Results 1 to 4 of 4

Thread: Altair 8800 kit first offered for sale [12/19/1974]

  1. #1
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Altair 8800 kit first offered for sale [12/19/1974]

    On this day is history: Altair 8800 kit first offered for sale [12/19/1974]
    Answers.com ^

    The MITS Altair 8800 was a microcomputer design from 1975, based on the Intel 8080A CPU. Sold as a kit through Popular Electronics magazine, the designers intended to sell only a few hundred to hobbyists, and were surprised when they sold over ten times that many in the first month.

    Today the Altair is widely recognized as the spark that led to the personal computer revolution of the next few years: The computer bus designed for the Altair was to become a de facto standard in form of the S-100 bus, and the first programming language for the machine was Microsoft's founding product, Altair BASIC.



    History While serving at the Air Force Weapons Laboratory at Kirtland Air Force base, New Mexico, Ed Roberts and Forrest M. Mims III decided to use their electronics background to produce small kits for model rocket hobbyists. Roberts and Mims, along with Stan Cagle and Robert Zaller, founded Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) in Roberts' garage in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and started selling radio transmitters and instruments for model rockets.


    In 1969 Roberts bought out the others and moved to a larger office, where he manufactured calculator kits for hobbyists. Mims assisted by writing manuals for some of the products in return for kits. In 1972, Texas Instruments developed their own calculator chip and started selling complete calculators at more than half the going rate. MITS was devastated by this, as were many other companies, and Roberts struggled to reduce his quarter-million dollar debt.


    With the release of the first 8-bit microprocessor, the Intel 8008, in 1972, and the more powerful 8080 in 1974, a number of hobbyists started designing microcomputer kits. In July 1974, one such design, Jonathan Titus' well thought-out Mark-8, based on the 8008, was advertised in Radio-Electronics magazine. The design was purely on paper, requiring the builder to track down the parts one at a time, a task that was basically impossible outside of California. Although the Mark-8 was not a success, the editors at Popular Electronics realized that someone was going to be the first to deliver a "real" kit, and decided they wanted to do it. At this point the story becomes somewhat less clear.




    The design Roberts looked for a deal on CPUs, and eventually talked Intel into supplying him with cosmetically blemished 8080's for $75, when they normally sold for $360. In fact the deal wasn't quite as shrewd as Roberts thought at the time; Intel chose the $360 price simply as a play on the famous IBM System/360 mainframe. The name finally decided upon for the computer came from Solomon's 12-year-old daughter, Lauren. She suggested Altair, which was the destination for the Starship Enterprise during an episode of Star Trek that she was watching.


    The first working sample was immediately shipped, by train, to New York. However, it never arrived due to a strike by the shipping company. The first example of this groundbreaking machine is thus lost to history. Solomon had already taken a number of pictures of the machine and wrote the article based on them, while Roberts got to work on building a replacement. Everything came together, and the kit was officially available on December 19, 1974.


    The launch
    Popular Electronics, January 1975The kit was first announced in the January 1975 edition of Popular Electronics. The timing seemed to be just right. The electronics hobbyists were moving on to computers as more and more electronics turned digital, and yet they were frustrated by the low power and flexibility of the few kits that were already on the market. The Altair had enough power to be actually useful, and was designed around an expandable system that opened it up to all sorts of experiments. Roberts needed to sell 200 over the next year to break even, but instead received thousands of orders in the first month, including 200 in one day.


    Within only six months competition arrived in the form of the IMSAI 8080, which included a keyboard, monitor and a floppy disk controller. Roberts was furious, and spent an increasing amount of his time trying to "knock off" these competitors instead of improving the Altair. By 1976 there were a number of much better built machines on the market, and when Roberts started demanding the newly-appearing computer stores sell only Altair machines, they instead turned to the competition and, in a turn of irony, MITS was quickly squeezed out of the market they themselves had created.
    Description In the first design of the Altair, the parts needed to make a complete machine would not fit on a single motherboard, and the machine consisted of four boards stacked on top of each other with stand-offs. Another problem facing Roberts was that the parts needed to make a truly useful computer weren't available, or wouldn't be designed in time for the January launch date.



    So during the construction of the second model, he decided to build most of the machine on removable cards, reducing the motherboard to nothing more than an interconnect between the cards, a backplane. The basic machine consisted of five cards, including the CPU on one and memory on another. He then looked for a cheap source of connectors, and came across a supply of 100-pin edge connectors.


    The rest, as they say, is history, and the S-100 bus was eventually acknowledged by the professional computer community and adopted as the IEEE-696 computer bus standard.


    For all intents, the Altair bus consists of the pins of the Intel 8080 run out onto the backplane. No particular level of thought (or rushed design) went into the design, which led to such disasters as various power lines of differing voltages being located next to each other, leading to easy shorting. Another oddity was that the system included two unidirectional 8-bit data buses, but only a single bidirectional 16-bit address bus. A deal on power supplies led to the use of +8V and +18V, which had to be "pulled down" on the cards to TTL (+5V) or RS-232 (+12V) standard voltage levels.
    The Altair shipped in a two-piece case. The backplane and power supply were mounted on a base plate, along with the front and rear of the box. The "lid" was shaped like a C, forming the top, left and right sides of the box. The face plate, reportedly inspired by the Data General Nova minicomputer, included a number of large toggle switches to feed binary data directly into the memory of the machine, and a number of red LEDs to read those values back out.


    Programming the Altair was an extremely tedious process where one toggled the switches to positions corresponding to an 8080 opcode, then used a special switch to enter the code into the machine's memory, and then repeated this step until all the opcodes of a presumably complete and correct program was in place. When the machine first shipped the switches and lights were the only interface, and all one could do with the machine was make programs to make the lights blink. Nevertheless, many were sold in this form. Roberts was already hard at work on additional cards, including a paper tape reader for storage, additional RAM cards, and a RS-232 interface to connect to a proper terminal.


    Software
    Altair BASIC Main article: Altair BASIC Around this time Roberts received a letter from a Seattle company asking if he would be interested in selling their BASIC programming language for the machine. He called the company and reached a private home, where no one had heard of anything like BASIC. In fact the letter had been sent by Bill Gates and Paul Allen from the Boston area, and they had no BASIC to offer. When they called Roberts to follow up on the letter he expressed his interest, and the two started work on their BASIC interpreter using a self-made simulator for the 8080 on a PDP-10 minicomputer. They figured they had 30 days before someone else beat them to the punch, and once they had a version working on the simulator, Allen flew to Albuquerque to deliver the program, Altair BASIC (aka MITS 4K BASIC), on a paper tape. Miraculously it worked the first time, and Gates soon joined him and formed Microsoft, then spelled "Micro-Soft".
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  2. #2
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: Altair 8800 kit first offered for sale [12/19/1974]

    My first computer was built from some boards and a Motorola 6802 microprocessor, 4096 bytes of memory (4K), and had LEDs to show my input and output, and switches to input the data and read registers in the CPU.

    It was capable of saving programs I had loaded into memory onto a cassette tape, and later, when I figured out how, I could save data I'd create with the computer in a sort of a database, and then put that on tape as well.

    I could control lights and external devices with that computer.

    Later on, I added a circuit board with a BASIC ROM and a bit more memory (I think a total of 16K or something) and a keyboard. Also, at the same time I added a board to output data to a monitor.

    The first monitor I owned was a black and white television that I modified to accept video input from the BASIC rom board so I could see what I typed in and then I could program in BASIC.

    BASIC for anyone that doesn't know, or remember was "Beginners All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code". I learned to program in BASIC, Pascal, 6802, 6502, 8080, 8088 and a few others. I still have that computer, but need to repair a power supply to make it work, and find a monitor I can use on it. lol

    My second computer was an Apple ][+, with 16K of memory, later upped that to 1Meg of Ram on a plug in board, used it for a ram-drive, and four floppies. I ran my first BBS from that system with four floppys and home-brew software, and a 300 baud modem.

    Eventually, AppleVenture became one of the most well-known BBSes on the East Coast, and was used by over 1000 users in it's heyday. The BBS software evolved through several iterations, and eventually I used one called GBBS (written by a fella named Greg, hence the name Gregs bulletin Board Service, or GBBS). That software used something called ACOS (All purpose communications operating system) and was used to access and control the serial boards in the 8 bit Apple computers. It was a compiled BASIC.

    Later in time, I replaced the software that was written by a friend named Joe Schober. It was called EBBS. Joe was a child prodigy back in those days. I was in my 20s and he was about 13 when I met him... already writing in unix code and basic.

    He created the software and sold a few copies around. I helped some with coding but he was the guru, and knew the ins and outs of the system at all levels. So, I helped create the "Starport Hub"...

    Starport was his system. Mine was AppleVenture, and there were several other systems, all of us interconnected via modems. When someone would dial in and send an email to someone, each of our systems would collect the data and later dial back out to deliver messages to other users on other systems. We went through.. I believe the University of Northern Virginia (I think! been a long time) to collect email from then DARPA/ARPA net in those days.

    This was before the INTERNET even existed.

    Somewhere along the way, I bought a 20 Meg external hard drive for the Apple system (which had been highly modified by me to be come an Apple //e which gave me lower case INSTEAD OF ALL UPPER CASE LIKE THE APPLE ][+ WAS ONLY CAPABLE OF USING... LOL) and I hacked the original case to fit the //e keyboard.

    I bought my wife a //c, and wanted to get my hands on a //gs but never did (if anyone wants to send me a Christmas present though, I'd take one working or not)

    Eventually, I moved from DC to Colorado, and reopened AppleVenture ][ BBS with the same machine and users, and they still called from around the country. I picked up more users and went to about 1800 posters. All of them via 9600 baud dial up, with one line. People spent days trying to get in.

    One night... in about 1992... a lightning storm moved through the area, and my back yard took a direct strike, which took out a VCR.. and my Apple //e Serial board. Also my 9600 baud modem was destroyed in the strike.

    That was the last night AppleVenture ][ was on the air... I kept the old phone line for many years until I finally switched over to wireless broadband several years back. I've never looked back.

    I'm still listed on the internet... in an old dial up listing:

    http://www.umich.edu/~archive/apple2...s/bbs.list.txt


    The Library BBS Hershey, PA 717-566-1699
    Software Alive Brooklyn, NY 718-822-7019
    AppleVenture Colorado Springs, CO 719-574-6589
    The Mac Journal BBS Norwich, VT 802-649-3825On that same listing, you will find these guys:


    Data Base II Virginia 703-323-5840
    Starport Falls Church, VA 703-560-9308
    Pro-Novapple Falls Church, VA 703-671-0416
    The Apple PACK Virginia 703-818-0941All of these were friends of mine, and I used to visit them all.

    One guy, I've not been able to get in touch with for years was Ron Gabbert, the original BBS I ever contacted... he ran "The Apple Pack" I believe.

    Well, for what it is worth... some computer memoires....

    Enjoy.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  3. #3
    Super Moderator Aplomb's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    2,322
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts

    Default Re: Altair 8800 kit first offered for sale [12/19/1974]

    I still recall your humble beginnings when you were working on a bike derailer and swapped out the crystals in my walkie talkie for me. I think you had even built yourself a radio around the same time.
    I'm taking America back. Step 1: I'm taking my kids out of the public re-education system. They will no longer have liberal bias and lies like this from bullying teachers when I expect them to be taught reading, writing, and arithmetic:
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.

  4. #4
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: Altair 8800 kit first offered for sale [12/19/1974]

    hahahahahaha
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •