Lot

29

MITS Altair 8800, 1974 The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in

In 134th Specialty Auction»Office Antiques | Scie...

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MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 1 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 2 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 3 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 4 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 5 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 1 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 2 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 3 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 4 of 5
MITS Altair 8800, 1974
The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in - Image 5 of 5
Auctioneer has chosen not to publish the price of this lot
Köln
MITS Altair 8800, 1974 The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in large quantities and is widely considered to be the "first" PC. The "MITS Altair" was built in 1974 by Ed Roberts and became instantly famous by being featured on the cover of "Popular Electronics" magazine in January 1975. Suddenly MITS was flooded with inquiries and orders for its new affordable PC. With the "Altair", Ed Roberts introduced the S-100 bus, predecessor to the ISA, PCI and all the current bus systems used in PCs. By modern standards the computer could not do much: it had no keyboard, no monitor output and no operating system. Data entry was done via DIP switches in binary code since there were LEDs but no monitor output. Bill Gates and Paul Allen provided a higher operating system in the form of "Altair BASIC" – the foundation stone was laid for "Microsoft" and the rest is computer history. The "MITS Altair" was also the first PC to have been copied. The first clone – the "IMSAI 8080" – was even more successful than the original. – The "Altair 8800" offered here is in excellent condition. The basic functions operate, the switches on the front panel work and the LEDs are blinking. The letter K at the end of the serial nummer plate indicates that it was purchased as a "kit" and that it was assembled by its owner. Included are the original "MITS CPU board" and a memory board with 4 KB (kilobytes) of memory. The machine runs on US 110 Volt. – A fascinating exhibition piece of the early computer history! Condition: (2/2) MITS Altair 8800, 1974 Dies war der erste in größeren Stückzahlen angebotene Personal Computer der Welt, und er gilt weithin als "erster" PC. Der MITS Altair wurde 1974 von Ed Roberts gebaut. Bekannt wurde der Rechner, als er im Januar 1975 auf der Titelseite der Zeitschrift "Popular Electronics" vorgestellt wurde. Daraufhin setzte ein Sturm auf den ersten erschwinglichen Personal Computer ein. Ed Roberts erfand mit dem Altair den S-100 Bus – den Vorgänger des ISA, PCI und aller aktuellen Bus-Systeme. Der Rechner konnte für heutige Verhältnisse nicht viel: Er hatte keine Tastatur, keinen Monitor-Ausgang und kein Betriebssystem. Die Eingabe erfolgte via DIP-Schalter, mit denen binär Eingaben gemacht werden konnten. Als Ausgabe gab es nur Leuchtdioden. Ein höheres Betriebssystem für den "Altair" lieferten dann schnell Bill Gates und Paul Allen in Form von "Altair BASIC". Der Grundstein für "Microsoft" war damit gelegt – und der Rest ist Geschichte. Der "MITS Altair" war auch der erste PC der Geschichte, der nachgebaut bzw. kopiert wurde. Die erste und erfolgreiche Kopie war der "IMSAI 8080". – Das angebotene Gerät ist in sehr gutem Zustand, das Frontpanel ist klar lesbar – alle Switches funktionieren. Der Rechner funktioniert, die LEDs blinken. Das Seriennummernschild ist vorhanden – K am Ende bedeutet "Kit": Der Rechner wurde also vom Käufer selbst zusammengebaut. Enthalten ist das Original-"MITS CPU Board" und ein "Memory Board" mit 4 KB (Kilobyte) Hauptspeicher. Der Rechner läuft auf US 110 Volt. – Ein großes Exponat der frühen Computer-Geschichte! Zustand: (2/2)
MITS Altair 8800, 1974 The Altair was the first personal computer in the world to be offered in large quantities and is widely considered to be the "first" PC. The "MITS Altair" was built in 1974 by Ed Roberts and became instantly famous by being featured on the cover of "Popular Electronics" magazine in January 1975. Suddenly MITS was flooded with inquiries and orders for its new affordable PC. With the "Altair", Ed Roberts introduced the S-100 bus, predecessor to the ISA, PCI and all the current bus systems used in PCs. By modern standards the computer could not do much: it had no keyboard, no monitor output and no operating system. Data entry was done via DIP switches in binary code since there were LEDs but no monitor output. Bill Gates and Paul Allen provided a higher operating system in the form of "Altair BASIC" – the foundation stone was laid for "Microsoft" and the rest is computer history. The "MITS Altair" was also the first PC to have been copied. The first clone – the "IMSAI 8080" – was even more successful than the original. – The "Altair 8800" offered here is in excellent condition. The basic functions operate, the switches on the front panel work and the LEDs are blinking. The letter K at the end of the serial nummer plate indicates that it was purchased as a "kit" and that it was assembled by its owner. Included are the original "MITS CPU board" and a memory board with 4 KB (kilobytes) of memory. The machine runs on US 110 Volt. – A fascinating exhibition piece of the early computer history! Condition: (2/2) MITS Altair 8800, 1974 Dies war der erste in größeren Stückzahlen angebotene Personal Computer der Welt, und er gilt weithin als "erster" PC. Der MITS Altair wurde 1974 von Ed Roberts gebaut. Bekannt wurde der Rechner, als er im Januar 1975 auf der Titelseite der Zeitschrift "Popular Electronics" vorgestellt wurde. Daraufhin setzte ein Sturm auf den ersten erschwinglichen Personal Computer ein. Ed Roberts erfand mit dem Altair den S-100 Bus – den Vorgänger des ISA, PCI und aller aktuellen Bus-Systeme. Der Rechner konnte für heutige Verhältnisse nicht viel: Er hatte keine Tastatur, keinen Monitor-Ausgang und kein Betriebssystem. Die Eingabe erfolgte via DIP-Schalter, mit denen binär Eingaben gemacht werden konnten. Als Ausgabe gab es nur Leuchtdioden. Ein höheres Betriebssystem für den "Altair" lieferten dann schnell Bill Gates und Paul Allen in Form von "Altair BASIC". Der Grundstein für "Microsoft" war damit gelegt – und der Rest ist Geschichte. Der "MITS Altair" war auch der erste PC der Geschichte, der nachgebaut bzw. kopiert wurde. Die erste und erfolgreiche Kopie war der "IMSAI 8080". – Das angebotene Gerät ist in sehr gutem Zustand, das Frontpanel ist klar lesbar – alle Switches funktionieren. Der Rechner funktioniert, die LEDs blinken. Das Seriennummernschild ist vorhanden – K am Ende bedeutet "Kit": Der Rechner wurde also vom Käufer selbst zusammengebaut. Enthalten ist das Original-"MITS CPU Board" und ein "Memory Board" mit 4 KB (Kilobyte) Hauptspeicher. Der Rechner läuft auf US 110 Volt. – Ein großes Exponat der frühen Computer-Geschichte! Zustand: (2/2)

134th Specialty Auction»Office Antiques | Science & Technology | Fine Toys & Automata«

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