Kenbak-1

Kenbak-1

A Kenbak-1 at the Computer History Museum
Developer John Blankenbaker
Manufacturer Kenbak Corporation
Type personal computer
Release date 1971 (1971)
Introductory price US$750
Discontinued 1973 (1973)
Units sold 40
Units shipped 40
Memory 256 bytes of memory

The Kenbak-1 is considered by the Computer History Museum and the American Computer Museum[1] to be the world's first "personal computer",[2] invented by John V. Blankenbaker (1930-) of Kenbak Corporation in 1970, and first sold in early 1971.[3] Only 50 machines were ever built. The system first sold for US$750.[4] Today only 14 machines are believed to exist worldwide,[5] in the hands of various collectors. Production of the Kenbak-1 stopped in 1973[6] as Kenbak failed, and was taken over by CTI Education Products, Inc. CTI rebranded the inventory and renamed it the H5050, though sales remained elusive.[7]

Since the Kenbak-1 was invented before the first microprocessor, the machine didn't have a one-chip CPU but instead was based purely on small-scale integration TTL chips.[8] The 8-bit machine offered 256 bytes of memory,[9] implemented on silicon gate Intel's MOS shift registers of type 1404.[10] The instruction cycle time was 1 microsecond (equivalent to an instruction clock speed of 1 MHz), but actual execution speed averaged below 1000 instructions per second due to architectural constraints such as slow access to serial memory.[8]

To use the machine, one had to program it with a series of buttons and switches, using pure machine code. Output consisted of a series of lights.

See also

References

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20080913191154/http://www.compustory.com:80/Pioneers.html. Archived from the original on September 13, 2008. Retrieved August 5, 2008. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. "Timeline of Computer History". Computer History Museum. Retrieved July 22, 2008.
  3. BBC News, November 6, 2015
  4. "Kenbak-1 The Training Computer". Computerworld. November 17, 1971. p. 43. Retrieved May 25, 2014.
  5. "Kenbak-1". Computer Museum of Nova Scotia. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  6. p. 52, "The First Personal Computer", Popular Mechanics, January 2000.
  7. Robert R Nielsen, Snr (2005). "Inside the Kenbak-1". Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  8. 1 2 Erik Klein. "Kenbak Computer Company Kenbak-1". Old-computers.com. Retrieved May 25, 2014.
  9. Bill Wilson (6 November 2015). "The man who made 'the world's first personal computer'". BBC News.
  10. "Technical".

External links

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