A history of the microcomputer industry in 300 adverts

Microtanic
1st September 1983
If you want flexibility and expandability, then you want the Microtan 65
The Microtan 65 was a single-board computer first built by Tangerine in 1980. Available as either a kit, or ready assembled, Tangerine sold around 10,000 of the 6502-based boards b...

Digital Research
September 1977
CP/M Low-cost microcomputer software
Called at the time a "control program" for microcomputers, hence the initials CP, CP/M had become the de-factor operating system for many microcomputers of the mid 1970s, followin...

TLF
September 1977
TLF Mini 12: Why buy a micro when you can buy a mini for less!
One of the most popular range of minicomputers in the 1970s was DEC's PDP - Programmed Data Processor - series of sometimes room-sized machines (once disk units and printers had b...

Cromemco
April 1977
Cromemco Z-2: Meet the most powerful μC system available for dedicated work
Just a few months after Cromemco's Z-1 Z80-based micro comes the update in the shape of the Z-2. Only there doesn't seem to be that much updated - it still runs the same 4MHz Z8...

Dynabyte
November 1977
Dynabyte builds the Great Memory
Mangling grammar slightly to get in a reference to the Great Pyramids of Giza, and going the extra mile by apparently cutting up one of its memory boards to make an actual pyramid...

Heathkit
September 1977
The Heathkit H11 Digital Computer
This advert, for Heathkit's H11 microcomputer, was part of an extravangant sixteen page spread in September 1977's Byte - The Small Systems Journal magazine. It introduced the c...

Noval
June 1977
If you can imagine it, you can achieve it with the Noval 760
Noval was founded in the summer of 1976 as a spinout of Gremlin Industries, a manufacturer of electronic arcade games. Its stated mission aim was to supply the market with its own ...

Rockwell
December 1980
Rockwell AIM-65: As You Like It!
The AIM-65 - Advanced Interactive Monitor - was a development computer based upon MOS Technology's 6502, and as such it was a bit like an improved MOS/Commodore KIM-1. It was co...

Altos
May 1980
In essence, the best in integrated circuit technology
First released around 1978, Altos is still offering the same machine - the ACS 8000 - in this advert from Altos's exclusive distributors in the UK, Logitek, based in Chorley, Lanc...

Acornsoft
June 1984
The Aviator - One man's flight to save his home town
The image above is a scan of the pre-press version of the advert and is used with permission. © Acornsoft Ltd 1985 This particular advert - which shows a Mark VI Spitfire of the ...

IBM
July 1987
The new IBM Personal System/2. Marry into the future without divorcing the past.
By 1986 IBM was suffering, partly from the rise of the clones of its original IBM 5150 (the "PC"), but also because it had slowed down product releases in the PC market it had cre...

Research Machines
October 1980
What will you do with 12-year-old programmers when he reaches 16?
This is an interesting advert - gender stereotyping aside - in the form of its implied message, from a company that controlled much of the UK Schools' IT hardware market until it ...

Tandon
November 1991
Der Schnellste PC der Welt - Tut's Auch
This advert from German magazine Der Spiegel - which roughly translates as "The fastest PC in the world - that'll do" - continues a frequently-visited meme of microcomputer advert...

Acorn
December 1985
BBC External Services
This advert seems to represent the end of a period of retrenchment for Acorn following a difficult year which had seen it bailed out by Italian company Olivetti back in February. ...

Acorn
August 1989
The Archimedes A3000
The A3000 was an update of the original Archimedes - also known in at least some parts of the press as the ARM, or more simply the Arc - which had been launched in 1987 and which ...