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Microcomputer

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The Commodore 64 was one of the most popular microcomputers of its era, and is the best selling home computer of all time.
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The Commodore 64 was one of the most popular microcomputers of its era, and is the best selling home computer of all time.

Although there is no rigid definition, a microcomputer (sometimes shortened to micro) is most often taken to mean a computer with a microprocessor (µP) as its CPU. They come after the Minicomputer, which had no "miniprocessor", instead the mini had many seperate, bulky chips for each task accomplished inside a micro. Another general characteristic of these computers is that they occupy physically small amounts of space.

Definition

Desktop computers, video game consoles, laptop computers, tablet PCs, and many types of handheld devices may all be considered examples of microcomputers according to this technical definition.

The word Microcomputer traces back to the "Big Iron" revolution. It described the first computers that were "personal-scale". They were small enough to fit on a desk (rather than a server room) and cheap enough to be owned by an individual (instead of shared within a corporation, or school). The advent of PCs that could run applications like "VisiCalc" put microcomputers into the workplace, and started displacing the Mini- and Mainframes of the day. Now, personal-scale computing is so common that the "Micro-" part can be left off. Clusters of microcomputers are even stealing the large scale jobs from Mainframes.

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In common usage, "microcomputer" has been largely supplanted by the description "personal computer" (PC) which describes the fact that it has been designed to be used by one person at a time, unlike mainframes and minicomputers.

Description

Most of the equipment used by a microcomputer is tightly integrated within a single case, although some equipment may be connected at short distances outside the case, such as monitors, keyboards, mice, etc. In general, a microcomputer will not get much bigger than can be put onto most tables or desks. By contrast, bigger computers like minicomputers, mainframes, and supercomputers may take up some portion of a large cabinet or even an entire room.

Most microcomputers serve only a single user at a time, but some, in the form of PCs and workstations running e.g. a UNIX(-like) operating system, may cater to several users concurrently. The µP does most of the job of calculating on and manipulating data that all computers do.

Along with the CPU, a microcomputer will come equipped with at least one type of data storage, a very high-speed, volatile device known as RAM. Although some microcomputers (particularly early 8-bit home micros) can perform simple tasks using RAM alone, some form of secondary storage is normally desirable. In the early days of home micros, this may have been something as simple as a cassette deck (in many cases as an external unit). Later, there was a tendency for secondary storage (particularly in the form of floppy and hard disk drives) to be built in to the microcomputer case itself.

Other devices that make up a complete microcomputer system can include its power supply, and various input/output devices used to convey information to and from a human operator (printers, monitors, human interface devices).

History

The world's first commercial microprocessor was the Intel 4004, released on November 15 1971. The 4004 processed 4 binary digits (bits) of data in parallel; in other words, it was a 4-bit processor. At the turn of the century 30 years later, microcomputers in embedded systems (built into home appliances, vehicles, and all sorts of equipment) most often are 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit, or 64-bit. Desktop/consumer microcomputers, like Apple Macintosh and PCs, are predominantly 32-bit but increasingly 64-bit, while most science and engineering workstations and supercomputers as well as database and financial transaction servers are 64-bit (with one or more CPUs).

The of microcomputers, for engineering development and hobbyist personal use, was launched in the mid-1970s; the MITS Altair being the most well-known example. 1977 saw the introduction of the second generation, known as home computers. These were considerably easier to use than their predecessors, whose operation often demanded thorough familiarity with practical electronics. It was the launch of the VisiCalc spreadsheet (initially for the Apple II) that first turned the microcomputer from a hobby for computer enthusiasts into a business tool. After the 1981 release by IBM of their IBM PC, the term Personal Computer became generally used for microcomputers compatible with the IBM PC architecture (PC compatible).

See also

 


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