Technologizer: Patentmania! Personal Computers of the Early 1980s

harrywp

By Harry McCracken

The first few years of PC history were its stone age–the era when any signs of life whatsoever were history-making. The period from 1985 to the present, as amazing as it’s been, has been one of consistency and compatibility. Which is why I think of 1980-1985 as the most interesting half-decade in PC history. Almost every new system (including some that debuted in 1979) was still an experiment–and even flops could be fascinating. Herewith a gallery of notable examples, illustrated with evocative drawings from Google Patents.

Data Processing System With Programmable Graphics Generator

Filed January 8th, 1979

With their advanced graphics and sound, I always thought of Atari’s 800 and 400 as the first third-generation personal computers–with the MITS Altair and its kin representing the first generation and the Apple II, Commodore PET, and Radio Shack TRS-80 the second. This 800 setup is uncommonly well-equipped, with two floppy drives, a tape deck, and what might have been considered a flat-screen TV in the early 1980s. Only two of the four joystick ports are occupied, though.

datap2




Computer Housing

Filed November 1st, 1979

If there’s a heaven for old PCs, Radio Shack’s TRS-80 Model II probably shares a bunk bed there with the Apple III. Both were follow-ups to hugely popular computers. Both were aimed at business users. Neither was compatible with its predecessor. And both were flops. I only saw one Model II in the wild–my friend Charles’s father had one in his office.

trs




ARTICLE CONTINUED HERE

[This post is excerpted with Harry’s permission from his Technologizer blog.]

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Technologizer: Dell’s Streak–Is It a Huge Smartphone or a Tiny Computer?

oncomputers

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And then there’s Dell’s Streak…which makes the Droid X look like a pipsqueak. At five inches, its screen is so expansive that it’s not clear upon first glance whether this device is a phone. It is. Or at least it can be one: The Dell executive I spoke with at a demo yesterday described the Streak as being “capable of making phone calls.” In other words, Dell sees it as a data device that does voice rather than a phone that does data.

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