Top 10 Personal Computers 387
BWJones writes "The Houston Chronicle has posted a story by Dwight Silverman on the ten most popular PC's of all time. His inclusions are for the most part accurate, but his rankings confuse me. For instance, he includes 'hobby' computers such as the Altair, but excludes the Apple I and his ranking of the Compaq portable PC at number one ahead of the Altair, Apple I and II, Apple Lisa and Macintosh. Interestingly, the author also skips other significant platforms entirely, such as the Amiga and Atari computers as well as skipping over the much more significant Tandy products, the TRS-80 line of computers which like the Apple I and II had built in BASIC which helped introduce many people to programming."
Worst PC's are more entertaining. (Score:2, Funny)
TRS-80 Z-80 chip far superior to the Apple 6502 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:TRS-80 Z-80 chip far superior to the Apple 6502 (Score:4, Interesting)
The Z80 chip could run rings around the Apple 6502 cpu
Erm, it was the other way round.
A 6502 at 1 Mhz could at least control a floppydrive.
When they tried the same trick with a Z80 they needed a 8 Mhz version.
The reason is very simple.
Look at the instructionset.
The shortest instruction on the 6502 was 1 clockpulse,
On the Z80 it was 4 clockpulses.
The longest instruction of the 6502 was 6 clockpulses.
The longest instruction of the Z80 was 24 clockpulses.
Re:TRS-80 Z-80 chip far superior to the Apple 6502 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:TRS-80 Z-80 chip far superior to the Apple 6502 (Score:3, Informative)
Just to add my two cents: the Z80 is a really fantastic chip, very easy to get your head around and understand at the register level.
Re:TRS-80 Z-80 chip far superior to the Apple 6502 (Score:5, Interesting)
And this was the feature that made it possible for the Apple II to have a low-cost floppy drive. Steve Wozniak designed a "dumb" floppy controller, using only a handful of chips, that worked by using the Apple II's cpu as the controller. The fact that the cpu directly read individual bits off the floppy and controlled the floppy hardware at a low level made possible some truly baroque copy-protection schemes.
The Apple II was also the only PC of its time to offer a true bit mapped "color" display--another of Wozniak's innovations. Every other PC of the time had only character-mapped graphics. This feature made the Apple the game machine of its era, although as with the floppy drive, everything from sprite movement to the individual cycles of the speaker had to be controlled directly by the cpu.
Re:Worst PC's are more entertaining. (Score:2)
Re:Worst PC's are more entertaining. (Score:2)
Unfortunately, i didn't have a floppy nor tape drive. I had to save stuff on Spiral-Bound Pulp Media(tm). I think that during that time (before i discovered electric guitars at age 13) i had filled up about 5 100pg n
Re:Worst PC's are more entertaining. (Score:2)
Re:Worst PC's are more entertaining. (Score:3, Interesting)
Just because it was your worst PC doesn't mean it was one of the worst machines. When it was made 48k was pretty good (16k used to be enough), monochrome and floppies was pretty much the standard issue for a buisness computer. There really weren't a lot of higher end options without taking a HUGE jump in price, and that mostly bought you speed, certainly not color and multimedia. Heck, the TRS-80 was one of "the" sta
Amiga. (Score:3, Insightful)
Definitely missing the Amiga on that list. Chuck the "APPLE NEWTON MESSAGE PAD".
IMHO
Re:Amiga. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, you get the distinct sense that this is the author's "computers I've owned that I thought were k-rad" list. It's a wee bit lacking in objectivity.
- David Stein
Definitely (Score:2)
Re:Definitely (Score:2)
Re:Amiga. (Score:3, Insightful)
Agreed. And they make a big deal about how the 1992 "Tandy Sensation" came with both sound and SVGA graphics. Yet the Amiga had both of those at least 5 years earlier. Also - "Sim City" came out on the Amiga before it came out on the C64 as the article states.
Missing from the list:
Amiga
Atari ST
Vic20
Radio Shack TRS80 and CoCo
Re:Amiga. (Score:3, Insightful)
PDA's (Score:2)
I voted for Macintosh though.
Ciryon
Re:Amiga. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Amiga. (Score:2)
Commodores failure to sell the Amiga to the US consumer was almost criminal. Apparently IBM and Apple were genuinely scared when they saw the Amiga back in the mid-eighties, and were greatly relieved when they saw C= selling it as little more than a t
what do you expect (Score:2, Funny)
Dissapointed (Score:5, Interesting)
I was sure to find references to my goold old Timex Sinclair 1000 [oldcomputers.net], or even my Adam computer [xbox-scene.com], but no! I had to read about Compaq...
Not even a word on the TI 99/4A [99er.net]. Guess I'll have to publish my own list. Actually, I had planned a long time to do a timeline of my computers, see how it respected moore's law. Guess there's no better time then right now to get started.
They each had a respectable place in history (Score:4, Insightful)
The TI 99/4 was definitely saddled with a weird "expansion box" which was essentially an empty PC case designed to hold expansion cards (memory, floppy drive, etc.). However, the 99/4 became the darling of early education since it ran LOGO [mit.edu], a programming language that was taught to kindergarten and elementary school children. There's a generation whose first classroom PC was a TI 99/4 running LOGO. TI also spent a lot of money advertising the 99/4 (Bill Cosby was the spokesman) which raised consumer awareness of the existence of PC's for the home.
The Timex/Sinclair was a novelty but also showed the possibilies for cheap and small PC's that could be used by hobbyists on a budget. There are a lot of programmers that cut their teeth on BASIC on the Sinclair
The Adam from Coleco was nearly "pathetic" as far as a PC, but it was a pretty cool gaming console and it had great packaging. It was compatable with nothing, but Coleco bundled it with a lot of stuff. However, if I recall correctly it was a major disaster in terms of sales and took Coleco down with it.
Re:They each had a respectable place in history (Score:2)
I just wanted to add that one of my first real OS (if you can call it that) was actually CP/M 2.2 on the Adam. I remember hooking to BBS, finding 8086 .com programs and complaining they never worked *hehe*
My 486sx (Score:4, Interesting)
It made computing a VERY VERY personal experience and taught me patience and anger-management...and the first real appropriate usage of colorful 4-letter words.
I will attest to that statement on the old Apple II machines and its BASIC interpreter, though. It did introduce me to programming. My favorite book at the time was something called "Kids and The Apple" which featured lots of BASIC code samples. If it were a list of the top 10 life-changing PCs, the old Apple II would get my vote as #1.
Re:My 486sx (Score:4, Interesting)
I still wax fondly over that computer. I've gone through three since, and I've never had one that felt remotely as *mine* as that one had been. Windows 95+, I think, in bringing computers to the masses, really took away a lot of the ability to have intimate, detailed knowledge and control of every aspect of the computer. And I miss that.
One of these days I need to start really learning Linux...
Re:My 486sx (Score:2)
Re:My 486sx (Score:2)
Re:My 486sx (Score:2)
What about the New G5? (Score:2, Insightful)
Top 10 lists suck... (Score:5, Funny)
Top Ten Reasons 'Top 10 Lists' Suck
10. They usually list items that are still avertised in the meadium of the list. Top ten list of cars for example will never list the Edsel, the Durants or REOs. They will list Honda, Toyota and Fords.
9. Most lists are usually geard to non-enthusiests. They will mention items that most people know about, and won't go too far to explain new, yet important, items.
8. They are filled with lame items so that the list is ten items long.
7. They are filled with duplicates that make the same point.
6. They are filled with duplicated that appempt to make the same point.
5. Top ten lists should really start at Nine and count down to Zero. Especially if they deal with computing or mathmatics.
4. Top ten lists usually forget about the distant past - and only mention items that the reasership is familliar with. Like the list of important historical events that fails to mention items before 1950.
3. Top ten lists get tiring by the seventh item.
2. Top ten lists usually play for novelty - Like a car list wherer the 'flying car' [216.239.41.104] will get mentioned, but the first diesel-engine car won't, even though in the grand scheme of things, the diesel engine is more important - it's considered boreing.
1.5 Some top ten lists will include another item, in order to appear to be cute.
1. Most top 10 lists are lame excuses to try to get attention. Like this one.
Top 10 lists (Score:5, Insightful)
But you might be forgetting is this is someones list. It isn't the end all and be all of lists, go ahead make your own, write an article about it.
I find it funny that so many people will get all riled up over what a single person wrote.
Re:Top 10 lists (Score:4, Informative)
The first, as MS would have you think. OK, so it was the first popular, and here's where it fits in the list.
9. Quadra/Centris 610 DOS Card model
A PC AND a Mac in the same case? Sweet!
8. PowerMac 6100
RISC for the masses... what else can I say?
7. Outbound Portable
The first Mac laptop, and one of the first legal Mac clones - kinda important, wouldn't you say?
6. Laser 128 series
The first fully legal Apple II clone.
5. Compaq Portable
The first IBM PC clone, and one of the first luggable IBM PCs.
4. Macintosh
GUI for the masses.
3. Commodore 64
Cheep! Cheep! Computing for the masses, however, I didn't like the emulators, and there's a shitload of bias here, m'kay?
2. IBM PC
The... IBM... PC... umm... DUH!
1. Apple II
The first modern computer. It could boot without any addins (to BASIC, however), but it's expansion capabilities are AMAZING - after all, CF, IDE, and 10Mb/s Ethernet cards are being made for it today.
Re:Top 10 lists (Score:2)
As for the Commodore 64, you've got to give the A2 the fact that it was designed five years earlier, and each model HAD to be backward compatible with the whole line.
Re:Top 10 lists (Score:2)
Compaq luggable (Score:4, Interesting)
So you're saying.... (Score:5, Funny)
Missing in action (Score:2)
Certainly the Amiga and the Atari ST. First 32-bit computers generally available to the masses.
But how on earth can you not include the Sinclair spectrum (1982)... Or in fact the ZX80/81. Obviously not an author from the UK....
Simon.
Wrong? (Score:2)
Uhm. The Amiga A1200, A4000, A4000T and CD32 were 32 bit. The other Amigas and the Atari ST were 16 bit computers. Right?
Disclaimer: Some of the "box" Amigas (2000, 2500, 3000) could take 24 bit graphics cards, but they were still 16 bit internally
It depends (Score:2)
Short answer: "It depends on your view". They all used the 68k series chips. Every member of that chip family was internally a 32-bit processor, doing 32-bit arithmetic in a single operation. Some chips had external databusses with only 16 (or in some cases 8) bits. The "ST" stood for "Sixteen Thirtytwo", showing it's 16-bit bus and 32-bit architecture.
As far as I'm concerned, if you can hold a 32-bit memory pointer in a single register, manipulate it, and use it as an
Re:Wrong? (Score:2)
think 386sx, but designed in 1979.
Re:Wrong? (Score:2)
the motorola 680x0 were 32bit chips. they had an external 16bit interface, but were 32bit inside.
The first 680*0 with external 32 bits databus would be the 68020.
If you combine a 68020 and a 68851 you get a 68030.
An 68040 is a 68030 combined with an 68882 (FPU).
Intel did the same trick with the 8088.
A 8088 has an 8 bits external databus but is 16 bits internal.
The predecessor of the 8088 is the 8086 which has a 16 bits databus external.
With other words, a 8088 is a low budget 8086.
Acorn Computers (was Re:Wrong?) (Score:2)
The Amiga 1200 was launched in December 1992 [emugaming.com] but before that a British company called Acorn Computers [geocities.com] released the Archimedes range of computers, the next generation after their 8 bit systems (Atom, BBC A/B/B+, Master, Master Compact). Starting with the A305, A310, A410 & A440 [machine-room.org] in mid 1989 these machines had 32bit ARM2 processors
Re:Acorn Computers (was Re:Wrong?) (Score:3, Interesting)
Such a shame Acorn couldn't market themselves out of a paper bag. The computer world would be a lot different (and a lot better) right now if they had only taken the time to market their products better.
Re:Missing in action (Score:2)
TRS-80 Model 100 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:TRS-80 Model 100 (Score:3, Informative)
Something else he missed as well... (Score:5, Informative)
All the time I lusted after an Apple II, but at well over 300 UKP it was impossible. When the Sinclair machine arrived, I had to wait 10 weeks before it turned up, but after an evening's soldering I had a working machine. Sinclair's lovely quote that you could "Run a nuclear power station with the ZX-80" were well far-fetched with the 1K (!) of RAM, but thanks to tokenising the basic on input, you could actually squeeze a lot more program than you could imagine into it. Oh, did I say that your video RAM was also included in that 1K?
The fact that you could not display output on your TV when the program was running, only at an input prompt or program stop was the best reason in the world to learn assembler for the Sinclair's Z80 processor and this limitation was soon removed by the large user community.
There's still some really strange/dedicated (delete as applicable) Germans running a users club at the ZX-TEAM-Homepage [zx81.de]
It was an influential machine and got a lot of young people interested in programming. It should really be somewhere there on the list.
Re:Something else he missed as well... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Something else he missed as well... (Score:2, Insightful)
I bet a lot of nuclear power stations were run with far more primitive computers.
Tandy CoCo!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
It had a whopping 16k, we had it modded to 32k after a while! Eventually replaced with a CoCo 3
I learned a ton on that little monster!
Re:Tandy CoCo!!! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Tandy CoCo!!! (Score:2, Funny)
When I got the CoCo 3, I only had one diskdrive, but two cartridge controllers. If you could hold the cartridge in tightly, you could pull out the ribbon and switch it to the other machine!
Other Items for Consideration (Score:5, Interesting)
TRS-80 Model I/III - these affordable computers were the first to have inexpensive networking. They had a multiplexer device avaiable (think hub) that workied through the casette port - one computer could 'save' to another 'loading' computer. Cheap, by clever, flie-level networking for the masses
C-64/TI-99/VIC-20/ATARI 400(800) - The fist mas market computers that broght comuting to people who were more interested in the applications (word-processing and gams) then the computers themselves.
TRS-80 PC-2/SHARP ??? - the first pocket computers, they had a BASIC interpreter and could do normal computing functions and yet fit in your pocket. Link here [obsoleteco...museum.org]. The precursors to PDA and 'smart phones'
TRS-80 Model 100 (Kerocera ???) - the first popular laptops.
ATARI ST/AMIGA 1000 - the first true 'multimedia' computers that broght music composition via computers to the masses.
SETI&Home Project - the first virtual supercomputer.
.
PDP-1, LINC, ALTO, Dartmouth BASIC etc. (Score:5, Interesting)
So, if you rate computers by their influence or by the affection they inspired, these really ought to be on the list:
The PDP-1. I mean, the MIT hacker community used it to play video games (Spacewar! and Flight Simulator), do word processing (Expensive Typewriter, TECO, and TJ-2), play music (Pete Samson's harmony compiler), etc.
The LINC. The Computer Museum designated this as "the first personal computer." It was a tabletop unit, not floorstanding, and pioneered the first diskette-like storage (the LINCtape stored about 700 half-kilobyte blocks with random access and rewrite-in-place; effectively, a linear diskette with fractional-minute seek time). It was a 12-bit computer, probably the shortest word length ever used before microprocessors.
The Xerox Alto. First WYSIWYG word processor. First compound-document (mixed words and graphics word processor). First "object-oriented" drawing program. First bitmap-editing painting program. Ethernet and local area networking. One user, one computer. I mean, every significant concept in modern-day personal computing was there.
The Dartmouth BASIC time-sharing system. If we ARE talking user head counts--adjusted for exponential growth--the Dartmouth BASIC time-sharing system has to be way up there. How many people used it? How many peole first got the idea that computers should be a working tool for ordinary people by using it? Where did people get the idea that they wanted their own computer, and why they wanted it--so that they could run their own BASIC programs. Hey, how would Bill Gates have known what to write in 1974 if Dartmouth BASIC hadn't been there first?
Re:PDP-1, LINC, ALTO, Dartmouth BASIC etc. (Score:2)
I learned how to program on a PDP-10, which was sometimes called a DecSystems 10. I started in basic, and then jumped to algol.
From the old days a Kim-1 (? I think that's the name) single board computer taught a lot of people how to program in machine code, and I still remember flipping toggle switches on an IMSAI.
The IMSAI was kind of cool -- we had one in school. You'd
Re:PDP-1, LINC, ALTO, Dartmouth BASIC etc. (Score:2)
I don't see how... (Score:5, Insightful)
And dammit, where is my TRS-80?
Re:I don't see how... (Score:5, Insightful)
Bzzzzzt! Not influential, regardless of who made it.
I totally agree about the original Mac, as well as the TRS-80 and the Amiga.
Hell, even the Lisa could be a candidate. I have fond memories of the fact that you had to dismantle the thing to retrieve the floppy when it froze up.
Thank you Microsoft! (Score:3, Funny)
>...but it ultimately gave birth to Microsoft, which helped make PCs available to the masses.
Ah, *that* was the missing link! Finally I am enlightened on how this all happened. My own memory of these things was far messier, until now. I'm glad that history isn't that complicated after all.
Thank you Microsoft! Thank you Mr. Silverman for enlightening me!
IMSAI 8080 (Score:5, Interesting)
I loved this one as I made many of the cards for it... cards which would do really weird things like interface to gas turbines, as I had some projects back then which involved large heavy machinery, and it occured to me that I could program one of these machines to act like a gas turbine, and allow me to check out all the logic of a Gas Turbine Controller without having to power up an actual gas turbine, that is I could read the fuel injector signals, generate a corresponding RPM signal, mimic fuel failure signals, vibration signals, etc. I remember how weird it seemed sitting in the control room of the turbine control room, with the entire room aglow with all sorts of displays indicating the turbine running full power, yet the turbine just down the hall was dead quiet as it was undergoing replacement of its blades.
It was my first taste of having my own programmable device that I understood intimately... and I still have it, albeit I have not used it in years... as I use several old ISA PC's to do this now... ( I like my old Borland 3 C++ compiler for DOS way too much.. it does exactly what I want it to do, and is much quicker for me to get something done than coding in 8080 assembler. And hell, I don't want GUI or its assorted bloatware just to do quickie process simulations. )
UK Perspective (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:UK Perspective (Score:4, Insightful)
...and lets not forget that the successor to the BBC, the Acorn Archimedes [old-computers.com], was the first-ever RISC-based home computer, despite claims that Apple make to the contrary regarding their PPC machines. The Archimeded' innovative RiscOS operating system introduced the task bar, a design we now see ripped off in Microsoft Windows. Furthermore, it was BillG himself, when shown a demonstration of Acorn's low-cost networking setup (Econet), who commented that the idea of linking computers together "wouldn't catch on".
Re:UK Perspective (Score:2, Informative)
Re:UK Perspective (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, RISC OS's UI is a vague rip-off of the original Windows GUI before they changed it.
I find this highly unlikely; RiscOS came out, IIRC, in 1988, predating Windows 3.0 by 2 years.
They forgot one... (Score:4, Funny)
-Sean
Where's the Amstrad? (Score:2)
A bit of a blinkered view (Score:2, Insightful)
Longevity (Score:5, Insightful)
I had to correct him - I remembered seeing seeing an Apple catalog listing both the original Powerbook Duo 210 and the Apple
As it turns out, the Apple
The computer, with only a few minor revisions, was sold for over twelve years.
In addition, I was sorry to see that the original iMac did not make the list.
Re:Longevity (Score:4, Insightful)
And no, I don't own an Apple product of any kind, but I think credit should go where it is due.
Revisionist history (Score:5, Informative)
I'm going to play devil's advocate to the prevailing sentiment here a little bit. I'm old enough to remember well the days of the C64, Vic-20, Apple I and II and later the Amiga and Atari XL and ST line (and the straight numbered PC's before them). I remember the industry well in those days, and hell, we had two Atari 520ST's and one Atari 1040ST in my house (I also owned an Apple II and had many friends who owned C64's as well as at least one that owned an Amiga 500).
But the Atari line specifically were not particularly popular computers and they did not have a particularly profound effect on the industry as a whole. Worse, Atari's PC's dropped in popularity pretty linearly with each successive release - the Atari 400 and 800 were fairly major players at first, but as the XL/XE line and then the ST's took over, Atari's influence waned further and further. The ST's did have some nice sound hardware (and were popular with audio professionals) that may have influenced what would eventually become standard in some PC's but otherwise they were basically ignored by average consumers as well as businesses.
The Amiga was ahead of its time - and probably should be on a list like this - but again, it all depends on your criteria. Commercially, the Amiga was a collossal failure that directly contributed to the downfall of Commodore Computers. There are arguments you could make in favor of having it on a top ten list like this, but you'd have to have a pretty loose criteria to include a computer family like the Amiga on the same list as the IBM 5150 - the 5150 being the direct grandfather of about 90% of the world's PC's today, almost 25 years after it was introduced. The Amiga, while still having a cult following, is not even in the same universe in terms of influence or popularity.
As for the Apple I, I don't think even Wozniak and Jobs would really argue it belongs on this sort of list. Only several hundred were made and while it was an important PC to the Apple company just in terms of being their first released product, as a computer taken on its own merits it was not at all important. I mean it's about like arguing Orson Welles' first home movie in high school is as important as Citizen Kane - it frankly and simply is not. Same goes for the Apple Lisa (the largely experimental precursor to the Mac that shares less with the Mac platform than many people seem to believe).
So I don't know; lists like these are pretty much intended to provoke debate through their commissions and omissions (in fact, the writer even says "Of course, there will be grousing with the choices here, and certainly with the order, but that's what makes lists fun"), and there may be different PC's that should or should not be here, but I can see his reasons for not including many of the PC's listed in the article submission.
It seems to me like what this writer did was look at each loose "era" of personal computing - the hobbyist era, the "wild west" era when there were a large variety of low-cost and popular PC options, and the post-IBM PC era when most consumer PC's became largely based on the 5150 design. He then included 3 or 4 PC's from each era on his list, and these all happen to be basically the most popular or important PC's of each era (with one or two exceptions). That's really as good a criteria as any, I think.
Re:Revisionist history (Score:5, Insightful)
>each loose "era" of personal computing . . . He then
>included 3 or 4 PC's from each era on his list . .
I don't think it's clear WHAT criteria the author used to compile his silly list, and I think that's the #1 problem with his list. Was it sales? Well, the average Dell Latitude model today probably outsells the original Mac, because the market for personal computers is so much larger today. So sales isn't the whole story.
He says he's ranking the most "important" PCs, but I don't even remember some of those systems. The "Tandy Sensation" at #8? What the hell was *that*? A 1992 release, he claims it showed other PC makers, "how multimedia should be done", but the Mindset PC had already taken a stab at that in the PC market back around 1983. The Amiga and Atari ST were certainly showing how multimedia could work on the desktop, and had both been doing so for around 7 years at that point. And of course there were the Macs, which started shipping with CD-ROM drives as standard equipment long before PC's did. I don't think the clone market looked to Tandy's system at all as some kind of standard - I think they were all chasing the Mac. As usual. And I say this as someone who has never owned a Mac, but let's be real here - whatever Apple is doing today with their hardware and interface, you can almost bet the PC will be doing in a year. Or two. Or three . .
As for Compaq's portable being the "most important" PC ever - what a joke! It may have been the first copy of the IBM PC, but the PC would have been cloned by somebody (probably many somebodies) eventually, anyhow. It's not like nobody had heard of reverse engineering in 1983. If Compaq hadn't done it, Japan, Inc. would have. The Compaq portable is probably one of the "most important" developments in the *IBM* PC & compatible market, but from an end-user's perspective on the personal computer as a tool, it really doesn't matter anymore what brand of box you're running so long as it accomplishes the job you've set out to do. And today's personal computers pretty much all operate alike regardless of what brand is stamped on the front of the box or the chips inside. You can thank a personal computer company for that development alright, but it ain't Compaq.
The user survey accompanying the article reflects that point of view perfectly. Currently, the Mac, Apple
As for the Apple
Re:Revisionist history (Score:3, Informative)
I remember seeing ads for these things but I can't for the life of me recall a review or even a blurb in PC Mag. It was a pretty insignificant machine overall, and doesn't even fit into the class of obscure and unsung, but wonderful, Tandy boxen (the
Model 16 and the 2000 being examples).
Commodore 64's operating system (Score:5, Informative)
BASIC was essentially the UI you got when you powered on the machine, though, and that's probably what the article author was talking about.
Re:Commodore 64's operating system (Score:5, Informative)
Nitpick on nitpick: The thing was actually called "kernal", not "kernel". That's how it's officially referred as, believe it or not. Kernal ROM. I am guessing that it originated as a typoed term, and they later explained that it actually was an acronym for "Keyboard Entry Read, Network And Link". (Source for this trivia here [funet.fi].) No idea why they put "network" there though =)
And GEOS was not the only program that implemented its own I/O routines. Every turboloader did this...
The article completely omits the fact that you could program in assembly right out of the box - most people seemed to start by writing BASIC "loaders" that read the program from data statements and poked it to memory - also, many magazines published machine language programs in this format. There were commercial and hobbyist-built assemblers, crossassemblers (for Amiga and PC), and even interpreters/compilers for other languages (notably Logo and Pascal - I forgot the package that I once futilely used).
Satisfies no one (Score:2)
Where's NeXT? (Score:2)
Re:Where's NeXT? (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:2)
And then, BWJones goes on the rip the article apart.
If it's so bad, why did you think
Top 10 Most Popular? (Score:2)
Tandy Sensation? Come on... (Score:2, Informative)
By the time the Sensation! came out, custom
Submitter Blew It (Score:3, Insightful)
Our hapless submitter changed that to most "popular", which is an entirely different thing, of course. And, easily determined by looking at sales records.
I know
Ridiculous list (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not sure what he means by "most important" - that's the caveat. "Most important" based on him browsing through advertisements in old issues of Byte magazine probably.
Clearly, the TRS-80 should be among the list. It was the first successfully-marketed and mass-produced PC.
The Kaypro should also be listed - it was more "important" than the Compaq portable. Though I still have a Compaq portable III with the gas plasma display in a closet somewhere - that was an innovative computer for the time, but it was following in the footsteps of the Kaypro and earlier portables. NEC, from my memory came out with the first mass-produced computer that would be considered a "laptop" - I had one of those as well. I forget the name - but it's worthy of the list.
The Compaq worthy of mention in the list would be the Compaq 386 - the first at the time to take advantage of the faster processor - ahead of IBM.
I would also note that the TRS80 Model II was the first mass-produced PC that was geared for hard core business use, even though it didn't do well (and there were others like Cromemco that were popular - not sure if those were legiti microcomputers or minis - my memory isn't what is used to be).
Other notable mentions: Timex/Sinclair - the first ultra-cheap, bare bones PC; the Texas Instruments TI99/4a, the Commodore Pet, Tandy Color Computer, and probably many more I'm forgetting.
Poor article - so many obvious omissions (Score:4, Interesting)
Strangely, although RISC OS limped on to this millennium [along with a much-changed AmigaOS], home PC OS'es have commoditised down to Windows vs. UNIX (Linux/*BSD/Mac OS X) with no other OS'es even getting a look in. Ditto with the hardware, which is basically Intel/AMD vs. Power PC.
Count me as another "Amiga Missing"... (Score:3)
But imagine my frustration when I switched from a 14MHz Amiga to a Pentium 166 MMX (best at the time)...
Switching from a Realtime OS with a *NIX style CLI to a POS (M$ Win*) was a major problem for me. I had become used to the system responding at my command (something I enjoyed after having to deal with my first computer...a C= 64) and using the many advantages of the *NIX command line...
Of course, Linux now has the new preempt patch in the 2.6 kernel which makes me extremely happy...
1981... (Score:3, Interesting)
Where is the Atari? The Atari 800XL was an awsome machine - on par with the Commodore 64. After learning basic on the TI-99, I later used the Atari to learn machine level programming, poking and peeking (or was it push and pop?)my way into the guts of the beast.
My own top 5 list (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Apple IIgs (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
2 - Note that I specifically said "world wide web" and not "internet." I'm aware it's got limited internet capabilities, but you're not going to be browsing the web on it.
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
2. Telnet to a shell account (better than dialing directly in only in that you can get the dial-up), and you'll be browsing the web. Port Links to it, and you'll be browsing the web.
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
BTW, Links 2.x IS graphical, through X or FB... No tabs, but Hacked Links offers that.
Re:Apple IIGS (Score:2)
Re:Apple IIgs (Score:2)
Re:Other lists (Score:5, Informative)
Hold up! (Score:2)
Re:BASIC? (Score:3, Informative)
My boss when I was in high school wrote his own complete accounting suite and ran his multiple businesses off of it. But if it's not a programming langua
Re:Which 2 popular computers are missing? (Score:2)
If you answered Atari and Amiga, you're wrong! They were never popular.
Except if you're from Europe.
Atari and Amiga was a big hit over here.
Even the ZX spectrum sold very well.
Re:The article is crap (Score:5, Informative)