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Home > Online & Multimedia
12:00 AM
Feb.
1,
2008
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Previous: 1974 / Next: 1976 View all of the years in the New Media Timeline |
TECHNOLOGY
- In the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics, the cover story describes the Altair 8800,
the first successful personal computer. For $395 you can order a kit to
build the Altair yourself or you can buy it assembled for $495. The
Altair 8800 comes with 256 bytes of computer memory and uses Intel's
8080 processor.
- Excerpt from the January 1975 Popular Electronics column that introduced the Altair:
"For
many years, we've been reading and hearing about how computers will one
day be a household item. Therefore, we're especially proud to present
in this issue the first commercial type of minicomputer project ever
published that's priced within reach of many households -- the Alair
8800...."
-
Ed Roberts, the creator of the Altair personal computer, works with Bill Gates and Paul Allen
to develop Altair's first programming language. Their program is a
version of the BASIC computer language. The partnership between Gates
and Allen is the beginning of the Microsoft company.
(See also: " Microsoft @ 30."
History Timeline, Microsoft, 2005.)
-
The ARPANET computer network is taken over by the U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency.
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THE MEDIA
- French television begins testing its Antiope teletext service. Teletext is a text-only system without the interactivity and graphics of viewdata. The French viewdata system is called Minitel.
- The Manhattan Cable Television service begins using a videotex and teletext Reuters news system. A consumer version of The Reuters Monitor is carried on two New York cable channels.
- The CompuServe dial-up service becomes an independent, publicly held company.
- News Example:
April/May 1975 -- The Fall of Saigon, New York Times. (Abstract available from the Infobank database service.)
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