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THE WORLD'S MOST ICONIC PCs

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XEROX ALTO

The cabinet-sized Alto may have stretched the definition of “personal computer” (only its portrait screen and keyboard are shown here), but it also defined many of the things we take for granted today. It ran the first GUI-based OS controlled by a mouse, it hosted the first WYSIWYG document system, the first email client, the first network-based games. When Steve Jobs was shown its latest features in 1979, he described it as a “veil being lifted from my eyes”.

APPLE II

Compare and contrast the Apple II with the MITS Altair 8800 below. Only three years separated them, yet the Apple II looked stylish – by contemporary standards, at least – and still included all the expansion slots demanded by the enthusiasts expected to buy it. Plus, astonishingly for the time, it could output in colour! What was a trickle of sales in the Apple II’s first year (a few thousand) soon turned into a flood of millions, helped by the arrival of VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet program, and numerous iterative improvements to the hardware.

COMMODORE PET

A computer so iconic that it can be recognised by its silhouette, the PET was Commodore’s first computer – built to take advantage of the company’s own 6502 processor (also used in the Apple II). At that point Commodore was famous for its calculators and typewriters, and its legendary boss Jack Tramiel took some persuading that new-fangled computers were worth a gamble. But thanks in the main to Chuck Peddle, the chip’s lead designer, Tramiel rolled the dice – and a long line of Commodore computers was born.

MITS ALTAIR 8800

Although it looks more like a prop from a bad 70s sci-fi movie, the Altair 8800 was the first minicomputer kit. It came in various configurations, but the base spec included a 1,024-byte memory board and Intel’s 8080 processor. Fripperies such as keyboard or a

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