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IBM PC was introduced in 1981 and had 360K floppies until the introduction of the IBM AT in 1984. I sold a 10Mb hard disk for the first XT for $10K; The Seagate 20Mb half height was $5K in 1985 IIRC. |
Don,
My erasable memory stands corrected. It was the early 80's. I started with a Northstar computer in '79. It used the CPM OS. Sherwood |
I'm a little confused, are you guys saying the first PC's had no hard drive?
The flight computer unit I first gave a link to (Verdan) came to the USA under license from the UK (Elliott Brothers) in the military sector. Link-2: http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1961/1961%20-%200456.html |
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At the time I was in high school, the PC to own was an Apple II. Apple pretty much concerned the market. Commodore should have done better, but the PET was limited and the VIC-20 wasn't an improvement. The C-64 was excellent, and that was my first machine. I used it through college. My first PC was a Toshiba 1200HD in 1988. The HD was for Hard-disk. Mine had a 10MB hard-dive built in. It still fires up, but the display is cracked and only 1/2 works. I upgraded it all the way to DOS 6.1. And I used that machine through the mid 1990's, when I got a color notebook from work. I paid a lot for a combination memory upgrade card and 1200 baud modem. The machine had 2MB of memory! Remember all of the programs to break the 640K barrier, to allow you to load drivers and parts of the OS into "high" memory so that you could run larger programs in main memory. My other recollection of those days was that GE was freak'n cheap, and always bought some program that was not the industry standard. SuperCalc5 instead of Lotus 1-2-3, etc. |
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"What is 'Diamonds are forever', Alex?"
I don't remember any commercial/industrial computers that used compact cassettes. The early personal computers that used cassettes, you usually supplied the cassette recorder. And they worked on the principle of a modem. The output was 300 baud modem sounds, recorded by the cassette recorder. These were 30 characters per second. They were SLOW! |
I still have my original Microsoft Mouse. It has two huge green buttons and a steel roller ball. I got it with my Ventura Publisher Ver 1 that ran on my Compaq lugable 4.77 Mhz powerhouse. It had 640 K of ram and a 10 meg hard drive. I also still have my Compaq DOS 2.2 operating system.
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I had my sailboat hauled for a bottom job a couple of weeks ago. The boatyard used on old Okidata dot matrix to print invoices, etc. We used to sell that exact printer in the mid 80's. I asked about it and the girl in the office said the owner of the boatyard picked up the printer at a second hand store for $5 and was able to order ribbons from someplace on the internet?? |
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In some ways, hard drive prices have gone up. This one cost $17.5 million:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/storage/?p=485&tag=nl.e589 Sherwood |
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