> From: Brent Hilpert >>> Back in 1965 Jack Kilby, Jerry Merryman and James Van Tassel at texas >>> Instruments created an integrated circuit designed to replace the >>> calulator. Historians, though not all, credit this development as the >>> beginning of the electronic-computing revolution that was truly underway >>> by the mid-70s.
>> Scotty, more power to the Reality Distortion Field! > It's not an out-to-lunch suggestion. > The digital pocket calculator was the first mass-market digital electronic > device to be put in the hands of the consumer. It's not clear which element of the original post that Al was referring to; I saw several things I might disagree with: - Unless you look at the date carefully, the notion that TI's work developing chips was intended to replace the calculator. - The notion that it was calculators that drove the development of micros; Intel had actually started work on a micro for Datapoint, which was eventually released as the 8008, _before_ they started on the 4004 for Busicom. I'd have to think long and hard before I rendered a judgement on how important digital pocket calculators were to where we are today. My initial reaction is to say 'not very', though - early personal computers, centered on Silicon Valley, were mostly driven by having, well, a personal computer. It's not clear that widespread ownership of personal calculators did anything to drive that. Noel