Previous: 1974 / Next: 1976 Intro and links to the other years in the timeline | TECHNOLOGY - In the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics, the cover story describes the Altair 8800, the first successful personal computer. For $395 you can order a kit to build the Altair yourself or you can buy it assembled for $495. The Altair 8800 comes with 256 bytes of computer memory and uses Intel’s 8080 processor.
- Excerpt from the January 1975 Popular Electronicscolumn that introduced the Altair:
“For many years, we’ve been reading and hearing about how computers will one day be a household item. Therefore, we’re especially proud to present in this issue the first commercial type of minicomputer project ever published that’s priced within reach of many households — the Alair 8800….” -
Ed Roberts, the creator of the Altair personal computer, works with Bill Gates and Paul Allen to develop Altair’s first programming language. Their program is a version of the BASIC computer language. The partnership between Gates and Allen is the beginning of the Microsoft company. -
The ARPANET computer network is taken over by the U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency. | | THE MEDIA - French television begins testing its Antiope teletext service. Teletext is a text-only system without the interactivity and graphics of viewdata. The French viewdata system is called Minitel.
- The Manhattan Cable Television service begins using a videotex and teletext Reuters news system. A consumer version of The Reuters Monitor is carried on two New York cable channels.
- The CompuServe dial-up service becomes an independent, publicly held company.
- News Example:
April/May 1975 — The Fall of Saigon, New York Times. | | |
|
Support high-integrity, independent journalism that serves truth and democracy. Make a gift to Poynter today. The Poynter Institute is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, and your gift helps us make good journalism better.
Donate
Only 33% of Americans say the media is ‘completely’ free to report the news, according to a new Pew Research Center survey
The former White House press secretary will take over Tuesdays through Fridays after Rachel Maddow returns to Mondays-only.
Respondents to a University of Florida survey reported facing financial and political pressure in their pursuit of accountability journalism
Bill Owens didn’t name names, but his resignation from the broadcast legend points to bigger problems
A page a day equals a book a year
Back to News