A
personal computer (
PC) is a
computer whose original sales price, size, and capabilities make it useful for individuals.
It is unknown who coined the phrase with the intent of a small affordable computing device but
John W. Mauchly described such a device in a
November 3,
1962 New York Times article entitled "
Pocket Computer may replace Shopping List". Six years later a manufacturer took a risk at referring to their product this way when
Hewlett Packard advertised their "Powerful Computing Genie" as "The New
Hewlett Packard 9100A personal computer"
[1]. This advertisement was too extreme for the target audience and replaced with a much drier ad for the
HP 9100A programmable calculator.
[2] [3] [4]
During the next 7 years the phrase had gained usage so when
Byte magazine, published its first edition it referred to its readers as being in the "personal computing field"
[5] while
Creative Computing defined the personal computer as a "non-(time)shared system containing sufficient processing power and storage capabilities to satisfy the needs of an individual user."
[6] Two years later when the
1977 Trinity of preassembled small computers hit the markets, the
Apple II[7] and the
PET 2001[8] were advertised as 'personal computers' while the
TRS-80 was a
microcomputer used for household tasks including "personal financial management". By 1979 over half a million microcomputers were sold and the youth of the day had a new concept of the personal computer.
[9] The Personal Computer was also the first non-human abstract to be the
Time Magazine Person of the Year.
Personal computers can be categorized by size and portability:
In their early years
personal computer was interchangeable with
microcomputers and
home computers. Often, the term
personal computer is used exclusively for computers running the
Microsoft Windows operating system, but this is erroneous. For example, a
Macintosh running
Mac OS and an
IBM PC compatible running
Linux are both personal computers. This confusion stems from the fact that the term
PC is often used as a shorthand form for
IBM PC compatible and historically Mac OS has run on non-IBM compatible hardware like the
PowerPC architecture. Newer personal computing devices have had their OS wars with WindowsCE struggling with
PalmOS in the
PDA markets and now the
cell phone devices have gotten powerful enough to start a whole new struggle to define the personal computer, its operating system and how we use it in our daily lives.
History
Main article: History of computing hardware (1960s-present)
Mainframes and large minicomputers


Time shared computer terminals connected to central computers, such as the TeleVideo
ASCII character mode smart terminal pictured here, were sometimes used before the advent of the PC.
Before the introduction of the
microprocessor in the early 1970s, computers were generally large, costly systems owned by large corporations, universities, government agencies, and similar-sized institutions. End users often did not directly interact with the machine but instead would prepare tasks for the computer on off-line equipment, such as
card punches. A number of assignments for the computer would be gathered up and processed in
batch mode. After the job had completed, users could collect the results. In some cases it could take hours or days between submitting a job to the computing center and receiving the output.
A more interactive form of computer use developed commercially by the middle 1960s. In a
time-sharing system, multiple
computer terminals let many people share the use of one
mainframe computer processor. This was common in business applications and in science and engineering.
A different model of computer use was foreshadowed by the way in which early, pre-commercial, experimental computers were used, where one user had exclusive use of a processor. Some of the first computers that might be called "personal" were early
minicomputers such as the
LINC and
PDP-8, and later on
VAX and larger minicomputers from
Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC),
Data General,
Prime Computer, and others. By today's standards they were very large (about the size of a refrigerator) and cost prohibitive (typically tens of thousands of
US dollars), and thus were rarely purchased by an individual. However, they were much smaller, less expensive, and generally simpler to operate than many of the mainframe computers of the time. Therefore, they were accessible for individual laboratories and research projects. Minicomputers largely freed these organizations from the
batch processing and bureaucracy of a commercial or university computing center.
In addition, minicomputers were relatively interactive and soon had their own
operating systems. The minicomputer
Xerox Alto (1973) was a landmark step in the development of personal computers, because of its
graphical user interface,
bit-mapped high resolution screen, large internal and external memory storage,
mouse, and special software.
[10] The minicomputer era was an intermediary step from mainframes to personal computer usage.
Computers at home
One early use of the term "personal computer" appeared in a
November 3,
1962,
New York Times article reporting
John W. Mauchly's vision of future computing as detailed at a recent meeting of the
American Institute of Industrial Engineers. Mauchly stated, "There is no reason to suppose the average boy or girl cannot be master of a personal computer.
[11]"
The
minicomputer ancestors of the modern personal computer used early
integrated circuit (microchip) technology, which reduced size and cost, but they contained no
microprocessor. This meant that they were still large and difficult to manufacture just like their
mainframe predecessors. After the "computer-on-a-chip" was commercialized, the cost to manufacture a computer system dropped dramatically. The arithmetic, logic, and control functions that previously occupied several costly
circuit boards were now available in one
integrated circuit, making it possible to produce them in high volume. Concurrently, advances in the development of
solid state memory eliminated the bulky, costly, and power-hungry
magnetic core memory used in prior generations of computers.
There were a few researchers at places such as
SRI and
Xerox PARC who were working on computers that a single person could use and could be connected by fast, versatile networks: not home computers, but personal ones.
A programmable terminal called the
Datapoint 2200 is the earliest known device that bears any significant resemblance to the modern personal computer
[12][13]. It was made by
CTC (now known as Datapoint) in 1970 and was a complete system in a small case bearing the approximate footprint of an
IBM Selectric typewriter. The system's CPU was constructed from a variety of discrete components, although the company had commissioned
Intel to develop a single-chip processing unit; there was a falling out between CTC and Intel, and the chip Intel had developed wasn't used. Intel soon released a modified version of that chip as the
Intel 8008, the world's first 8-bit microprocessor
[14]. The needs and requirements of the Datapoint 2200 therefore determined the nature of the 8008, upon which all successive processors used in IBM-compatible
PCs were based. Additionally, the design of the Datapoint 2200's multi-chip CPU and the final design of the Intel 8008 were so similar that the two are largely software-compatible; therefore, the Datapoint 2200, from a practical perspective, can be regarded as if it were indeed powered by an 8008, which makes it a strong candidate for the title of "first
microcomputer" as well.
Development of the single-chip
microprocessor was an enormous catalyst to the popularization of cheap, easy to use, and truly personal computers. The
Altair 8800, introduced in a
Popular Electronics magazine article in the January 1975 issue, at the time set a new low price point for a computer, bringing computer ownership to an admittedly select market in the 1970s. This was followed by the
IMSAI 8080 computer, with similar abilities and limitations. The Altair and IMSAI were essentially scaled-down minicomputers and were incomplete: to connect a keyboard or screen to them required heavy, expensive "peripherals". These machines both featured a front panel with switches and lights, which communicated with the operator in
binary. To program the machine, one didn't simply power up: one first had to key in the
bootstrap loader program in binary, then read in a paper tape containing a
BASIC interpreter, using a massive paper-tape reader. Keying the loader required setting a bank of eight switches up or down and pressing the "load" button, once for each byte of the program, which was typically hundreds of bytes long. This was before one could begin to do any computing. (At the first
West Coast Computer Faire, a three-year-old girl amused herself by flipping random switches and pressing the Load button, which were at her eye level, then moving on to the next demo. By doing so, she had inserted a random number into the location whose address was in the Program Counter, thus crashing the machine. She was followed by gasps and screams as the vendors discovered that they had to repeat the whole start-up cycle—her parents found her by heading for the commotion. The next Computer Faire banned small children. A Few years later, personal computers lost the switches and lights; thirty years later, they have
memory protection, so that crashing a single program doesn't crash the machine.)
In 1976, the Kooro Manufacturing & Electronics Cooperative in Skopje, Macedonia produced in limited quantities, an all in one (integrated keyboard, monochrome monitor, 8 inch floppy disk drive and 16k of ram) for use by government officials. Similar in appearance to the TRS-80 Model III computer using a proprietary operating system.
[15]
It was arguably the Altair computer that spawned the development of
Apple, as well as
Microsoft which produced and sold the
Altair BASIC programming language interpreter, Microsoft's first product. The second generation of
microcomputers — those that appeared in the late 1970s, sparked by the unexpected demand for the kit computers at the electronic hobbyist clubs, were usually known as
home computers. For business use these systems were less capable and in some ways less versatile than the large business computers of the day. They were designed for fun and educational purposes, not so much for practical use. And although you could use some simple office/productivity applications on them, they were generally used by computer enthusiasts for learning to
program and for running
computer games, for which the personal computers of the period were less suitable and much too expensive. For the more technical hobbyists home computers were also used for electronics interfacing, such as controlling
model railroads, and other general hobbyist pursuits.
The
MOS Technology 6502 series microprocessor lead to a reduction in the expense of creating computing systems. The
Commodore PET, the
TRS 80, and the
Apple II, also known as the
1977 Trinity by
Byte magazine, are often cited as the first personal computers. Specifically, the Commodore PET, which Byte called the first
[16]. The design of the Commodore PET, a single integrated machine with a built in monitor, keyboard, and datasette device, and the operating system of the
Xerox Alto went on to inspire the popular Macintosh computer, by Apple.
A 1978 ad for the Apple II used the wording "Apple, the personal computer". There was no trademark symbol. Three years later, the term "personal computer" was a trademark of IBM, which had decided to invade the
microcomputer market and had done it successfully; a few years later, a judge declared that "personal computer" was no longer an IBM trademark, but a generic term for any personal computer
not made by Apple.
Back to business


A release photo of the original IBM PC (ca. 1981).
It was the launch of the
VisiCalc spreadsheet, initially for the
Apple II (and later for the
Atari 8-bit family,
Commodore PET, and
IBM PC) that turned the microcomputer into a business tool.
In fact, An Apple employee discovered in 1980 that IBM's San Jose research lab had purchased several
Apple IIs, solely to run
VisiCalc.
This was followed by the
August 12 1981 release of the IBM PC, which would revolutionize the computer market. The
Lotus 1-2-3, a combined
spreadsheet (inspired by VisiCalc), presentation graphics, and simple
database application, would become the PC's own
killer application. Good
word processor programs didn't appear for personal computers till 1985. The earlier versions were dominated by
WordStar but were not comparable to standalone word processors or those found on mini-computers.
WordPerfect 4.1 for the
IBM 5150 and
Microsoft Word 1.0 for the
Apple Macintosh both released in 1985 were enough reason to justify the entire cost of purchasing the computers for individual office workers giving these programs the status of
killer applications.
[17]
In the
January 3 1983 issue of
Time magazine, the personal computer was named the "
Person of the Year" for 1982.
Uses
Personal computers are normally operated by one user at a time to perform such general purpose tasks as
word processing,
Internet browsing,
Internet faxing,
e-mail and other digital messaging,
multimedia playback,
computer game play,
computer programming, etc. The user of a modern personal computer may have significant knowledge of the operating environment and application programs, but is not necessarily interested in programming nor even able to write programs for the computer. Therefore, most
software written primarily for personal computers tends to be designed with simplicity of use, or "
user-friendliness" in mind. However, the
software industry continuously provide a wide range of new products for use in personal computers, targeted at both the expert and the non-expert user.
Configuration
This section describes the typical personal computer called a
desktop computer because one can easily look inside the case. The other types of personal computers have the same basic setup, but usually lack the peripherals.
Computer components
A minimal setup of a typical contemporary desktop computer would be
The motherboard connects everything together. The memory card(s), graphics card and processor, are mounted directly onto the motherboard (the processor in a
socket and the memory and graphics cards in
expansion slots). The mass storage is connected to it with cables and can be installed in the computer case or in a separate case. Same for keyboard and mouse, except that they are external and connect to the back plate. The monitor is also connected to the back plate, except not (usually) directly to the motherboard, but to a connector in the graphics card.
- The mass storage can be
- *Hard disk
- *Floppy drive or Zip drive (both with removable media)
- *Optical drive (CD or DVD, removable, usually read-only)
- The operating system (e.g.: Microsoft Windows, Mac OS, Linux or many others) can be located on either of these, but typically it's on one of the hard disks. A live cd is also possible, but it is very slow and is usually used for installation of the OS, demonstrations, or problem solving.
On top of these, a typical computer also has
Common additions, connected on the outside (peripherals), are
Several functions (implemented by
chipsets) can be integrated into the motherboard, such as typically
USB and network, but also graphics and sound. But even if these are present, a separate card can be added if what is available isn't sufficient.
The graphics and sound card can have a break out box to keep the analog parts away from the
electromagnetic radiation inside the computer case. For really large amounts of data, a
tape drive can be used or (extra) hard disks can be put together in an external case.
These components can usually be put together with little knowledge, to build a computer. If something shouldn't go somewhere, it usually doesn't fit (this used to not always be the case in the past) and if it
does fit it can usually do little harm.
Most personal computers are standardized to the point that purchased software is expected to run with little or no customization for the particular computer. Many PCs are also user-upgradeable, especially desktop and workstation class computers. Devices such as main memory, mass storage, even the
motherboard and
central processing unit may be easily replaced by an end user. This upgradeability is, however, not indefinite due to rapid changes in the personal computer industry. A PC that was considered top-of-the-line five or six years prior may be impractical to upgrade due to changes in industry standards. Such a computer usually must be totally replaced once it's no longer suitable for its purpose. This upgrade and replacement cycle is partially related to new releases of the primary mass-market operating system, which tends to drive the acquisition of new hardware and tends to obsolete previously serviceable hardware (see
planned obsolescence).
The
hardware capabilities of personal computers can sometimes be extended by the addition of
expansion cards connected via an expansion
bus. Some standard peripheral buses often used for adding expansion cards in personal computers as of 2005 are
PCI,
AGP (a high-speed PCI bus dedicated to graphics adapters), and
PCI Express. Most personal computers as of 2005 have multiple physical
PCI expansion slots. Many also include an AGP bus and expansion slot or a PCI Express bus and one or more expansion slots, but few PCs contain both buses.
Motherboard
The motherboard (or mainboard) is the primary
circuit board within a personal computer. Many other components connect directly or indirectly to the motherboard. Motherboards usually contain one or more CPUs, supporting circuitry -- usually
integrated circuits (ICs) providing the interface between the
CPU memory and input/output peripheral circuits, main memory, and facilities for initial setup of the computer immediately after being powered on (often called boot
firmware or, in IBM PC compatible computers, a
BIOS). In many portable and embedded personal computers, the motherboard houses nearly all of the PC's core components. Often a motherboard will also contain one or more peripheral buses and physical connectors for expansion purposes. Sometimes a secondary
daughter board is connected with the motherboard to provide further expandability or to satisfy space constraints.
Central processing unit
The central processing unit, or CPU, is that part of a computer which executes software
program instructions. In older computers this circuitry was formerly on several
printed circuit boards, but in PC class machines, has been from the first personal computers, a single integrated circuit. Nearly all PCs contain a type of CPU known as a
microprocessor. The microprocessor often plugs into the motherboard using one of many different types of socket.
IBM PC compatible computers use an
x86-compatible processor, usually made by
Intel,
AMD,
VIA Technologies or
Transmeta. Apple Macintosh computers were initially built with the
Motorola 680x0 family of processors, then switched to the
PowerPC series (a
RISC architecture jointly developed by
IBM,
Motorola, and
Apple Computer), but as of 2006, Apple has switched again, this time to x86 compatible processors.
Main memory
Main article: Primary storage
A PC's main memory (i.e., its 'primary store') is fast storage that is directly accessible by the CPU, and is used to store the currently executing program and immediately needed data. PCs use
semiconductor random access memory (RAM) of various kinds such as
DRAM or
SRAM as their primary storage. Which exact kind depends on cost/performance issues at any particular time. Main memory is much faster than mass storage devices like
hard disks or
optical discs, but is usually
volatile, meaning it does not retain its contents (instructions or data) in the absence of power, and is much more expensive for a given capacity than is most mass storage. Main memory is generally not suitable for long-term or archival data storage.
Mass storage


Internals of a Winchester hard drive with the disks removed.
Mass storage devices store programs and data even when the power is off; they do require power to perform read/write functions during usage. Although semiconductor
flash memory has dropped in cost, the prevailing form of mass storage in personal computers is still the electromechanical
hard disk.
The disk drives use a sealed head/disk assembly (HDA) which was first introduced by IBM's "Winchester" disk system. The use of a sealed assembly allowed the use of positive air pressure to drive out particles from the surface of the disk, which improves reliability.
If the mass storage controller provides for expandability, a PC may also be upgraded by the addition of extra hard disk or
optical disc drives. For example,
DVD-ROMs,
CD-ROMs, and various optical disc recorders may all be added by the user to certain PCs. Standard internal storage device interfaces are
ATA,
Serial ATA,
SCSI, and CF+ Type II in 2005.
Video card
The
video card - otherwise called a graphics card, graphics adapter or video adapter - processes and renders the graphics output from the computer to the
computer display, also called the visual display unit (VDU), and is an essential part of the modern computer. On older models, and today on budget models, graphics circuitry tended to be integrated with the motherboard but, for modern flexible machines, they are supplied in
PCI,
AGP, or
PCI Express format.
When the IBM PC was introduced, many existing personal computers used text-only display adapters and had no graphics capability.
Laptop computers
A laptop computer or simply
laptop, also called a notebook computer or notebook, is a small personal computer designed for mobility. Usually all of the interface hardware needed to operate the laptop, such as
parallel and
serial ports, graphics card, sound channel, etc., are built in to a single unit. Most laptops contain
batteries to facilitate operation without a readily available electrical outlet. In the interest of saving power, weight and space, they usually share RAM with the video channel, slowing their performance compared to an equivalent desktop machine.
One main drawback of the laptop is that, due to the size and configuration of components, relatively little can be done to upgrade the overall computer from its original design. Some devices can be attached externally through ports (including via USB); however internal upgrades are not recommended or in some cases impossible, making the desktop PC more modular.
Personal Supercomputers
Personal Supercomputers (PSCs) are personal computing devices with considerable larger computing power than your typical personal computer. Many PSCs are an array of several processing units.
Read More
List of other non-IBM-PC-compatible business PCs
Pre-IBM-PC personal business computer systems
This is a list of non IBM PC compatible business personal computers (PC), and Personal Workstation (PW) computers, that came on the market
before the IBM-PC (August 1981)
Post-IBM-PC personal business computer systems
This is a list of non IBM PC compatible business personal computers (PC), and Personal Workstation (PW) computers, that came on the market
after the IBM-PC (August 1981).
See also
Notes
1.
^ [1]
2.
^ [2]
3.
^ [3]
4.
^ Origin of the term "personal computer": evidence from the JSTOR electronic journal archive;B.W.; Shapiro, F.R.; Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE Vol.22, Issue 4, October-December 2000 Page(s):70 - 71; Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/MAHC.2000.887997
5.
^ 3rd Column 2nd Paragraph
[4]
6.
^ Personal computers may now prove to be less expensive and more efficient than time-sharing, adapted from
Personal Computers by B. Horn and P. Winston, Datamation, May 1975
[5]
7.
^ [6]
8.
^ [7]
9.
^ "Total share: 30 years of personal computer market share figures", Jeremy Reimer
December 14,
2005
10.
^ Rheingold, H. (2000). Tools for thought: the history and future of mind-expanding technology (New ed.). Cambridge, MA etc.: The MIT Press.
11.
^ "Pocket Computer May Replace Shopping List", New York Times, 1962-11-03.
12.
^ [8]
13.
^ [9]
14.
^ A History of Modern Computing, (MIT Press), pp. 220–21
15.
^ [10]
16.
^ Byte Magazine 1982
17.
^ Haigh, Thomas (2006-June).
Remembering the Office of the Future: The Origins of Word Processing and Office Automation (PDF) 16,25. IEEE Computer Society. Retrieved on 2007-09-13.
18.
^ This means that MS-DOS is ported to this machine, and is using BIOS calls to interface with the hardware, but the architecture of the hardware is completely different. So IBM-PC software that directly writes to (for example) the video screen (which almost all software did) won't work. The differences with the IBM-PC architecture could be huge. Especially the
memory mapping and the video display hardware, but even simple things like the way the keyboard was interfaced to the system could be completely different. See also IBM PC compatible#Compatibility issues.
Further reading
- Accidental Empires: How the boys of Silicon Valley make their millions, battle foreign competition, and still can't get a date, Robert X. Cringely, Addison-Wesley Publishing, (1992), ISBN 0-201-57032-7
External links
computer is a machine which manipulates data according to a list of instructions.
Computers take numerous physical forms. The first devices that resemble modern computers date to the mid-20th century (around 1940 - 1941), although the computer concept and various machines
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John William Mauchly (August 30 1907 – January 8 1980) was an American physicist who, along with J. Presper Eckert, designed ENIAC, the first general purpose electronic digital computer, as well as EDVAC, BINAC and UNIVAC I, the first commercial computer made in the United
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Price USD 1.
..... Click the link for more information. A pocket computer is a small calculator-sized handheld computer programmable in BASIC. This specific category of computers existed primarily in the 1980s. Manufacturers included Sharp, Casio, Tandy/Radio Shack (Selling Casio and Sharp models under their own TRS line), as
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Public (NYSE: HPQ )
Founded Palo Alto, California (1939)
Headquarters Palo Alto, California, USA
Key people Bill Hewlett, Co-founder
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Hewlett-Packard 9100A was the world's first personal computer, first appearing in 1968. HP called it a desktop calculator because, as Bill Hewlett said, "If we had called it a computer, it would have been rejected by our customers' computer gurus because it didn't look like an IBM.
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Hewlett-Packard 9100A was the world's first personal computer, first appearing in 1968. HP called it a desktop calculator because, as Bill Hewlett said, "If we had called it a computer, it would have been rejected by our customers' computer gurus because it didn't look like an IBM.
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Byte magazine was an influential microcomputer magazine in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage. Whereas many magazines from the mid-1980s had been dedicated to the Wintel platform or the Mac, mostly from a business user's
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The PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) was a home-/personal computer produced by Commodore starting in the late 1970s. Although it was not a top seller outside the Canadian, US, and UK educational markets, it was Commodore's first full-featured
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A laptop computer is much smaller than a desktop.
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Microsoft Windows
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Company/developer: Microsoft Corporation
OS family: MS-DOS/9x-based, Windows CE, Windows NT
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Macintosh, commonly known as Mac, is a brand name which covers several lines of personal computers designed, developed, and marketed by Apple Inc. Named after the McIntosh variety of apple, the original Macintosh was released on January 24, 1984.
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