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Okla-homey
8/12/2008, 06:31 AM
August 12, 1981: IBM's first PC is completed

http://img367.imageshack.us/img367/1764/ibm275pxibmpc5150cy0.jpg
Operating system: IBM BASIC / PC-DOS 1.0
CP/M-86
UCSD p-System
CPU: Intel 8088 @ 4.77 MHz
Memory: 16 kB ~ 640 kB

27 years ago today, the International Business Machine Co. (IBM) introduces a computer for use by Joe Six-pack. By the early 1980s, the computer had shrunk from being a room-clogging behemoth to a relatively dainty machine that could fit on desks in homes and schools. So, IBM's introduction of its Personal Computer (PC) on August 12, 1981, didn't exactly signal a technical revolution. But that didn't stop Big Blue's PC from bursting onto the scene.

http://img360.imageshack.us/img360/4466/ibmpcbadgexv3.jpg

Their new product sold 136,000 units in its first year and a half of release, propelling the company's stock on an upward climb that peaked later in the decade. IBM had seemingly served notice to the computer industry: the granddaddy of business computing was making a break from the boardroom and looking to conquer America's homes.

http://img360.imageshack.us/img360/4875/ibm750pxibmfloppydrivewrn6.jpg
5 1/4 inch Diskette Drive with a partially inserted double-density diskette containing DOS 1.1.

Not as widely noticed was the fact that IBM's new machine was a pastiche of other company's components, including a processing chip courtesy of Intel and an operating system developed by a thirty-two person concern called Microsoft.

Eventually, IBM would not only be relying on other company's technology, but would be chasing them for profits. Though recent years have been a touch kinder to the company, the early 1990s saw IBM posting annual losses that sometimes ballooned up to $8 million.

olevetonahill
8/12/2008, 07:24 AM
Why in hell didnt I buy some Microsoft stock Back then :confused:

SoonerJack
8/12/2008, 07:39 AM
Man those keyboards were built like a tank. Dual floppies, one for the app and one for data. lol

Okla-homey
8/12/2008, 07:40 AM
Man those keyboards were built like a tank. Dual floppies, one for the app and one for data. lol

yep, and this Casio on my wrist has more memory.:D

olevetonahill
8/12/2008, 07:47 AM
yep, and this Casio on my wrist has more memory.:D

Bro I remember when those little Pkt Caculators that cost maybe a buck Now
Cost 20 Bucks and coundnt do a .01 % of what they can do now :mad:

Hot Rod
8/12/2008, 08:26 AM
Shall we play a game?

soonersn20xx
8/12/2008, 08:35 AM
Good Morning Dave.

http://pix.nofrag.com/4/6/b/40c8ee9d0c15487933806e0bde6e4.jpg (http://pix.nofrag.com/4/6/b/40c8ee9d0c15487933806e0bde6e4.html)

OUDoc
8/12/2008, 08:57 AM
Shall we play a game?

http://media.tumblr.com/NhXkZmgLq7a6lycxaCvQIzwp_500.jpg

Ross33
8/12/2008, 09:00 AM
Shall we play a game?

Global Thermonuclear War?

TheHumanAlphabet
8/12/2008, 09:38 AM
Heh, I remember I was big stuff when I had 640K memory and a 10 meg hard drive. 10 megs, you'll never need more than that!

Frozen Sooner
8/12/2008, 11:37 AM
Heh, I remember I was big stuff when I had 640K memory and a 10 meg hard drive. 10 megs, you'll never need more than that!

Swanky.

I remember having the cool computer that everyone wanted to play on 'cause it was an Apple IIe with 128k instead of 64.

tommieharris91
8/12/2008, 11:43 AM
Heh, my mom worked at IBM around that time as a secretary and was paid in shares of stock.

soonersn20xx
8/12/2008, 11:57 AM
I remember having the cool computer that everyone wanted to play on 'cause it was an Apple IIe with 128k instead of 64.

I had one of those at work, when bored I played Star Trek on it...........grid of blinking white dots with letters as symbols for the ships.:rolleyes: