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3000 BC: Dust abacus is
invented, probably in Babylonia.
1800 BC: Babylonian
mathematician develops algorithms to resolve numerical
problems.
500 BC: Bead and wire abacus
originates in Egypt.
200 AD: Saun-pan computing
tray is used in China; soroban computing tray used in Japan.
1000: Gerbert of Aurillac or
Pope Sylvester II devises a more efficient abacus.
1617: Scottish inventor John
Napier uses bones to demonstrate division by subtraction and
multiplication by addition.
1622: William Oughtred
develops the slide rule in England.
1624: Wilhelm Schickard
builds first four-function calculator-clock at the University
of Heidelberg.
1642: Blaise Pascal builds
the first numerical calculating machine in Paris.
1673: Gottfried Leibniz
builds a mechanical calculating machine that multiplies,
divides, adds and subtracts.
1780: American Benjamin
Franklin discovers electricity.
1805: Joseph-Marie Jacquard
invents perforated card for use on his loom.
1822: In England Charles
Babbage designs a Difference Engine to calculate logarithms,
but the machine is never built.
1833: Charles Babbage designs
the Analytical Machine that follows instructions from
punched-cards. It is the first general purpose computer.
1842: Lady Ada Byron,
Countess of Lovelace and daughter of Lord Byron, the poet,
documents Babbage's work and writes programs for Babbage.
1854: Irishman George Boole
publishes The Mathematical Analysis of Logic using the binary
system now known as Boolean algebra.
1855: George and Edvard
Scheutz of Stockholm build the first practical mechanical
computer based on Babbages work.
1876: Telephone is invented
by Alexander Graham Bell.
1884: Herman Hollerith
applies for patents for automatic punch-card tabulating
machine.
1884: Institute of Electrical
Engineers (IEE) is founded.
1886: William Burroughs
develops the first commercially successful mechanical adding
machine.
1889: Patent is issued for
Hollerith tabulating machine.
1890: Dr. Herman Hollerith
constructs an electromechanical machine using perforated cards
for use in the U.S. census.
1896: Hollerith founds the
Tabulating Machine Co. and constructs a sorting machine.
1903: Nikola Tesla, a
Yugoslavian who worked for Thomas Edison, patents electrical
logic circuits called gates or switches.
1911:
Computer-Tabulating-Recording Company is formed through a
merger of the Tabulating Company (founded by Hollerith), the
Computing Scale Company, and the International Time Recording
Company.
1912: Institute of Radio
Engineers (IRE) is formed.
1914: Thomas J. Watson
becomes President of Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company.
1921: Czech word robot is
used to describe mechanical workers in the play R.U.R. by
Karel Capek.
1924:
Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company changes its name to
International Business Machines.
1925: Vannevar Bush, builds a
large scale analog calculator, the differential analyzer, at
MIT.
1927: First public
demonstration of television. Radio-telephone becomes
operational between London and New York.
1927: Powers Accounting
Machine Company becomes the Tabulating Machines Division of
Remington-Rand Corp.
1928: A Russian immigrant,
Vladimir Zworykin, invents the cathode ray tube (CRT).
1931: First calculator, the
Z1, is built in Germany by Konrad Zuse.
1933: First electronic
talking machine, the Voder, is built by Dudley, who follows in
1939 with the Vocoder (Voice coder).
1936: Englishman Alan M.
Turing while at Princeton University formalizes the notion of
calculableness and adapts the notion of algorithm to the
computation of functions. Turing's machine is defined to be
capable of computing any calculable function.
1937: George Stibitz builds
the first binary calculator at Bell Telephone Laboratories.
1938: Hewlett-Packard Co. is
founded to make electronic equipment.
1939: First Radio Shack
catalog is published.
1939: John J. Atanasoff
designs a prototype for the ABC (Atanasoff-Berry Computer)
with the help of graduate student Clifford Berry at Iowa State
College. In 1973 a judge ruled it the first automatic digital
computer.
1940: At Bell Labs, George
Stibitz demonstrates the Complex Number Calculator, which may
be the first digital computer.
1940: First color TV
broadcast.
1940: Remote processing
experiments, conducted by Bell Laboratories, create the first
terminal.
1941: Colossus computer is
designed by Alan M. Turing and built by M.H.A. Neuman at the
University of Manchester, England.
1941: Konrad Zuse builds the
Z3 computer in Germany, the first calculating machine with
automatic control of its operations.
1944: Colossus Mark II is
built in England.
1944: Mark I (IBM ASCC) is
completed, based on the work of Professor Howard H. Aiken at
Harvard and IBM. It is a relay-based computer.
1944: Grace Murray Hopper
starts a distinguished career in the computer industry by
being the first programmer for the Mark I.
1945: John von Neumann paper
describes stored-program concept for EDVAC.
1946: Binac (Binary Automatic
Computer), the first computer to operate in real time, is
started by Eckert and Mauchly; it is completed in 1949.
1946: ENIAC (Electronic
Numerical Integrator and Computer), with 18,000 vacuum tubes,
is dedicated at the University of Pennsylvania. It was 8 by
100 feet and weighed 80 tons. It could do 5,000 additions and
360 multiplications per second.
1946: Eckert-Mauchly Computer
Corporation is formed as the Electronic Control Co. to design
a Universal Automatic Computer (Univac).
1946: Term bit for binary
digit is used for first time by John Tukey.
1947: Alan M. Turing
publishes an article on Intelligent Machinery which launches
artificial intelligence.
1947: Association for
Computing Machinery (ACM) is formed.
1948: EDSAC (Electronic Delay
Storage Automatic Calculator) is developed at the University
of Cambridge by Maurice V. Wilkes.
1948: IBM introduces the 604
electronic calculator.
1948: IBM builds the
Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator (SSEC), a computer
with 12,000 tubes.
1948: Transistor is invented
by William Bradford Shockley with John Bardeen and Walter H.
Brattain.
1949: EDVAC (Electronic
Discrete Variable Automatic Computer) supports the first tests
of magnetic disks.
1949: Jay Forrester uses iron
cores as main memory in Whirlwind. Forrester patent is issued
in 1956.
1949: Claude Shannon of MIT
builds the first chess playing machine.
1950: Maurice V. Wilkes at
Cambridge University uses assembler (symbolic assembly
language) on EDSAC.
1950: Remington-Rand acquires
Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corp.
1950: SEAC (Standards Eastern
Automatic Computer) is delivered to the National Bureau of
Standards.
1951: First Joint Computer
Conference is held.
1951: Maurice V. Wilkes
introduces the concept of microprogramming.
1951: IEEE Computer Society
is formed.
1951: UNIVAC I is installed
at the Bureau of Census using a magnetic tape unit as a buffer
memory.
1951: Wang Laboratories, Inc.
is founded by An Wang in Boston.
1951: Whirlwind computer
becomes operational at MIT. It was the first real-time
computer and was designed by Jay Forrester and Ken Olsen.
1952: First computer manual
is written by Fred Gruenberger.
1952: IBM introduces the 701,
its first electronic stored-program computer.
1952: Nixdorf Computer is
founded in Germany.
1952: Remington-Rand acquires
Engineering Research Associates (ERA).
1952: RCA develops Bizmac
with iron-core memory and a magnetic drum supporting the first
database.
1952: UNIVAC I predicts an
Eisenhower landslide with 7% of the votes, just one hour after
the polls close.
1952: U.S. Department of
Justice sues IBM for monopolizing the punched-card accounting
machine industry.
1953: Burroughs Corp.
installs the Universal Digital Electronic Computer (UDEC) at
Wayne State University.
1953: First high-speed
printer is developed by Remington-Rand for use on the Univac.
1953: First magnetic tape
device, the IBM 726, is introduced with 100 character-per-inch
density and 75 inches-per-second speed.
1953: IBM ships its first
stored-program computer, the 701. It is a vacuum tube, or
first generation, computer.
1954: FORTRAN is created by
John Backus at IBM. Harlan Herrick runs the first successful
FORTRAN program.
1954: Gene Amdahl develops
the first operating system, used on IBM 704.
1955: First SHARE users group
meeting is held.
1955: Remington-Rand merges
with Sperry Gyroscope to form Sperry-Rand.
1956: APT (Automatic
Programmed Tool) is developed by D.T. Ross.
1956: Burroughs acquires
Electro data and the Datatron computer, which becomes the
Burroughs 205.
1956: Government antitrust
suit against IBM is settled; consent decree requires IBM to
sell as well as lease machines.
1956: A. Newell, D. Shaw and
F. Simon invent IPL (Information Processing Language.)
1956: RCA ships the Bizmac.
1956: T.J. Watson, Jr.
assumes presidency of IBM.
1956: The acronym artificial
intelligence is coined by John McCarthy.
1957: Control Data
Corporation is formed by William C. Norris and a group of
engineers from Sperry-Rand.
1957: Digital Equipment
Corporation is founded by Ken Olsen.
1957: First issue of
Datamation is released.
1957: Honeywell joins with
Raytheon to ship the Datamatic 1000.
1958: ALGOL, first called IAL
(International Algebraic Language), is presented in Zurich.
1958: First virtual memory
machine, Atlas, is installed in England by Feranti. It was
developed at the University of Manchester by R.M. Kilburn.
1958: First electronic
computers are built in Japan by NEC: the NEC-1101 and -1102.
1958: Frank Rosenblatt builds
the Perceptron Mark I using a CRT as an output device.
1958: LISP is developed on
the IBM 704 at MIT under John McCarthy.
1958: Seymour Cray builds the
first fully transistorized supercomputer for Control Data
Corp., the CDC 1604.
1958: Jack Kilby of Texas
Instruments makes the first integrated circuit.
1959: COBOL is defined by the
Conference on Data System Languages (Codasyl), based on Grace
Hoppers Flow-Matic.
1959: First packaged program
is sold by Computer Science Corporation.
1959: IBM introduces the
1401. Over 10,000 units will be delivered during its lifetime.
1959: IBM ships its first
transistorized, or second generation, computers, the 1620 and
1790.
1959: Jack S. Kilby at Texas
Instruments files a patent for the first integrated circuit.
1959: Robert Noyce of
Fairchild Semiconductor develops the monolithic idea for
integrated circuits.
1960: Benjamin Curley
develops the first minicomputer, the PDP-1, at Digital
Equipment Corporation.
1960: COBOL runs on UNIVAC II
and RCA 501.
1960: Control Data
Corporation delivers its first product, a large scientific
computer named the CDC 1604.
1960: DEC ships the first
small computer, the PDP-1.
1960: First electronic
switching central office becomes operational in Chicago.
1960: Removable disks first
appear.
1961: AFIPS (American
Federation of Information Processing Societies) forms.
1961: Multiprogramming runs
on Stretch computer. Time-sharing runs at MIT on IBM 709 and
7090 computers by F. Corbato.
1961: IBM delivers the
Stretch computer to Los Alamos. This transistorized computer
with 64-bit data paths is the first to use eight-bit bytes; it
remains operational until l971.
1962: APL (A Programming
Language) is developed by Ken Iverson, Harvard University and
IBM.
1962: First general-purpose
simulation languages are proposed: (1) SIMSCRIPT by the Rand
Corporation, and (2) GPSS by IBM.
1962: IBM markets 1311 using
removable disks.
1962: IBM's U.S.-based annual
revenues from computer products reaches $1 billion and for the
first time surpasses its other revenue.
1962: H. Ross Perot founds
EDS (Electronic Data Systems) in Dallas, TX.
1963: Control Data acquires
Bendix Corp. computer division.
1963: Conversational graphics
consoles are developed by General Motors (DAC-1) and MIT
Lincoln Laboratories (Sketchpad), resulting in computer-aided
design (CAD). Sketchpad uses the first light-pen, developed by
Ivan Sutherland.
1963: DEC ships the first
PDP-5 minicomputer.
1963: Tandy acquires Radio
Shack (9 stores).
1964: IBM announces the
System 360, the first family of compatible computers.
1964: Control Data
Corporation introduces the CDC 6000, which uses 60-bit words
and parallel processing. CDC ships the 6600, the most powerful
computer for several years. It was designed by Seymour Cray.
1964: BASIC (Beginners
All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Language) is created by Tom
Kurtz and John Kemeny of Dartmouth. First time-sharing BASIC
program runs.
1964: Graphic tablet is
developed by M.R. Davis and T.D. Ellis at Rand Corporation.
1964: Honeywell introduces
the H-200 attacking IBM's installed base of 1400 systems.
1964: NCR introduces the
315/100.
1965: CDC founds the Control
Data Institute to provide computer-related education.
1965: Digital Equipment ships
the first PDP-8 minicomputer.
1965: First computer science
Ph.D. is granted to Richard L. Wexelblat at the University of
Pennsylvania.
1965: IBM ships the first
System 360, its first integrated circuit-based, or third
generation, computer.
1966: Honeywell acquires
Computer Control Company, a minicomputer manufacturer.
1966: Scientific Data Systems
(SDS) introduces Sigma 7.
1966: Texas Instruments
offers the first solid-state hand-held calculator.
1967: DEC introduces the
PDP-10 computer.
1967: A.H. Bobeck at Bell
Laboratories develops bubble memory.
1967: Burroughs ships the
B3200.
1967: First issue of
Computerworld is published.
1968: Dendral, the first
medical diagnostic medical program, is created by Joshua
Lederberg at Stanford University.
1968: Univac introduces the
9400 computer.
1968: Integrated Electronics
(Intel) Corp. is founded by Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce.
1969: Edson deCastro leaves
DEC to start Data General Corp. and introduces the Nova, the
first 16-bit minicomputer.
1969: First International
Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence is held.
1969: IBM unbundles hardware
and software; introduces a minicomputer line, System/3.
1969: Lockheed Electronics
ships the MAC-16.
1969: PASCAL compiler is
written by Nicklaus Wirth and installed on the CDC 6400.
1970: Computer Logic Systems
ships SLS-18.
1970: DEC ships its first
16-bit minicomputer, the PDP-11/20.
1970: Data General ships
SuperNova.
1970: First ACM Computer
Chess tournament is held.
1970: Honeywell acquires
General Electric's computer operations. 1970: IBM ships its
first System 370, a fourth generation, computer.
1970: Xerox Data Systems
introduces the CF-16A.
1971: Computer Automation
introduces the Alpha-16.
1971: IBM introduces the
370/135 and 370/195 mainframe computers.
1971: Floppy disks are
introduced to load the IBM 370 microcode.
1971: Intel Corporation
announces the first microprocessor, the Intel 4004, developed
by a team headed by Marcian E. Hoff.
1971: John Blankenbaker
builds the first personal computer, the Kenbak I.
1971: NCR introduces the
Century 50.
1971: Sperry-Rand takes over
the RCA computer product line.
1972: Cray Research is
founded.
1972: First electronic pocket
calculator is developed by Jack Kilby, Jerry Merryman, and Jim
VanTassel of Texas Instruments.
1972: Gary Kildall at Naval
Postgraduate School writes PL/1, the first programming
language for the Intel 4004 microprocessor.
1972: Intel introduces the
8008, an 8 bit microprocessor.
1972: Prime Computer is
founded.
1973: First National Computer
Conference (NCC) is held in New York City.
1973: IBM settles a lawsuit
by Control Data, selling Service Bureau Corporation (SBC) to
Control Data.
1973: PROLOG language is
developed by Alain Comerauer at the University of Marseilles-Luminy,
France.
1973: R2E markets the MICRAL,
the first microcomputer in France.
1973: Winchester disk drives
are first introduced by IBM, who uses the term as a code name
for its Model 3340 direct-access storage device.
1974: Digital Equipment
enters the Fortune 500 ranking of the largest industrial
companies.
1974: Intel introduces the
8080, an 8 bit microprocessor that will be used in numerous
personal computers.
1974: Zilog is formed.
1975: Cray-1 supercomputer is
introduced.
1975: Homebrew Computer Club,
considered the first personal computer users group, is formed.
1975: MITS introduces the
Altair personal computer, named after a Star Trek episode, A
Voyage to Altair. The kit cost $397 for a 256 byte computer.
The I/O consisted of switches and lights. It was designed by
Ed Roberts and Bill Yates.
1975: Microsoft is founded
after Bill Gates and Paul Allen adapt and sell BASIC to MITS
for the Altair PC.
1975: The first computer
store opens in Santa Monica, CA.
1975: Xerox withdraws from
the mainframe computer industry.
1976: First fault-tolerant
computer, the T/16, is introduced by Tandem.
1976: MYCIN, an expert system
to diagnose and treat infectious blood diseases, is developed
at Stanford University by E. Shortliffe.
1976: NEC System 800 and 900
general-purpose mainframes are introduced.
1976: Seymour Cray engineers
and delivers Cray 1 with 200,000 freon-cooled ICs and 100
million floating point operations per second (MFLOP)
performance.
1976: Superminicomputers are
introduced by Perkin-Elmer and Gould SEL.
1976: Zilog Z-80 chip is
introduced.
1977: Apple Computer is
founded and introduces the Apple II personal computer.
1977: Apple, Commodore, and
Tandy begin selling personal computers.
1977: DEC introduces its
first 32-bit superminicomputer, the VAX-11/780.
1977: Datapoint introduces
ARC system, the first local area network.
1977: First ComputerLand
franchise store opens in Morristown, NJ under the name
Computer Shack.
History, 1978 - 1994
1978: SPRINT business service
is inaugurated.
1978: Texas Instruments
introduces the Speak-and-Spell educational toy featuring
digital speech synthesis.
1978: Total computers in use
in the U.S. exceed a half million units.
1978: The first COMDEX trade
show is held.
1979: Ada language is
developed by a team at CII-Honeywell Bull (France) directed by
Jean Ichbiah.
1979: The Source and
CompuServe Information Services go on-line.
1979: VisiCalc, the first
electronic spreadsheet software, is shown at the West Coast
Computer Faire.
1979: Wordstar, one of the
best-selling word processing programs for PCs, is released by
Micropro (now called Wordstar International).
1980: Control Data
Corporation introduces the Cyber 205 supercomputer.
1980: First issue of
InfoWorld is published.
1980: Microsoft licenses UNIX
operating system from Bell Laboratories and introduces its
XENIX adaptation.
1980: Total computers in use
in the U.S. exceed one million units.
1981: Commodore introduces
the VIC-20 home computer, which sells over one million units.
1981: IBM enters the personal
computer market, creating a de facto standard.
1981: Osborne Computer
introduces the Osborne 1, the first portable computer.
1982: AT&T agrees to give up
22 Bell System companies in settling a 13-year-old lawsuit
brought by the Justice Department.
1982: Compaq Computer
incorporates.
1982: Sun Microsystems is
founded.
1982: Microsoft licenses
MS-DOS to 50 microcomputer manufacturers in the first 16
months of availability.
1982: Time Magazine names the
computer its Man of the Year.
1982: U.S. drops IBM
antitrust suit begun in 1969.
1983: Compaq ships its first
computer in January and sells $111M, the greatest first-year
sales in the history of American business.
1983: Cray 2 computer
introduced with one billion FLOPs (floating point operations
per second) performance rating.
1983: Lotus 1-2-3 replaces
VisiCalc as the spreadsheet software of choice for
microcomputers.
1983: NEC announces the SX-1
and SX-2 supercomputers.
1983: Total computers in use
in the U.S. exceed ten million units.
1984: Apple introduces the
Macintosh computer.
1984: IBM introduces the PC
AT (Advanced Technology). IBM merges with Rolm Corp., which
becomes a telecommunications subsidiary.
1984: The Tandy 1000 personal
computer becomes the #1 selling IBM PC-compatible in its first
year.
1985: IBM delivers the new
3090 Sierra systems.
1985: Aldus introduces
PageMaker for the Macintosh and starts the desktop publishing
era.
1986: Burroughs merges with
Sperry to form Unisys Corporation, second only to IBM in
computer revenues.
1986: Compaq makes the
Fortune 500 list. Introduces its first Intel 80386-based PC.
1986: Computerworld publishes
its 1,000th issue on November 3.
1986: HP introduces its
Spectrum line of reduced instruction set computers (RISC).
1986: Tandy has over 7300
retail outlets including more than 4800 company-owned Radio
Shack stores in the U.S.
1986: The number of computers
in the U.S. exceeds 30 million.
1987: IBM introduces its PS/2
family and ships over 1 million units by year end.
1987: Cray Research
introduces the Cray 2S which is 40% faster than the Cray 2.
1987: ETA Systems introduces
its ETA-10 family of supercomputers.
1987: Sun Microsystems
introduces its first workstation based on a RISC
microprocessor.
1987: Apple introduces the
Macintosh II and Macintosh SE and HyperCard.
1987: IBM introduces its
Systems Applications Architecture (SAA).
1987: DEC introduces
Vaxstation 2000 workstation computer, and the MicroVAX 3500
and 3600.
1987: Aldus introduces
PageMaker for the IBM PC and compatible computers.
1987: Compaq reaches a
billion dollar in sales in its fifth year of operation.
1987: Conner Peripherals
beats Compaq's first year sales record: $113M vs $111M.
1987: Computer Associates
acquires UCCEL in the largest ever software acquisition
($780M).
1987: IBM invests in Steve
Chens Supercomputer Systems, Inc.
1987: Apple spins off its
application software business as a separate company and names
it Claris.
1987: Texas Instruments
introduces the first AI microprocessor chip.
1988: DEC introduces
VAXstation 8000.
1988: Cray Research
introduces the Cray Y-MP, a $20M supercomputer.
1988: IBM introduces a new
mainframe computer operating system called MVS/ESA.
1988: IBM announces its long
awaited Silverlake mid-range computers called AS/400.
1988: Motorola announces the
88000, a RISC microprocessor.
1988: The first graphics
supercomputers are announced by Apollo, Ardent and Stellar.
These computers are aimed at 3D graphics applications.
1988: The first
PS/2-compatible computers are announced by Tandy, Dell
Computer and others.
1988: Unisys introduces the
2200/400 family to replace its mid-range 1100 series.
1988: AT&T announces plan to
acquire 20% of Sun Microsystems, and that Sun will help AT&T
develop the next version of UNIX.
1988: In response to the
AT&T-Sun cooperation, IBM, DEC, HP, Apollo and several other
major computer companies form the Open Software Foundation to
set a UNIX counterstandard.
1988: Sun Microsystems
surpasses the $1 billion sales mark, and introduces
80386-based workstations.
1988: IBM and Sears joint
videotex venture starts operation under the PRODIGY name.
1988: Sematech picks Austin,
TX as its headquarters and the consortium will be headed by
Robert Noyce.
1988: A consortium of PC
companies led by Compaq introduces the EISA counter standard
to IBM's PS/2 MicroChannel bus.
1988: IBM introduces the
ES/3090 S series mainframe computer.
1988: IBM wins a $3.6B
contract to build the next generation air traffic control
system.
1988: Unisys acquires
Convergent Technologies for $350M.
1988: Computer Associates
acquires Applied Data Research for $170M from Ameritech.
1988: Next unveils its
innovative workstation computer which is the first computer
using erasable optical disks as the primary mass storage
device. IBM license Next's graphics user interface.
1988: A nondestructive worm
spreads via the Internet network and brings several thousand
computers to their knees.
1989: Solbourne Computer
introduces the first Sun 4-compatible computer.
1989: DEC announces a
workstation using Mips Computer's RISC microprocessor.
1989: Microsoft buys a 20%
stake in Santa Cruz Operation, a major UNIX software
developer.
1989: Intel announces the
80486 microprocessor and the I860 RISC/coprocessor chip. Both
chips have over one million transistors.
1989: Hewlett-Packard
acquires Apollo for $476M.
1989: Sun Microsystems
introduces its SPARCstation, a low-end RISC workstation with
an entry price of only $9,000.
1989: Control Data
discontinues its ETA supercomputer subsidiary.
1989: IBM announces the
Officevision software using the SAA protocol, which runs on
PS/2s, PS/2 LANs, AS/400 and mainframe computers.
1989: Cray restructures
itself into two companies: Cray Research which continues with
its current business and Cray Computer Corp. headed by Seymour
Cray, which will develop a gallium arsenide-based
supercomputer.
1989: Next sells a 16.6%
share to Canon for $100M.
1989: Seagate buys Control
Data's Imprimis disk drive subsidiary for $450M.
1989: Computer Associates
acquires Cullinet for $333M.
1989: Prime Computer agrees
to be bought by a J.H. Whitney-formed company, ending a long
and acrimonious takeover battle by MAI Basic.
1989: Apple introduces its
long awaited portable Macintosh.
1989: The worldwide number of
computers in use surpasses 100M units.
1989: Poqet announces the
first pocket sized MS-DOS compatible computer.
1989: Grid introduces a
laptop computer with a touch sensitive pad that recognizes
handwriting--the GridPad.
1989: The number of computers
in the U.S. exceeds 50M units.
1989: The battery-powered
notebook computer becomes a full function computer including
hard and floppy disk with the arrival of Compaq's LTE and LTE/286.
1989: Digital Equipment
extends the VAX-family into the mainframe arena with the VAX
9000.
1989: The first EISA-based
personal computers arrive.
1989: The first 80486-based
computers are introduced.
1989: Dun & Bradstreet
acquires MSA in a major software acquisition worth $333M.
1990: Motorola introduces the
68040 microprocessor.
1990: IBM announces its RISC
Station 6000 family of high performance workstations.
1990: Digital Equipment
introduces a fault-tolerant VAX computer.
1990: Cray Research unveils
an entry-level supercomputer, the Y-MP2E, with a starting
price of $2.2M.
1990: Microsoft introduces
Windows 3.0.
1990: Lotus wins its look and
feel suit against Paperback Software's spreadsheet program.
1990: IBM ships the PS/1, a
computer for consumers and home offices.
1990: IBM announces the
System 390 (code name Summit), its mainframe computer for the
1990s.
1990: Microsoft's fiscal year
revenue ending 6/30/90 exceeds $1B.
1990: NCR abandons its
proprietary mainframes in favor of systems based on single or
multiple Intel 486 and successor microprocessors.
1990: Apple introduces its
low-end Macintoshes: The Classic, LC and IISI.
1990: Intel launches a
parallel supercomputer using over 500 860 RISC
microprocessors.
1990: Sun Microsystems brings
out the SPARCstation 2.
1990: Microsoft along with
IBM, Tandy, AT&T and others announced hardware and software
specifications for multimedia platforms.
1990: The first SPARC
compatible workstations are introduced.
1991: Go Corp. releases
PenPoint, an operating system for pen-based computers.
1991: Advanced Micro Devices
announces its AMD 386 microprocessor to compete with Intel's
386 chips.
1991: Notebook PCs are
introduced by most PC vendors.
1991: HP unveils its
RISC-based 9000 Series 700 workstations with exceptional
price-performance.
1991: Compaq leads a group of
21 companies to launch the Advanced Computing Environment
(ACE) to establish a new standard for high-end PCs and
workstations.
1991: The Federal Trade
Commission launches an investigation into Microsoft's business
practices.
1991: Intel introduces the
486SX, a lower priced 486 chip.
1991: NCR agrees to be
acquired by AT&T in a deal valued at $7.4B.
1991: Apple releases the
System 7.0 operating system for Macintosh.
1991: Wang will resell IBM's
PS/2, RS/6000 and minicomputers. IBM will invest $100M in
Wang.
1991: Microsoft rolls out DOS
5.0 with great success.
1991: Major changes among PC
dealers as ComputerLand acquires Nynex's computer stores,
CompuCom acquires Computer Factory, ValCom and Inacomp merge,
JWP buys Businessland and Intelligent Electronics acquires
BizMart.
1991: Borland buys
Ashton-Tate for $440M.
1991: SunSoft, a Sun
Microsystems subsidiary, announces Solaris which is a UNIX
operating system for SPARC workstations and 386/486 PCs.
1991:- The Bell companies
receive permission to enter the on-line information services
market.
1991: Apple and IBM sign a
historic deal--including two joint ventures: Kaleida will
develop multimedia products, Taligent will develop
object-oriented operating software.
1991: Apple rolls out its
PowerBook notebook and Quadra Macintosh PCs.
1991: Wavetracer introduces
its Zephyr massively parallel computer system with up to 8192
processors.
1991: IBM reorganizes itself
into more autonomous business units and several divisions
become wholly-owned subsidiaries.
1991: AT&T/NCR agrees to
acquire Teradata for $520M.
1991: Many major computer
companies have quarterly or full-year loses including Compaq,
DEC, IBM, Lotus and Unisys, primarily due to work force
reduction costs.
1991: The first general
purpose pen-based notebook computers are introduced.
1991: IBM has its first
revenue decline in 45 years.
1992: IBM invests $100M in
Groupe Bull.
1992: Silicon Graphics buys
Mips Computer in a $400M stock swap.
1992: IBM releases OS/2
Version 2.0 and ships over 1M units.
1992: Microsoft introduces
Windows 3.1 and ships nearly 10M units.
1992: The core of Apple's
lawsuit versus Microsoft Windows is dismissed.
1992: Sun Microsystems
launches a new generation of SPARC computers--the SPARCstation
10 family.
1992: Compaq announces
several new lines of PCs and becomes a price trend setter. Its
low-price strategy is very successful.
1992: Ken Olsen resigns from
Digital Equipment after 25 years at the helm.
1992: Sears and IBM forms a
new venture, named Advantis, to compete in the value added
network service market.
1992: Wang Laboratories files
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
1992: IBM makes the IBM PC
Co. a subsidiary.
1992: IBM follows Compaq's
strategy and introduces aggressively priced PCs--also with
good success.
1992: Compaq enters the
Japanese market with aggressively priced PCs--as much as 50%
lower than Japanese PC prices.
1992: Digital Equipment
announces its next generation computer architecture--the
RISC-based Alpha.
1992: Microsoft introduces
Windows for Workgroup.
1992: Intel says its next
microprocessor will be called Pentium instead of 586.
1992: Hewlett-Packard ships
the LaserJet 4, a 600 by 600 dots per inch resolution laser
printer.
1992: Novell to acquire UNIX
Systems Laboratory, including Univel, from AT&T for $350M.
1993: IBM reports its worst
year in history with a loss of $4.97B on revenues of $64.5B.
1993: IBM chairman John Akers
resigns and after the most executive search publicity ever,
Louis Gerstner becomes the new chairman & CEO.
1993: General Magic, an Apple
spin-off, debuts Telescripts, a communications-intensive
operating system for PDAs.
1993: Next sells its hardware
business to Canon and will concentrate its effort on the
Nextstep software business.
1993: Novell unveils NetWare
4.0.
1993: IBM introduces the F
series of the AS/400.
1993: Lotus announces Notes
3.0.
1993: Motorola start shipping
the first PowerPC microprocessor.
1993: IBM's storage division,
Adstar, becomes a subsidiary.
1993: - Microsoft unveils
Windows NT.
1993: Pentium-based systems
start shipping.
1993: EPA's Energy Star
Initiative is unveiled and most PC vendors support the program
with announcements of energy efficient PCs.
1993: Apple ships the Newton
MessagePad--its first Personal Digital Assistant.
1993: AT&T announces it will
acquire McCaw Cellular for $12.6B.
1993: Compaq introduces the
Presario, a PC family targeted for the home market.
1993: FTC ends its probe of
Microsoft without any actions, but the Antitrust Division of
the Department of Justice will launch its investigation.
1994: John Sculley leaves
Apple after 10 years at the helm.
1993: Microsoft outlines the
Plug and Play and Microsoft at Work (MAW) initiatives.
1993: IBM debuts its first
workstations based on the PowerPC chip.
1993: Novell transfer the
UNIX trademark to X/Open and X/Open will certify that an
operating system is UNIX compliant.
1993: IBM announces OS/2 for
Windows, which upgrades the Windows environment to OS/2.
1993: Sun Microsystems
license NextStep and makes a $10M investment in Next.
1993: IBM say it will sell
its Federal Systems division ($2.2B in yearly revenue) to
Loral for $1.6B.
1994: Apple enters the
on-line service market by announcing eWorld.
1994: HP becomes a Taligent
partner and buys 15% from Apple and IBM.
1994: MCI invests $1.3B in
Nextel Communications, a wireless service provider.
1994: Macintoshes using the
PowerPC start shipping.
1994: Intel introduces the
486DX4 clock-tripling microprocessor
1994: Aldus and Adobe agree
to merge in a transaction worth $525M and will form a $0.5B+
software company.
1994: Novell says it will
acquire WordPerfect for $1.14B and will buy Borland's Quattro
Pro for $145M.
1995:IBM releases the ThinkPad 701C, featuring an
automatically expanding full-sized keyboard, dubbed the
Butterfly.
1995: The Universal Serial Bus (USB) debuts.
1995: Netscape Communications releases the Netscape
Navigator web browser.
1995: IBM acquires Lotus Development for US$3.5 billion.
1995: Microsoft ships Windows 95. One million copies are
sold in four days.
1995: Microsoft ships the Office 95 application suite for
Windows 95, incorporating Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.
1995: Microsoft ships the Internet Explorer web browser.
1995: Microsoft releases DirectX 1.0 multimedia API
software developers' kit.
1996: Novell sells WordPerfect and Quattro Pro to Corel for
US$180 million.
1996: Intel announces the Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP),
a new processor interface for graphics accelerators.
1997: Intel ships the 200 MHz Pentium MMX processor.
1997: Intel ships the 300 MHz Pentium II processor.
1997:Apple Computer ships the Mac OS 8.0 operating system.
1997:Apple Computer and Microsoft announce a five-year
alliance, with Microsoft investing US$150 million. Apple will
make Internet Explorer the default Web browser on its
computers, and Microsoft will release Office for the
Macintosh.
1998: Compaq Computer buys Digital Equipment.
1998: Apple Computer introduces the iMac computer, with 233
MHz PowerPC G3 processor, 32 MB RAM, 4 GB hard drive, 15-inch
monitor, for US$1300.
1998: The Department of Justice and 20 states file an
antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft.
1998: Microsoft ships Windows 98.
1998: Microsoft becomes the world's most valuable company.
1999: Intel ships the 733 MHz Pentium III processor.
1999: Judge Jackson rules that Microsoft has a monopoly on
operating systems, and uses it in a harmful way.
2000: Microsoft releases the Windows 2000 operating system.
2000: AMD releases the first commercial 1 GHz Athlon
processor.
2000: U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Jackson rules that
Microsoft acted illegally to protect its operating systems
monopoly, and used its monopoly to attempt to monopolize the
market for Web browser software.
2000: Intel introduces the 1.5 GHz Pentium 4 processor.
2001: Apple Computer ships the Mac OS X operating system.
2001: Microsoft introduces the Tablet PC.
2001: Microsoft launches the Windows XP operating system.
2002: Apple Computer announces new iMac computers, with a
15-inch flat-panel screen attached by a pivoting arm to a
10.5-inch diameter dome.
2002: To date, about one billion personal computers have
been shipped worldwide.
2003: SCO Group files a lawsuit against IBM, claiming IBM
illegally used licensed Unix technology in its Linux software.
SCO seeks US$1 billion in damages.
2003: To date, Intel has shipped one billion x86
processors.
2003: Advanced Micro Devices launches the 2.2 GHz 64-bit
Athlon 64 processor.
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