+++ FIND this to see second doc melded w/additional facts. 
Last section us Chiips history.

[ I included some additional sections: 1. on 4004, ]
[ CHIPS HISTORY  last page]
Contents:   search for [ to continue editing. 
1. Prehistory		2. Mini	3. 4004
4. Micropro		5. Network	6. Dos

1. A HISTORY OF THE COMPUTER: PREHISTORY

The abacus, a simple counting aid, may have been invented in Babylonia (now Iraq), fourth century B.C.  The Antikythera mechanism, used for registering and predicting the motion of the stars and planets, is dated t  coast of Greece in 1901. Arabic numerals are introduced to Europe in the eighth and ninth centuries A.D.  Roman numerals remain in use in some parts of Europe until the seventeenth century.  The Arabic system introduced the concepts of the zero and fixed places for tens, hundreds, thousand, etc., and greatly simplified mathematical calculations. 

John Napier, Baron of Merchiston, Scotland, invents logs in 1614.  Logs allow multiplication and division to be reduced to addition and subtraction.  Wilhelm Schickard builds the first mechanical calculator in 1623.  It can work with six digits, and carries digits across columns.  It works, but never makes it beyond the prototype stage.  Schickard is a professor at the university of  Tubingen, Germany.  Blaise Pascal builds a mechanical calculator in 1642.  It has the capacity for eight digits, but has trouble carrying and its gears tend to jam. 

Joseph-Marie Jacquard invents an automatic loom controlled by punch cards. Charles Babbage conceives of a "Difference Engine" in 1820 or 1821. It is a massive steam-powered mechanical calculator designed to print astronomical tables.  He attempts to build it over the course of the next 20 years, only to have the project canceled by the British government in 1842.  Babbage's next idea is the Analytical Engine - a mechanical computer that can solve any mathematical problem.  It uses punch-cards similar to those used by the Jacquard loom and can perform simple conditional operations. Augusta Ada Byron, the countess of Lovelace, met Babbage in 1833.  She describes the Analytical Engine as weaving "algebraic patterns just as the Jacquard loom weaves flowers and leaves."  Her published analysis of the Analytical Engine is our best record of its programming potential.  In it she outlines the fundamentals of computer programming, including data analysis, looping and memory addressing.

Start of Modern Computer History

1947, December 23 
Three scientists at Bell Telephone Laboratories, William Shockley, Walter Brattain, and John Bardeen demonstrate their new invention of the point-contact transistor amplifier. The name transistor is short for "transfer resistance". (Miniaturization of electronic circuits via the transistor is a key development making personal desktop computers small, reliable, and affordable.) 

1948, (month unknown) 
John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Schockley of Bell Telephone Laboratories file for a patent on the first transistor.

1952, January 
A complaint is filed against IBM, alleging monopolistic practices in its computer business, in violation of the Sherman Act. (The government's antitrust investigations and trial against IBM will drag on for thirty years, finally being dismissed in 1982. IBM will cautiously monitor its microcomputer business practices, fearful of a repeat of government scrutiny.) 

1956, January 
A U.S. District Court makes a final judgement on the complaint against IBM filed in January 1952 regarding monopolistic practices. A "consent decree" is signed by IBM, placing limitations on how IBM conducts business with respect to "electronic data processing machines". (Though personal computers are twenty years in the future, this consent decree will limit IBM's success and ability to compete in the marketplace.)  

November 
IBM introduces the RAMAC 305, the first hard drive, with 50 two-foot diameter platters. Total capacity is 5 MB. (The first hard drives for personal computers will appear in about 15 years, also with a capacity of around 5 MB.)  (350 Disk Storage Unit  (September 1966 

1958, September 
At Texas Instruments, Jack Kilby completes building the first integrated circuit, containing five components on a piece of germanium half an inch long and thinner than a toothpick. October

1959, January 
Texas Instruments announces the discovery of the integrated circuit.(month unknown) 
At Fairchild Semiconductor, Robert Noyce constructs an integrated circuit with components connected by aluminum lines on a silicon-oxide surface layer on a plane of silicon. Fairchild Semiconductor announces their independent discovery of the integrated circuit. 

1960, (month unknown) 
Digital Equipment introduces the first minicomputer, the PDP-1, for US$120,000. It is the first commercial computer equipped with a keyboard and monitor. PDP stands for Program, Data, Processor. (The minicomputer represents an important size and power step from mainframe toward personal computers.)  (minicomputer introduced in 1972 ) At Harvard university, Theodor Nelson sets out to write software to implement Vannevar Bush's memex idea, calling it hypertext. (By the mid-1970s, the first draft of Project Xanadu is complete, but by 1990, no hypertext product for a personal computer has come of the project.)  

IBM develops the first automatic mass-production facility for transistors, in New York.

2. A HISTORY OF THE MINI COMPUTER
Texas Instruments and Fairchild semiconductor both announce the integrated
circuit in 1959. Ivan Sutherland demonstrates a program called Sketchpad on a
TX-2 mainframe at MIT's Lincoln Labs in 1962.  It allows him to make engineering
drawings with a light pen. A typical minicomputer costs about $20,000.

1961, (month unknown) 
Fairchild Semiconductor releases the first commercial integrated circuit. 

1962, (month unknown)   Douglas Engelbart invents the mouse pointing device for computers. 

1963, April   Charles Tandy buys the Radio Shack Corporation, for free. (The Tandy or Radio Shack company will become one of the main producers of home computers in the late 1970s.)  (month unknown) 

Douglas Engelbart receives a patent on the mouse pointing device for computers. 

1964, (month unknown) 
John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz develop the BASIC programming language at Dartmouth College. BASIC is an acronym for Beginners All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code. (BASIC becomes the most popular introductory programming language for microcomputers, often stored in ROM, and executing commands interactively.)

The American Standard Association adopts ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) as a standard code for data transfer. (This standard, defining 7-bit character codes, will be used for most personal computers in the Western world.)
Texas Instruments receives a patent on the integrated circuit. IBM coins the term "word processing". 

1965, (month unknown) 
Gordon Moore, head of research and development for Fairchild Semiconductor, predicts that transistor density on integrated circuits would double every 12 months for the next ten years. This prediction is revised in 1975 to doubling every 18 months, and becomes known as Moore's Law.(1965 (every 18 months (every 18-24 month.

1965: An IC that cost $1000 in 1959 now costs less than $10.  Gordon Moore predicts that the number of components in an IC will double every year.  This is known as Moore's Law. Doug Engelbart demonstrates in 1968 a word processor, an early hypertext system and a collaborative application: three now common computer applications.  Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce found Intel in 1968. Xerox creates its Palo Alto Research Center - Xerox PARC - in 1969.  Its mission is to explore the "architecture of information." Fairchild Semiconductor introduces a 256-bit RAM chip in 1970.  In late 1970 Intel introduces a 1K RAM chip and the 4004, a 4-bit microprocessor. Two years later comes the 8008, an 8-bit microprocessor.

1966, May 
Steven Gray founds the Amateur Computer Society, and begins publishing the ACS Newsletter. (Some consider this to be the birth-date of personal computing.) (month unknown) AT&T Bell Labs announces the invention of magnetic bubble memory. 

1967, (month unknown) IBM builds the first floppy disk. 

1968, February 
International Research Corp., in San Martin, California, develops the architecture for a computer-on-a-chip modelled on an enhanced PDP-8/S concept. (Until now, the CPU (central processing unit) has been a collection of chips and other components on a circuit board. Moving as many as possible onto a single chip will greatly aid miniaturization, reduce costs, and increase speed.)
May 
Wayne Pickette, of International Research, proposes to Fairchild Semiconductor that they develop his design for a computer-on-a-chip. Fairchild turns down his offer. June 4 
The US Patent & Trademark Office grants patent 3,387,286 to Dr. Robert Dennard, of the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center. The patent is for a one-transistor DRAM cell and the basic idea in the three-transistor cell. (Dynamic RAM (Random Access Memory) will become the standard short-term storage medium for programs and data during rocessing.) 
(month unknown) 
Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore found Intel Corporation. (Intel begins as a memory chip producer, but will soon switch to the new field of microprocessors.) Ed Roberts and Forest Mims found Micro Instrumentation Telemetry Systems (MITS). (In a few years, MITS will make a desparate switch from producing calculators to computers, and begin a revolution in hobbyist computing.) Douglas C. Engelbart, of the Stanford Research Institute, demonstrates his system of keyboard, keypad, mouse, and windows at the Joint Computer Conference in San Francisco's Civic Center. He demonstrates use of a word processor, a hypertext system, and remote collaborative work with colleagues. 

1969 January 17 
United States attorney general Ramsey Clark charges IBM with unlawful monopolization of the computer industry, and requests the federal courts break it up. (13 years later, the US Justice Department will drop the case.) (month unknown) Honeywell releases the H316 "Kitchen Computer", the first home computer, priced at US$10,600 in the Neiman Marcus catalog.  Bubble memory debuts. Busicom, a Japanese calculator manufacturer, asks Intel to build a custom-chip set for a new calculator. Ted Hoff suggests that instead of set of chips, they create a general-purpose programmable chip. (Intel is initially not anxious to produce processor chips to compete with their customers for memory chips, but eventually decides to take a chance in this new field.) ETI company Jerry Sanders and seven others leave Fairchild Semiconductor to form Advanced Micro Devices. 

May 
Advanced Micro Devices Incorporated is founded. (month unknown) 
Computer Terminal Corporation visits Intel, asking them to integrate about 100 TTL components of their Datapoint 2200 terminal's 8-bit CPU into a few chips. Ted Hoff says they could put it all on one chip, so Intel and CTC sign a contract for it. (The resulting chip becomes Intel's 8008 processor.)  
IBM builds SCAMP, probably the world's first personal computer. 
For the Busicom project, Intel's Marcian (Ted) Hoff and Stan Mazor design a 4-bit CPU chip set architecture that could receive instructions and perform simple functions on data. The CPU becomes the 4004 microprocessor. 
October     Engineers from Japan's Busicom company meet with Intel to inspect work on their calculator IC project. They accept the Intel design for a chip set, and sign an exclusive contract for the chips. (ETI company ) 

(month unknown) 
Intel announces a 1 kilobit RAM chip, which has a significantly larger capacity than any previously produced memory chip. 
Gary Starkweather, at Xerox's research facility in Webster, New York, demonstrates using a laser beam with the xerography process to create a laser printer. 
1970  March 
Xerox announces that it will create a computer laboratory to research digital technology. (The resulting laboratory, PARC, will develop many personal computer technologies, but fail to bring them to market.) 
April 
Wayne Pickette takes his computer-on-a-chip design to Intel, and is hired, beginning work for Dr. Ted Hoff.  
(month unknown) 
Intel begins work on the layout of the circuit for what would be the 4004 microprocessor. Federico Faggin directs the work.
June 
Xerox opens the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). (founded by Kay Power in 1972 
(month unknown) 
Intel creates the 1103 chip, the first generally available DRAM memory chip. 
Bell Labs develops Unix. (Unix will become the dominant operating system of high end microcomputers, or workstations.)
October 
At Intel, the 4001 2 kilobit ROM chip is first fabricated, the first chip of the 4000 family. At Intel, Wayne Pickette proposes to Ted Hoff the idea of building a computer-on-a-chip for the Busicom project.
November 
At Intel, the 4002 320 bit RAM chip is first fabricated. 
At Intel, the 4003 10-bit I/O chip is first fabricated. 
December 
Gilbert Hyatt files a patent application entitled "Single Chip Integrated Circuit Computer Architecture", the first basic patent on the microprocessor. (Twenty years later, the US Patent Office will grant his patent, but five years after that will overturn the award.) 
At Intel, the first run of 4004 microprocessors is fabricated. However, due to a missing masking layer, the entire run is unusable. At the time the chip is called a "mini-programmer". 
---
3. Subject: RE: 4004 Processor
---

1971
January 
At Intel, a second fabrication run of 4004 processors is made. This time, the processors work with only minor errors.
February 
At Intel, a third fabrication run of 4004 processors is made, with corrected masks.
March 
Intel ships sample calculator chip sets to Busicom, each set consisting of four 4001 ROM chips, two 4002 RAM chips, two 4003 I/O chips, and one 4004 CPU. 
(month unknown) 
Intel decides to market the 4000 family. 
Intel renegotiates its contract with Busicom, gaining Intel the right to market the 4004 microprocessor openly in non-calculator applications. Intel returns US$60,000 to Busicom in exchange for product rights to the 4004 processor.
Texas Instruments develops the first microcomputer-on-a-chip, containing over 15,000 transistors.  
June 
Texas Instruments runs an advertisement in Electronics magazine, showing a "CPU on a Chip" that it developed for Computer Terminal's Datapoint 2200 terminal. (However, the chip is never marketed due to unresolved problems in operation.) 
Gary Boone, of Texas Instruments, files a patent application relating to a single-chip computer. 
(month unknown) 
3M introduces a 1/4 inch tape drive and cartridge, the first such system practical for desktop computer use. Tape storage capacity is 30 MB. 
The National Radio Institute introduces the first computer kit, for US$503. 
The Kenback Corporation introduces the Kenback-1 computer, for US$750. It uses a 1 KB MOS memory made by Intel.  
Niklaus Wirth invents the Pascal programming language. (Pascal was developed as a teaching language, but becomes a popular general-use programming language. )  (1969 ) 
IBM introduces the 23FD floppy disk drive. It uses an 8-inch floppy plastic disk, called a "memory disk", coated with iron oxide on one side. The drive can only read the disks. (1965 ) 
Wang Laboratories introduces the Wang 1200 word processor system. (Though not a general purpose computer system, dedicated word processing systems such as this became early targets of desktop computer systems.) 
Intel introduces the 1101 chip, a 256-bit programmable memory, and the 1701 chip, a 256-byte erasable read-only memory (EROM).  
Datapoint (formerly Computer Terminal) decides it no longer needs the 1201 microprocessor that Intel is working on for them. Datapoint agrees to let Intel use its architecture in exchange for canceling the development charges. (This chip becomes the Intel 8008 processor.) 
August 
The newly developed device, the EPROM, is integrated with the 4004 to enhance development cycles of microprocessor products.
(month unknown) 
Steve Wozniak and Bill Fernandez build a computer with lights and switches, mostly from chips rejected by local semiconductor companies. They call it the Cream Soda Computer, as they drank Cragmont cream soda while they worked. ) 
November 
In major trade publications including Electronic News, Intel officially introduces the MCS-4 (Microcomputer System 4-bit) microcomputer system. It is comprised of the 4001 ROM chip, 4002 RAM chip, 4003 shift register chip, and the 4004 microprocessor. Clock speed of the CPU is 108 kHz. Performance is 60,000 operations per second. It uses 2300 transistors, based on 10-micron technology. It can address 640 bytes. Initial price is US$200. Documentation manuals were written by Adam Osborne. The die for the chip measures 3x4 mm. The chip is introduced to the public in Las Vegas by Wayne Pickette. 
---

http://www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/quickreffam.htm
Introduction date: November 15, 1971
Clock speed: 108 kilohertz, 0.06 MIPS
Number of transistors: 2,300 (10 microns), Bus width: 4 bits
Addressable memory: 640 bytes, Typical use: Busicom calculator
First microcomputer chip, arithmetic manipulation

There may still be some archival information in the developer's manuals: http://developer.intel.com/design/Pentium4/manuals/

There is some additional information in the Winn L Rosch Hardware Bible.
http://margo.student.utwente.nl/stefan/chipdir/n/400.htm
http://margo.student.utwente.nl/stefan/chipdir/oth/4004.txt
http://margo.student.utwente.nl/stefan/chipdir/pin/4004card.txt
http://margo.student.utwente.nl/stefan/chipdir/c/d.htm#databook
http://www.computer.org/annals/an1997/a3004abs.htm
http://www.intel.com/intel/museum/25anniv/hof/4004.htm
http://www.dotpoint.com/xnumber/intel_4004.htm
http://irobot.org/4004/default.htm
----
Joseph K.,Intel(R) Technical Support
*Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
http://support.intel.com/support/processors/
-------
+++
This section is part of another document, meleded here but which may jump ahead of below dates.

1972
(month unknown) 
Federico Faggin urges Intel management to allow him to begin development of a successor to the 8008 processor. Management decides to wait to see how reception of the 8008 goes first. 
April 
Intel introduces its 200-KHz 8008 chip, the first commercial 8-bit microprocessor, part of the MCS-8 product family of chips. It accesses 16 KB of memory. It uses 3500 transistors, based on 10-micron technology. Speed is 60,000 instructions per second. The processor was originally developed for Computer Terminal Corporation (later called Datapoint). 
(month unknown) 
At Xerox PARC, Alan Kay proposes they build a portable personal computer, called the Dynabook, the size of an ordinary notebook. PARC management does not support it. 
Xerox PARC engineers Chuck Thacker and Butler Lampson ask Alan Kay if they could try building the Dynabook. (They proceed, but the result is the Alto, a large desktop workstation.) 
Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie develop the C programming language. (C becomes perhaps the most popular language for professional software development, and is the basis for the C++ object-oriented extensions ten years later.) 
Wang Laboratories introduces its first small business computers, the 2200 series. 
Intel management allows Federico Faggin to begin work on an improved 8008 processor. 
August 
Scelbi Computer Consulting Company begins design work on what would be the Scelbi-8H microcomputer. 
(month unknown) 
The People's Computer Company is founded. 
Xerox decides to build a personal computer to be used for research. Project "Alto" begins.  
Canada's Automatic Electronic Systems introduces the world's first programmable word processor with a video screen, the AES 90. The computer system uses magnetic disks for storage, and a custom-built microprocessor.
Gary Kildall implements PL/I on the Intel 4004 processor.
Rockwell announces the PPS-4 microprocessor family, similar to Intel's MCS-4 (with 4004 processor). 
Traf-O-Data develops a primitive microcomputer based on Intel's 8008 microprocessor for recording automobile traffic flow on a highway. 
5 1/4 inch diskettes first appear. 
October 
The first issue of People's Computer Company magazine is released. 
November 
Researchers at PARC begin work on a prototype Alto personal computer.
(month unknown) 
At Texas Instruments, Gary Boone and Michael Cochran create the TMS1000 one-chip microcomputer. It integrates 1 KB ROM and 32 bytes of RAM with a simple 4-bit processor.

1973 January 
Intel files a patent application for a "memory system for a multichip digital computer".
March 
The first prototype Alto workstation computer is turned on at Xerox' Palo Alto Research Center. Its first screen display is a bitmapped image of the Sesame Street character Cookie Monster. (completed in 1974 )
April 
The first operational Alto computer is completed at Xerox PARC. 
(month unknown) 
In France, R2E introduces the Micral microcomputer, powered by an Intel 8008 microprocessor. It is the first commercial non-kit computer based on a microprocessor. The term "microcomputer" is first used in print in reference to the Micral.  
June 
At the Lakeside prep school in Washington state, Bill Gates tells a friend "I'm going to make my first million by the time I'm 25.". 
(month unknown) 
Gary Kildall creates the PL/M programming language for the Intel 8008, based on PL/I. 
IBM introduces the IBM 33FD floppy disk drive. The drive can read and write both sides of an 8-inch disk, storing a total of 400 KB. Code name during development was Igor. 
IBM introduces the IBM 3340 hard disk unit, known as the Winchester, IBM's internal development code name. The recording head rides on a layer of air 18 millionths of an inch thick. It uses four 8-inch diameter platters, giving it a capacity of 70 MB. 
Shugart Associates announces the SA901 disk drive, an 8-inch floppy drive compatible with the IBM 33FD. 
Shugart Associates announces an 800 KB version of its SA901 8-inch floppy drive.
Scelbi Computer Consulting Company offers the first computer kit in the U.S. using a microprocessor, the Intel 8008-based Scelbi-8H, for US$565, with 1 KB programmable memory. An additional 15 KB is available for US$2760. 
At Xerox PARC, Bob Metcalfe invents the Ethernet computer connectivity system. 
December 
At Intel, the first fabrication run of the 8080 processor is made.  
(month unknown) 
Gary Kildall writes a simple operating system in his PL/M language. He calls it CP/M (Control Program/Monitor).  (Control Program for Microcomputer ) (Control Program / Microprocessor 
 
1974 April 
Intel releases its 2 MHz 8080 chip, an 8-bit microprocessor. It can directly access 64 KB of memory via 2-byte memory addressing. It incorporates 6000 transistors, based on 6-micron technology. Speed is 0.64 MIPS.  (March  
(month unknown) 
Rockwell introduces the PPS-8 microprocessor family, similar to but slower than Intel's 8080 processor. 
In a desperate act to save his failing calculator company, MITS company owner Ed Roberts begins building a small computer based on Intel's new 8080 chip, with plans to sell it for the unheard-of price of US$500. Roberts is able to buy 8080 chips from Intel for $75 each in large volume. 
June 
Intel receives a patent for a "memory system for a multichip digital computer". 
(month unknown) 
Southwest Technical Products Company introduces the TVT-11 kit for US$180, and ASCII keyboard kit for US$40. 
National Semiconductor introduces the 16-bit IMP-16 microprocessor.  (1972 ) 
Gary Kildall, of Microcomputer Applications Associates, develops the CP/M operating system for Intel 8080-based systems.
RCA releases the 1802 processor, running at 6.4 MHz. It is considered one of the first RISC chips. 
Engineer David Ahl suggests Digital Equipment produce an inexpensive version of its PDP-8 minicomputer, for US$5000. Top management call the idea foolish. 
July 
Radio Electronics magazine publishes an article on building a Mark-8 microcomputer, designed by Jonathan Titus, using the Intel 8008 processor. 
(month unknown) 
Federico Faggin and Ralph Ungermann leave Intel to form a competing microprocessor company. 
August 
MITS completes the first prototype Altair 8800 microcomputer. His original name for the computer is "PE-8", in honor of the Popular Electronics magazine. 
Bill Mensch, Chuck Peddle, and others leave Motorola to work for MOS Technology. 
(month unknown) 
Ed Roberts decides that the programming language of his new microcomputer should be BASIC. 
David Bunnell, MITS technical writer, suggests the name "Little Brother" for the new MITS computer.  
September 
Creative Computing, the first magazine for home computer users, is founded.  
Hal Singer starts the Micro-8 Newsletter for enthusiasts of the Mark-8 microcomputer. 
Bravo is developed for the Xerox Alto computer. It is the first WYSIWYG program for a personal computer.  
Despite being US$300,000 in debt, Ed Roberts is able to borrow an additional US$65,000 from the bank to complete work on what would become the Altair computer.  
(month unknown) 
Gary Kildall and John Torode begin selling the CP/M disk operating system for microcomputers.  
Motorola introduces its 6800 chip, an early 8-bit microprocessor used in microcomputers and industrial and automotive control devices. The 6800 was designed by Chuck Peddle and Charlie Melear.
November 
Hal Chamberlin and others begin publishing The Computer Hobbyist magazine.
Zilog is founded.
(month unknown) 
Railway Express loses Ed Robert's only prototype Altair computer, en route to New York for review and photography for publishing by Popular Electronics.
MITS engineers create an empty Altair box with switches and lights on the front, send it to Les Solomon for display on the cover of Popular Electronics.
Lauren Solomon, 12 year old daughter of Les Solomon, publisher of Popular Electronics, suggests the name "Altair" for Ed Robert's new microcomputer. Altair was the name of where Star Trek's Enterprise was going that night on TV. 
December 
Scelbi sells its last Scelbi-8H, discontinuing hardware to concentrate on software.
Popular Electronics publishes an article in its January 1975 issue by MITS announcing the Altair 8800 computer for US$397 in kit form, or US$439 assembled. It features a 2-MHz Intel 8080 processor, and 256 bytes of RAM. The Altair pictured on the cover of the magazine is actually a mock-up, as an actual computer was not available.) 
Paul Allen sees the Popular Electronics issue with the Altair story, and tells Bill Gates that the microcomputer revolution is just beginning. 
Bill Gates and Paul Allen contact Ed Roberts, saying they have a BASIC for the Intel 8080 processor. They propose licensing it for use on the Altair in exchange for royalty payments. (They then spend the next eight weeks writing the software.) 
(month unknown) 
Intel introduces the 3000 series of microprocessor chips. 

1975 January 
Harry Garland and Roger Melen receive Altair number 0002. They had proposed in December to attach their Cyclops camera to the Altair, for use as a security camera. 
t Harvard, Monte Davidoff helps Bill Gates and Paul Allen write the floating-point routines for their 8080 BASIC. 
(month unknown) 
Ed Roberts coins the term "personal computer" as part of an advertising campaign for the Altair.  
February 
The Xerox PARC-developed Gypsy word-processing system is first field-tested by end-users. Gypsy is one of the first word processors termed "WYSIWYG", meaning what you see is what you get. Gypsy runs on the PARC-developed Alto personal computer
Paul Allen flies from Harvard to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to meet with Ed Roberts at MITS, to demonstrate the newly written BASIC interpreter for the Altair. Paul writes a paper tape reader on the plane trip, for the Altair to load the BASIC software. At MITS, Paul enters the loader, the Altair reads the paper tape, and is ready to execute BASIC instructions. Despite never having touched an Altair before, the BASIC works flawlessly. Paul types "PRINT 2 + 2", and the Altair responds "4". Paul then types in the BASIC source code for a Lunar Lander game from a book. This becomes the first sofware program ever run on what would later become MS BASIC. 
Bill Gates and Paul Allen license their newly written BASIC to MITS, their first customer. This is the first computer language program written for a personal computer.
(month unknown) 
At MITS, David Bunnell starts the Computer Notes newsletter.
March 
Fred Moore and Gordon French hold the first meeting of a new microcomputer hobbyist's club in French's garage, in Menlo Park, California. 32 people meet, including Bob Albrect, Steve Dompier, Lee Felsenstein, Bob Marsh, Tom Pittman, Marty Spergel, Alan Baum, and Steven Wozniak. Bob Albrect shows off an Altair, and Steve Dompier reports on MITS, and how they had 4000 orders for the Altair. (After a few meetings, the club is given the nickname "Homebrew Computer Club".) ) 
Ed Roberts hires Paul Allen as director of software at MITS. 
(month unknown) 
The second meeting of Fred Moore/Gordon French's computer hobbyists group is held at the Stanford AI lab. 40 attend. The name for the group is chosen: Bay Area Amateur Computer Users Group - Homebrew Computer Club.
April 
The third meeting of the Homebrew Computer Club is held. 
The fourth meeting of the Homebrew Computer Club is held at the Peninsula School in Menlo Park. Steve Dompier plays the music "Fool on the Hill" and "Daisy" using the Altair and a radio. 
Bill Gates and Paul Allen found Micro-Soft (the hyphen is later dropped). (July) (August ) 
MITS delivers the first generally-available Altair 8800, sold for US$375 with 1 KB memory. (256 bytes ) 
Bob Marsh and Gary Ingram found Processor Technology. 
May 
The Amateur Computer Group of New Jersey is formed. 
June 
MOS Technology announces the MC6501 processor for US$20 and the MC6502 for US$25. (Fall) 
Bob Marsh delivers the first Processor Technology 4 KB memory boards for the Altair. 
The Southern California Computer Society is formed. 
At Xerox, John Ellenby proposes they build the Alto II personal computer, a modified Alto, making it easier to produce, more reliable, and more easily maintained. His request is approved. 
Paul Terrell signs a deal with MITS in which Terrell would receive a 5% commission on every Altair sold in Northern California, for promoting and selling the Altair.  
(month unknown) 
Motorola sues MOS Technology over the similarity of the 6501 and 6502 processors to the 6800. (In an out-of-court settlement, MOS Technology withdraws the 6501 from the market.) 
IMS begins working on an 8080-based computer. 
Hard drive maker Tandon is formed. 
Gordon Moore revises his 1965 prediction about transistor density, from doubling every 12 months to doubling every 18 months. This becomes known as Moore's Law. 
Intel develops the Multibus 8-bit memory bus structure.  
Wavemate releases the Jupiter II computer kit.
Southwest Technical Products releases the M6800 computer kit. 
Microcomputer Associates releases the JOLT computer kit. 
In the USSR, the Elektronika S5-01 is introduced. The microprocessor is the K586 NMOS chip series. 
MITS begins work on a Motorola 6800-based Altair. 
MITS sales of Altair computers hits US$1 million. 
Sphere Corporation introduces its Sphere I computer kit, featuring a Motorola 6800 CPU, 4 KB RAM, ROM monitor, keyboard, and video interface, for US$650. 
Harry Garland and Roger Melen found Cromemco. The company is named after the Crowthers Memorial dorm at Stanford. [266.xv
Digital Equipment introduces the LSI-11 microcomputer (board with microprocessor), with 8 KB RAM. It is the first American microcomputer using a 16-bit architecture.
IBM's John Cocke begins work on project "801", to develop a scaleable chip design that could be used in small computers as well as large. 
Wayne Green founds BYTE Magazine. 
July 
Bill Gates and Paul Allen ship 4K and 8K versions of BASIC v2.0 to MITS. 
Dick Heiser opens Arrow Head Computer Company, subtitled "The Computer Store", in Los Angeles, selling assembled Altair computers, boards, peripherals, and magazines. This is the first retail computer store in the USA. 
July 22 
Bill Gates and Paul Allen sign a licensing agreement with MITS, for their implementation of the BASIC language. Gates and Allen receive US$3,000 immediately, with royalties of $30 per copy of 4K BASIC, and $35 for 8K BASIC. 
(month unknown) 
IMSAI announces the IMSAI 8080 microcomputer.
September 
IBM's Entry Level Systems unit unveils the IBM 5100 Portable Computer. It is a briefcase-size minicomputer with BASIC, 16 KB RAM expandable to 64 KB, tape storage drive holding 204 KB per tape, keyboard, and built-in 5-inch screen. Price: US$8975-19975. Weight: 55 pounds. Code name during development was Project Mercury.(Price over US$10,000 
The first issue of BYTE magazine is published. 
October 
MITS releases a version of MicroSoft BASIC 2.0 for its Altair 8800, in 4K and 8K editions. Microsoft BASIC software  
(month unknown) 
MITS decides to release a floppy disk storage system for the Altair computer. 
December 
Paul Terrell opens the Byte Shop, in Mountain View, California, one of the first computer stores in the United States.  
Bill Gates writes an open letter to microcomputer hobbyists, complaining about software piracy, to be published in an Altair newsletter. 
IMSAI hires Ed Faber as Director of Sales.  (1976 January ) 
Lee Felsenstein and Bob Marsh begin work on a complete computer, 8080-based with a keyboard and color video display capabilities built-in. 
December 31 
To date, MITS has sold 2,000 Altair 8800 systems.

1976 January 
David Jackson founds Altos Computer Systems. 
Paul Terrell begins signing dealership agreements, allowing Byte Shop franchises to open elsewhere in the US. [266.189] 
(month unknown) 
MITS unveils the Altair 680, based on the Motorola 6800 microprocessor. 
Steve Wozniak offers his new computer (Apple) to Hewlett-Packard, who reject it as a non-viable product. 
Hewlett-Packard begins Project Capricorn, to build a computer-like calculator. The result will be the HP-85 computer 
February 3 
David Bunnell publishes in his "Computer Notes" Altair newsletter an article from Bill Gates, complaining of software piracy. 
February 
Bill Gates writes software routines for BASIC on the Altair to use diskettes for storage. 
Lee Felsenstein and Bob Marsh deliver the first Processor Technology Sol computer to Popular Electronics magazine publisher Les Solomon.  
(month unknown) 
MOS Technology ships the 6502 microprocessor. The 6502 was developed by Chuck Peddle. 
MOS Technology announces the KIM-1 Microcomputer System, with 1 MHz 6502 CPU, 1 KB RAM, 2 KB ROM monitor, 23-key keypad, LED readout, cassette and serial interfaces, for US$245. (1975 ) 
March 
Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs finish work on a computer circuit board, that they call the Apple I computer. 
March 26 
The World Altair Computer Convention is held, in a hotel near Albuquerque, New Mexico, over three days. This is the first such convention for the microcomputer industry. At the conference, Bill Gates explains his position on software piracy. In the hotel's penthouse suite, Processor Technology holds its own "booth" to promote their 4-KB memory boards for the Altair. 
March 
Paul Terrell incorporates Byte, Inc. 
Intel introduces the 5 MHz 8085 microprocessor. Speed is 0.37 MIPS. It uses 6500 transistors, based on 3-micron technology. It supports an 8-bit bus, and operates on a single 5-volt power supply.(1978) 
(month unknown) 
Bill Gates offers to sell all rights and ownership of his 8080 BASIC to Ed Roberts and MITS for about US$6500. Roberts declines the offer. 
April 1 
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak incorporate the Apple Computer Company, on April Fool's Day. 
April 
Apple Computer co-founder Ron Wayne sells his share for US$800. 
David Bunnell's Computer Notes Altair newsletter publishes Bill Gates' "A Second and Final Letter" article on software piracy
Microsoft hires its first permanent programmer, Marc McDonald. 
National Semiconductor releases the SC/MP 8-bit microprocessor, providing early advanced multiprocessing.  
(month unknown) 
The term "personal computer" first appears in print, in the May issue of Byte magazine.  
Gary Kildall and wife Dorothy McEwen found Intergalactic Digital Research. (The name is soon shortened to Digital Research.) 
May 
In Japan, IBM Japan announces the IBM 5100 desktop system, with 5-inch monochrome display. Price is about US$10,000.  
Digital Research copyrights the CP/M operating system.  
The Trenton Computer Festival is held, in New Jersey.  
June 
Western Digital introduces the MCP-1600 3-chip CPU.  
Texas Instruments introduces the TMS9900, the first 16-bit microprocessor. The microprocessor implements the 16-bit architecture used on the TI 990 minicomputer.
Wang Laboratories announces a word-processing system using advanced computer technology, rather than traditional electromechanical devices. The price is US$30,000, more than twice that of the most expensive competitor's word-processor.  
At the PC '76 conference at the Shelbourne Hotel in Atlantic City, Processor Technology unveils the Sol-20 microcomputer. The Sol-20 uses an Intel 8080 processor, and is sold in a kit form. 
(month unknown) 
In the USSR, the Elektronika S5-11 microcomputer is introduced. 
Advanced Micro Devices and Intel sign a patent cross-license agreement, giving Advanced Micro Devices the right to copy Intel's processor microcode and instruction codes. 
Xerox management rejects two proposals to market the Alto computer. 
Wang Laboratories updates the Wang WPS word processor, adding a CRT display, a large disk storage, and a fast letter-quality printer. 
IBM develops the ink jet printer. 
At Xerox, John Ellenby proposes they build the Alto III, to be marketed as an advanced word processing system. The proposal is shelved. [
Processor Technology releases VDM, a video display module. It works on the Altair, IMSAI, Sol, Polymorphic computers, and any other with an S-100 bus. 
Dynalogic of Canada creates its own advanced microcomputer. 
Gary Kildall grants a license to CP/M to GNAT Computers for US$90. 
Kentucky Fried Computers is founded. 
Tom Snyder's "Tomorrow" TV show features the Sol computer, playing a game called "Target". 
IMS is renamed IMSAI. 
John Martin sells Bill Millard on the idea of a chain of computer stores. Bill promises John shares in the company in exchange for the idea. The chain later becomes ComputerLand. 
U.S. Robotics is founded, in Skokie, Illinois. 
Chuck Peddle designs the Commodore PET. 
Steve Wozniak proposes that Hewlett-Packard create a personal computer. The idea is rejected. 
Steve Jobs proposes that Atari create a personal computer. The idea is rejected. 
Lore Harp and Carole Ely form Vector Graphic Incorporated, selling memory boards for S-100 bus systems. 
George Morrow founds the MicroStuf company. 
The first issue of Dr. Dobbs magazine is published. 
IMSAI begins shipping the IMSAI 8080 microcomputer.
Polymorphic Systems introduces the Polymorphic 8800. It is the first microcomputer with an interface for a video monitor, a connection for a cassette tape recorder, and its basic operating system in ROM. 
Stephen Wozniak demonstrates the Apple I at the Homebrew Computer Club. 
The bus of the Altair is named (or renamed) the S-100 bus. 
July 
The Apple I computer board is sold in kit form, and delivered to stores by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. Price: US$666.66.  
Paul Terrell orders 50 Apple computers from Steve Jobs, for his Byte Shop. 
Zilog releases the 2.5 MHz Z80, an 8-bit microprocessor whose instruction set is a superset of the Intel 8080.  (early 1975) (1975) (1975 December ) 
August 
Paul Terrell receives his order of 50 Apple computers.  
iCOM advertises their "Frugal Floppy" in BYTE magazine, an 8-inch floppy drive, selling for US$1200. 
In Atlantic City, New Jersey, the Personal Computing Festival is held. Several computer hobbyist clubs hold their first convention there. 
Steve Wozniak begins work on the Apple II. 
September 
Computer Shack is incorporated. The name is later changed to ComputerLand, due to objections from Radio Shack.
(ComputerLand is incorporated ) 
October 
Commodore International buys MOS Technology. ) 
Mike Markkula, ex-marketing wizard at Intel, visits Steve Jobs' garage, to see the Apple computers.  
Steve Wozniak decides to remain at Hewlett-Packard, but is soon convinced that he should leave and join Apple Computer permanently
November 
The tradename "Microsoft" is registered. 
ComputerLand opens a pilot store in Hayward, California, as a retail outlet and a training facility for franchise owners.  
Paul Allen resigns from MITS. 
Paul Allen begins full time work at Microsoft. 
December 
Bill Gates drops out of Harvard, to devote his full attention to Microsoft. (January 1976 ) 
Michael Shrayer completes writing the Electric Pencil word-processing program for microcomputers.) 
Shugart Associates announces its Model SA400 5 1/4 inch "minifloppy" disk drive for US$390. Disk capacity is 110 KB. The disk size is based on a cocktail napkin which a customer requested, rather than the usual eight inch size. 
Dick Wilcox demonstrates his Alpha Micro, a multi-user CPU board, at a meeting of the Homebrew Computer Club.  
Don French and Steve Leininger are given official approval to develop and sell a microcomputer for Radio Shack. 
Steve Wozniak and Randy Wigginton demonstrate the first prototype Apple II at a Homebrew Computer Club meeting. 
(month unknown) 
At Xerox, the Display Word Processing Task Force recommends that Xerox produce an office information system like the Alto. Code name for the project is Janus. The result will be the Star computer. 
December 31 
To date, MITS has shipped over 10,000 Altair 8800 kits. 

1977
The section "1977 to date" of the "Chronology of Personal Computers" is not available for free on the Web. 
The Web version of "1947-1976" covers about 250 events. The complete timeline right up to the year 2001 covers about 3500 events. Since beginning this timeline in 1995, I have checked about 2200 sources, carefully documenting which information comes from each source. 

A complete copy of the "Chronology of Personal Computers" is available in text form by email for US$20. If you would like to purchase a copy for your own personal use, please send me an email requesting my postal mailing address. Your copy will be sent by email upon receipt of payment. Note that this version is not permitted to be copied to others, or displayed on a Web site. 

A list of references used is included at the end of the time. For reasons of size, ease of reading, and protection of my copyright, the references are not included with each event. If you need to know what references provide information for particular events, I will respond to email asking for them. 

I continue to work on this timeline as time permits. Updates to the entire timeline can be purchased for US$5. 

All money received for this project go toward my goal of having this timeline ultimately published as a book. When it is published, you can receive half of your money paid for the text version back upon proof of purchase of the book. 

Thank you for your interest in this timeline. Other timelines I am working on are listed here. 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Last updated: 2002 February 21.	Copyright  1995-2002 Ken Polsson (email: kpolsson@islandnet.com).
URL=http://www.islandnet.com/~kpolsson/comphist/	Link to Ken P's home page. 


