Home | Photos | Micro history | RAF 69th | The AJO | Saxon horse | more ▼
nosher.net
  • Home
  • A life in photos
  • A history of the microcomputer industry in 300 adverts

    Acorn,  Acornsoft,  ACT/Apricot,  ACT/Computhink,  Aculab,  Advance,  Advance Memory Systems,  Ai Electronics,  Alpha Micro,  Altos,  Amstrad,  Apple,  Asda,  Atari,  BASF,  BCL,  Bendix,  Bondwell,  British Micro,  Bromcom,  Bywood,  C/WP-Cortex,  CAL,  Cambridge Computer,  Camputers,  Canon,  Casio,  Casu Electronics,  Cifer,  Climax International,  Coleco,  Columbia,  Comart,  Commodore,  Compaq,  Compucolor Corporation,  Compukit,  CompuServe,  Computer Facilities,  COMX,  Corvus,  Cromemco,  Cyber Electronics,  DAI,  Data General,  Dataindustrier/Luxor,  Dell,  Digital,  Digital Group,  Digital Research,  Dragon Data,  Durango,  Dynabyte,  EACA/Genie,  ECD,  Elliott,  Enterprise/Elan,  Epson,  Equinox/Parasitic,  Euro-Calc/Plessey,  Exidy,  Ferranti,  Fortronic,  Fortune,  Franklin,  Fujitsu,  Future,  GEC,  Gemini Micro,  Globe Business Machines,  Goldstar,  Goupil,  Gulfstream/Bytec,  Hayes,  Haywood,  Heathkit,  Hewlett-Packard,  HH,  Hitachi,  Hotel Microsystems,  Iasis,  IBM,  ICL,  Imagine,  IMSAI,  Intel,  Intertec,  IO Research,  Iotec,  ITCS,  Ithaca,  ITT,  Jarogate,  Jupiter Cantab,  Kaypro,  Laskys,  Limrose,  LSI,  Mattel,  Memotech,  Metacomco,  MicroDaSys,  Micromation,  Micronet,  Micronix,  Microsoft,  Microtanic, Midwest Scientific Instruments (MSI),  Miracle Technology,  Mission,  MITS,  Mitsubishi,  Morrow,  MOS Technology,  Multitech,  Namal,  Nascom/Lucas,  NCR,  NEC,  Netronics,  Newbury Laboratories,  Newbury/Grundy,  Newtons Laboratories,  North Star,  Noval,  Novation,  Ohio Scientific,  Olivetti,  Olympia,  Opus,  Orb Micro,  Oric,  Osborne,  Pace,  Panasonic,  Pearcom,  PerSci,  Philips,  Polymorphic,  Portico,  Prism,  Processor Technology,  Psion,  Quantum,  Qume,  RAIR,  Rank Xerox,  RCA,  Research Machines,  Rockwell,  Sanyo,  Schneider,  Scicon,  Seiko,  Semi-Tech/Pied Piper,  Sharp,  Shelton,  Shugart,  Sinclair,  Sirius/Victor,  Smoke Signal,  Sord/CGL,  Soroc,  Space Byte,  Spectravideo,  SWTPC,  Tandata,  Tandon,  Tandy/Radio Shack,  Tangerine,  Tatung,  Tava,  TDI/Sage,  Telcon/Zorba,  TeleVideo,  Texas Instruments,  TLF,  Torch,  Toshiba,  Toyo Menka,  Transam,  Transtec,  Triumph-Adler,  Tulip/Compudata,  Tycom,  U-Micro,  Vector Graphic,  Victor,  VisiCorp,  Wang,  Wells American,  Wicat,  Wren Computers,  Xcalibur,  Yamaha,  Zen,  Zenith Data Systems,  Zilog

  • The Arnewood Jazz Orchestra Archive
  • The RAF Halton 69th Entry Archive
  • The Saxon Horse burial at Eriswell
  • An 1887 history of flint knapping in Brandon
  • Family recipes

A history of the microcomputer industry in 300 adverts

adverts home | a-z index | industry connections | timelines | by year | next 15 adverts | previous 15 adverts

Sinclair advert thumbnail

Sinclair

June 1978

MK14 - the only low-cost keyboard-addressable microcomputer!

This is the second-earliest reference in this collection - and the first to mention an actual computer - to the company that would become Sinclair, which did so much to kick-start...

Nascom/Lucas advert thumbnail

Nascom/Lucas

June 1978

Nascom 1 Microprocessor Z80 kit

Nascom, the computer company which was eventually acquired by car-parts maker Lucas was, for a while, the UK's biggest supplier of computer kits. It was established by Lynx Elec...

Sinclair advert thumbnail

Sinclair

June 1978

The new Sinclair DM235 digital multimeter. 3.5 digits. Under £50!

Sinclair Radionics, the company that was based in St. Ives, Cambridgeshire, was in some financial difficulties during the mid 70s, and was part-nationalised by the National Enterp...

SWTPC advert thumbnail

SWTPC

November 1977

SWTPC announces first dual minifloppy kit under $1,000

South West Technical Products Corp was a company that started out producing project kits, but here is offering a complete Motorola 6800-based system with 4K memory and floppy disk...

Research Machines advert thumbnail

Research Machines

May 1979

The Research Machines' 380Z - A unique tool for research and education

From its launch in 1977 through to mid 1982, Research Machines Limited, often abbreviated to RML or RM, seemed to be selling the same one machine - a Z80-based system called the 3...

Heathkit advert thumbnail

Heathkit

April 1978

A computer can get awfully bored when it can't communicate!

Heathkit was another of those companies better known for its consumer and technical electronics, but which jumped in to the market opened up by the MITS Altair 8800. This advert...

IMSAI advert thumbnail

IMSAI

February 1978

IMSAI introduces the PCS-80/30 Integrated Video Computer

This looks a lot like the "portable" version of the Commodore 64 - the SX-64 - that would appear on the scene some seven years later, and as such was a similar early attempt, like...

SWTPC advert thumbnail

SWTPC

January 1978

Your computer system needn't cost a fortune - SWTPC 6800

South Western Technical Products Corporation started out as a company producing kits of the projects often printed in electronics magazines of the late 60s and 70s, before branchi...

Commodore advert thumbnail

Commodore

December 1985

£79.99 all in: the Commodore Communications Modem

Way before the masses discovered the joys of the Internet (as in after 1995), there existed a vibrant dial-up community using Bulletin Boards and infotext/Viewdata services like P...

Commodore advert thumbnail

Commodore

November 1984

Commodore 64: It's not how much you pay, it's how much you get

In the era of the IBM PC, this Commodore advert compares the price and features of the Commodore 64 and the IBM PCJr. Known by IBM's codename of the "Peanut", the Junior was nev...

Commodore advert thumbnail

Commodore

December 1985

At last, the business PC you can welcome like an old friend

Not to be left out in the stampede for IBM PCs and their compatible ilk (it's four years since the IBM PC launched), comes this offering from Commodore for its version. This par...

Commodore advert thumbnail

Commodore

December 1985

The Commodore 128. When you look at the facts, they do seem to weigh rather heavily in our favour.

The 128 was Commodore's last 8-bit computer and was released in 1985, although news of the 128 started appearing at the end of 1984, with Popular Computing Weekly saying that "Com...

Commodore advert thumbnail

Commodore

December 1985

Buy one of these Commodore peripherals for £199.99 and get a Seiko RC-1000 free!

It's another advert depicting the mid-1980s rage-du-jour of the "wrist terminal", in the form of the Seiko RC-1000 (also seen here). Smart watches or wearables seem to pop up ev...

Seiko advert thumbnail

Seiko

October 1985

The greatest breakthrough in wrist technology since Seiko introduced quartz

Not actually an advert for a computer, per se, but an interesting reflection of what was all the rage at the time: multi-function "James Bond"-style watches. The Seiko RC1000 is...

Commodore advert thumbnail

Commodore

August 1983

The Commodore 64. Under $600

It's another Commodore advert, from August 1983, playing to Jack Tramiel's famous adage "Computers for the masses, not the classes". The origin of this famous quote dates back to...

adverts home | a-z index | industry connections | timelines | by year | next 15 adverts | previous 15 adverts

Feedback: microhistory@nosher.net
© nosher.net 1999-2025