X

Photos: The evolution of the PC

From the PDP-8 and Commodore PET, to the Apple Newton and iPhone
By Nick Heath, Contributor
40152664-1-p1030244.jpg
1 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

From the PDP-8 and Commodore PET, to the Apple Newton and iPhone

It may only be 44-years old but with its myriad switches and a chassis the size of a cupboard, the PDP-8 seems light years away from the modern PC.

But this is the great granddaddy of today's netbooks and smartphones, it was the first computer to be mass produced and sold more than 50,000 - despite costing a princely $18,000 on its introduction in 1965.

The PDP-8 kicks off The National Museum of Computing's PC Gallery, which opens today, where the story of the evolution of the modern PC is told using 50 machines that defined personal computing.

Britain plays a key part in this story of how PCs became cheap, user-friendly and infinitely more powerful, and is well represented by machines from the 1980s - the golden age of computer manufacturing in the UK.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-2-p1030257.jpg
2 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

In 1977 the Commodore PET 2001 arrived with a built-in monochrome monitor, a 1MHz processer and up to 8KB of memory.

It still cost £850 - but the closely set keyboard, was dubbed the "chiclet keyboard" because it resembled the popular US chewing gum.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-3-p1030260.jpg
3 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The RML 380Z was released in 1978 and was the first machine by Oxford-based Research Machines.

Targeted at the education market it sported a 4MHz processor, 4KB of memory and came with a separate keyboard and monochrome monitor. On launch it cost £3,266.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-4-p1030274.jpg
4 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

British company Sinclair Research introduced low cost personal computing to the world with the ZX series of machines.

The Sinclair ZX81 cost just £69 on release in 1981 and was a follow-up to the Sinclair ZX80, which is now extremely rare.

With a 3.25MHz processor and 1KB of memory the ZX81 had a membrane keyboard, could connect to an TV and load programmes from an ordinary tape recorder.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-5-p1030276.jpg
5 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

Widely used in schools across the UK the BBC Micro was a massive success for its Cambridge-based manufacturer Acorn Computers.

Acorn anticipated it would sell 12,000 machines but went on to sell 1.5 million.

Launched in 1981 at a cost of £299, it ran at 2MHz and had up to 128KB of memory.

Lin Jones, project manager at The National Museum of Computing, said the British boom in personal computing during the 1980s, which gave rise to the BBC, Spectrum and Amstrad, had inspired a generation of programmers.

She said: "Today Britain rules the world for computer games programmers and the brains behind it grew up playing games and programming in Basic on these computers."

Acorn went on to produce the Archimedes series of computers and chips developed by its subsidiary ARM are used in many different mobile phone handsets today.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-6-p1030280.jpg
6 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The IBM PC was first introduced in 1981 and went on to be so successful that the term PC became synonymous with IBM compatible hardware.

This IBM model 5150 sported a 4MHz 8088 processor and 64K of memory. In 1984 it cost roughly £4,500.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-7-p1030277.jpg
7 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

This is the Olivetti M20, was based on the Zilog Z8000 16-bit processor and sported a proprietary operating system called the Professional Computer Operating System.

The computer cost $5,400 on its launch in 1982.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-8-p1030258.jpg
8 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The Dragon 32 computer was launched in 1982 by Welsh manufacturer Dragon Data.

Released during the boom years for British home computing it had a 0.89MHz processor and 32KB of memory.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-9-p1030278.jpg
9 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

On its launch in 1983 the Apple Lisa was a high-end system with the first graphical user interface.

The £4,500 machine had a 5MHz processor, support for up to 2MB of memory and a large high resolution display.

The computer was ahead of its time, offering protected memory that would not be found in the Mac OS X operating system until it was released in 2001.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-10-p1030259.jpg
10 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The Oric-1 and Oric Atmos were produced by Cambridgeshire-based Tangerine Computer Systems.

Launched in 1983, the Oric-1 had a 1MHz processor and up to 48KB of memory. Its £129 price tag matched the pricing of models of the competing ZX Spectrum.

The Atmos model added a keyboard with full-sized individual keys and an updated V1.1 ROM.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-11-p1030275.jpg
11 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The low price of the Amstrad CPC 464 combined with its power and flexibility led to more than two million machines being sold, making it one of the most successful computers in Europe.

Processor, keyboard, tape recorder and monitor were all included and it ran a large number of programs.

The 4MHz, 64K memory machine cost about £700 on its launch in 1984.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-12-p1030281.jpg
12 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The original Apple Mac personal computer was the first commercially successful PC to feature a mouse and graphical user interface, rather than the text-based command line.

Launched with the Orwellian 1984 themed ad, directed by Ridley Scott, it cost £1,600 and had a 8MHz processor and up to 128KB of memory.

A strong seller, 72,000 machines were shifted within four months of its launch in January 1984.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-13-p1030296.jpg
13 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

This rather bulky machine is the Osborne 1, the first commercially successful portable personal computer, classed as a "luggable".

Launched in 1981, it was about the same size and weight as a suitcase and cost more than £1,500.

Its use was limited by a built-in 13cm display and single density floppy disk drive.

Despite this the 4MHz 64K machine was popular, shipping 10,000 units each month and spawning a range of imitators at its peak.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-14-p1030311.jpg
14 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The Epson HX20 is considered to be one of the world's first laptop computers.

It included a full keyboard, a four by 20-line display, storage device and rechargeable batteries with a Microsoft Basic operating system.

The machine was used for many years in pharmacies to send orders to wholesalers and can still be found in use today.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-15-p1030308.jpg
15 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

IBM's first laptop computer in 1986 was also the first machine by the company to use 3.5-inch floppy discs.

Sales of the PC Convertible were poor, as it was hampered by a hard to read and oddly shaped LCD screen, did not feature PC serial and parallel ports and was not much faster than the Portable model that it replaced.

The £1,800 machine ran at 4.77MHz and had 256KB of memory.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-16-p1030301.jpg
16 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

Apple packed a lot into its first portable computer the $6,500 Macintosh Portable, launched in 1989, with a 16 MHz processor, 1MB of memory and built-in LCD screen and trackball.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-17-p1030310.jpg
17 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The Apple MessagePad was the first PDA with handwriting recognition.

Despite offering many features of a traditional PC it was not as commercially successful as Apple had planned.

The device was generally known as the Newton and cost more than $1,000.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-18-p1030312.jpg
18 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

The journey finishes with the Apple iPhone, seen here surrounded by the different devices whose functions are packed into the handset.

In the exhibition the iPhone represents today's generation of smartphones that are able to combine touchscreen, handwriting and speech recognition with the functionality of phones, PDAs, games consoles, cameras, TVs, MP3 players, DVD players and sat-nav devices.

The National Museum of Computing's (TNMOC) Jones said: "We have gone full circle from the PDP-8 to the smartphone and netbook, it means that today you have got your email, the internet and everything that you need in your hands."

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

40152664-19-p1030322.jpg
19 of 19 Nick Heath/ZDNET

People can also try their hand at classic games at the exhibition, from Nutcracka on the BBC Micro to The Simpsons on the Amiga.

TNMOC is based at Bletchley Park, home to the World War II Enigma codebreakers, near Milton Keynes.

Photo credit: Nick Heath/silicon.com

Related Galleries

Holiday wallpaper for your phone: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, and winter scenes
Holiday lights in Central Park background

Related Galleries

Holiday wallpaper for your phone: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, and winter scenes

21 Photos
Winter backgrounds for your next virtual meeting
Wooden lodge in pine forest with heavy snow reflection on Lake O'hara at Yoho national park

Related Galleries

Winter backgrounds for your next virtual meeting

21 Photos
Holiday backgrounds for Zoom: Christmas cheer, New Year's Eve, Hanukkah and winter scenes
3D Rendering Christmas interior

Related Galleries

Holiday backgrounds for Zoom: Christmas cheer, New Year's Eve, Hanukkah and winter scenes

21 Photos
Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6: Electric vehicle extravaganza
img-8825

Related Galleries

Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6: Electric vehicle extravaganza

26 Photos
A weekend with Google's Chrome OS Flex
img-9792-2

Related Galleries

A weekend with Google's Chrome OS Flex

22 Photos
Cybersecurity flaws, customer experiences, smartphone losses, and more: ZDNet's research roundup
shutterstock-1024665187.jpg

Related Galleries

Cybersecurity flaws, customer experiences, smartphone losses, and more: ZDNet's research roundup

8 Photos
Inside a fake $20 '16TB external M.2 SSD'
Full of promises!

Related Galleries

Inside a fake $20 '16TB external M.2 SSD'

8 Photos