A history of the microcomputer industry in 300 adverts

Toyo Menka
January 1983
You'll never forget your first TMK 300 micro
Unlike the rest of the world then, as this advert appears to be a one-off - and even then it appeared in specialist systems magazine Systems International, rather than a mainstrea...

Hewlett-Packard
January 1983
HP 9000: Today, HP can give you full 32-bit power
At around the same time as HP was dabbling in the mainstream microcomputer market with machines like its HP-86, released in 1982 and which retailed for $2,820, which is about £8,8...

GEC
January 1983
The new GEC 1450 makes building a system child's play.
GEC - or General Electric Company plc - was a large British conglomerate with interests in defence, electronics, communications and engineering. It was founded in 1886, making it ...

Cifer
January 1983
A Graphic Display of Intelligence
Cifer was established in Melksham, Wiltshire in 1972, as a manufacturer of terminals and - later on - microcomputers. According to its advert it became a major supplier in the E...

Cyber Electronics
December 1981
Make friends with Panther... The British micro system
Here's another advert for another fairly generic Z80-based (or possibly Intel 8080) CP/M micro system, from Cyber Electronics Ltd. of Ilford in Essex. Unlike most similar adverts...

Limrose
November 1978
Low cost, expandable Limrose LMC 6800-2
Limrose Electronics was founded in May 1971 by Dr Ravi Raizada as a seller of electronic logic tutors which taught how basic logic gates operated. It went on to release the MTP80...

MOS Technology
September 1975
MOS Technology
The image above is adapted from a Wikimedia public-domain source MOS Technology was founded in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, in 1969 by three former employees of General Instrument...

Scicon
October 1978
The 200 mph micro
Whilst it feels like pretty much every modern car is more computer than motor, the idea of using electronics to manage some or all of a car's engine and performance dates back dec...

RAIR
November 1978
The British Micro: RAIR Black Box Microcomputer
This is probably the first advert to feature RAIR's Black Box - a microcomputer that managed to survive until at least 1983 and which became popular as an OEM machine, cropping up...

Netronics
March 1979
This is the famous ELF II computer
The apparently-famous ELF II from Netronics Research and Development Limited of New Milford, Connecticut, was one of relatively few micros around which used RCA's COSMAC - COmplem...

Acorn
May 1979
Introducing Acorn: A professional MPU card
This is probably Acorn's very first advert - it does indeed say "introducing Acorn" - and appeared just a few months after the company's founding as Cambridge Processor Unit (CPU)...

Triumph-Adler
March 1984
The Alphatronic PC means business
The Alphatronic PC was very much the baby of the Alphatronic family, being a Z80-based 8-bit machine designed and built in Japan to TA's specification, primarily for the home mark...

Zenith Data Systems
December 1991
When you were a child, you didn't like it when the light went out. Are you any different now?
Zenith's notebook micro was based on Intel's CPU of the same name - the 80386SL, which was a variant of the '386 which had been designed specifically for use in portable computers...

Schneider
January 1989
Schneider Computers... Stand out from the crowd!
Alan Sugar sometimes claimed that Amstrad's early success was because it didn't try to crack the European or US market, a move which almost bankrupted Acorn. Eventually though th...

Equinox/Parasitic
October 1986
Our powerful multi-user systems come complete with some new Power Points!
From the days before "Power Point" meant something other than slideshow presentations in tedious meetings on a Friday afternoon, comes this advert from Equinox for its latest mult...