".

  • The Commodore PET-2001 (1977) has the worst keyboards of any full-size computer.

  • The portable desk-top sized IBM 5100 from 1975 could cost up to $20,000, depending on options included.

  • The Zenith MiniSport (1989) was the only computer to ever use a 2-inch floppy drive.

  • The Apple Macintosh and Commodore Amiga 1000 have the developer's signatures cast into the inside of their case.

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Comment by Glenn on January 11, 2010 at 11:55am
...would spend hours typeing in the program and then try to run it just to find out I had mis typed something and then have to check eveything to find out what I missed. Don't really miss that.

LOL James! I remember that, though I didn't have Commodore. I still have a stack of those magazines. :-p

I kinda do miss those days. I didn't restrict myself to typing programs in out of a magazine, though. I actually wrote them from scratch. My best set of programs were written to keep track of manhours spent on individual jobs and calculate payroll for a small company I was working for at the time.

I used a Radio Shack PC-2 (kinda mentioned in the article...probably a predecessor) in the shop itself for everyone to clock in and out of jobs and a RS Model 100 for the heavy duty calculations and printing out the reports. I had major fun writing that set of programs, and the secretary just loved me! :-D

BTW; you do remember what checking your programs for typing and logic errors was called, don't you? It's called debugging, and of course it's still done today, if you do any heavy duty programming at all with anything other than one of the "Visual" compilers. Even with them, if what you need to do is heavy enough.

I still have MS QuickBasic 4.5 and Borland's Turbo C++ and Turbo Pascal (for DOS, of course) around here somewhere, but they'll remain in storage. I also have the free versions of MS Visual Basic and Visual C++, but I fear they'll remain archived, as well. If I start programming again, it'll be under my new "Significant Other"; Linux.
Comment by James L. Yepsen on December 23, 2009 at 6:45pm
I have not used it in a long time but I have a Commodore 128D. I use to subscribe to magazines that had programs for the Commodore 64 and would spend hours typeing in the program and then try to run it just to find out I had mis typed something and then have to check eveything to find out what I missed. Don't really miss that.
Comment by Keith on December 11, 2009 at 9:29pm
The Apple Lisa did terrible in the consumer market.
Comment by Jon :D on December 11, 2009 at 6:21pm
Lol @ redtippmann - dumbass.

Anyway, wow. Haven't looked into history of computers, but this seems interesting. Thanks for the post!
Comment by redtippmann on December 11, 2009 at 4:29am
1st

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