The IBM PC Celebrates its
25th Birthday
Page posted on 11 August 2006
On the 12th of August 1981 the first ever personal computer - the IBM 5150 - was
announced. It became one of the most important releases in the world of
technology, ever.
With a fraction of the power of today's machines, the 5150 stood proud with an
Intel 8088 processor running at an almighty 4.77MhZ, 16kB (max 640kB) of memory
and loaded with IBM Basic/MS DOS 1.0. Despite not coining the common acronym
"PC", the 5150 defined it as being the standard which complied with IBM's
specifications.
IBM created the 5150 with an "open architecture" which meant other manufacturers
could create machines, after buying a licence for the BIOS from IBM. Other
manufacturers weren't content with paying IBM, so circumvented this licence
charge by reverse engineering the BIOS.
The BBC has produced an article about the 5150, the last 25 years of IBM
computing and what the future holds for the IBM PC.
Link: BBC: 25 Years of the IBM PC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4780963.stm
Twenty five years of the IBM PC
Computer firm IBM made technological history on 12 August 1981 with the
announcement of a personal computer - the IBM 5150.
Costing $1,565, the 5150 had just 16K of memory - scarcely more than a couple of
modest e-mails worth.
The machine was not the first attempt to popularise computing but it soon came
to define the global standard.
It altered the way business was done forever and sparked a revolution in home
computing.
"It's hard to imagine what people used to do with computers in those days
because by modern standards they really couldn't do anything," said Tom Standage,
the Economist magazine's business editor told the World Service's Analysis
programme.
"But there were still things you could do with a computer that you couldn't do
without it like spreadsheets and word processing."
Global impact
Everything from automated spreadsheets to desktop publishing and the rise of the
internet have since become possible.
The term PC had been in use long before IBM released its machine - but the
success of the 5150 led to the use of the term to mean a machine compatible with
IBM's specifications.
The machine was developed by a team of 12 engineers, led by Don Estridge, who
was known as the "father of the IBM PC".
Development took under a year and was achieved by building a machine using "off
the shelf" parts from a variety of manufacturers.
The machine had an "open architecture" which meant other firms could produce
compatible machines. IBM banked on being able to charge a license for using the
BIOS - the software which controls the heart of the machine.
But other companies reverse engineered the BIOS and were able to produce clones
of the machine without having to pay IBM a penny.
That open architecture sparked an explosion in PC sales and also paved the way
for common standards - something business had craved.
Since then the PC has come to dominate the home and the office and led the move
to the online era with cheap global communication, e-commerce and for consumers
the ability to find the answer to almost any question on the web.
Roger Kay, president of computer consultancy firm Endpoint, said the impact of
the PC on all aspects our lives cannot be over-stated.
"I have for example an archive of correspondence from people that I diligently
wrote letters to and all of a sudden that just stops," he said.
"I don't think I've got a personal letter for five years."
Moving this revolution forward are the one billion PCs that are now in use
around the world.
In many ways, the PC has become in the developed world, an essential tool in our
everyday lives.
End of an era?
But for how much longer?
Ray Ozzie, Microsoft's chief software architect, told the firm's shareholders
last month the PC era was coming to an end.
"We're now in a new era, an era in which the internet is at the centre of so
much that we do now with our PCs," he told them.
"And it's important to start then from a different vantage point."
With the lion's share of the Microsoft global software empire founded on the
success of the PC, Mr Ozzie's statement was a significant admission.
Mr Standage said Microsoft has come to recognise that it will inevitably have to
move with the times.
He said: "The problem is that Microsoft has most to lose from the shift towards
internet-based software and that means it has the least incentive to do anything
about it because it likes the status quo.
"But if it doesn't switch to this new model other people will."
PC supremacy
The move towards internet based software calls into question the supremacy of
the PC itself.
Vying to knock the PC off its pedestal are a new generation of media PCs that
hook up to televisions and hand-held computer devices, from phones to pocket
PCs.
With all this small mobile technology and the growth of wireless internet, will
people on the move bother owning a PC at all?
Reports of the PC's demise may be a little premature. While the market may not
be growing anymore, it remains an industry generating some $200bn a year.
In developing countries such as China and Latin America, the PC market is still
expanding at double digit growth rates.
But the development of mobile technology may enable the developing world to
leapfrog the PC era altogether.
Mr Standage said mobile technology is key to sharing the benefits of the PC age
with developing countries.
"I think that adding features to mobile phones is probably a better way to
democratise computing," he said.
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