Chronology of Events
in the
History of Microcontrollers
1947-1970 The Early Years
Transistors, integrated circuits, programmable memory
1947
-
December
-
Three scientists at Bell Telephone Laboratories, William Shockley, Walter
Brattain, and John Bardeen demonstrate their new invention of the point-contact
transistor amplifier. [185.84] [202.131] [266.9]
1948
-
(month unknown)
-
John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Schockley of Bell Labs file
for a patent on the first transistor. [9]
1952
-
January
-
A complaint is filed against IBM, alleging
monopolistic practices in its computer business, in violation of the Sherman
Act.
-
(month unknown)
-
G. W. Dummer, a radar expert from Britain's Royal Radar Establishment presents
a paper proposing that a solid block of materials be used to connect electronic
components, with no connecting wires. [185.86]
1954
-
May
-
Texas Instruments announces the start of
commercial production on silicon transistors.
1955
-
(month unknown)
-
William Shockley founds Shockley Semiconductor in Palo Alto, California.
[266.xiv] [346.58]
1956
-
January
-
A U.S. District Court makes a final judgement on the complaint against
IBM filed in January 1952 regarding monopolistic
practices. A "consent decree" is signed by IBM,
placing limitations on how IBM conducts
business with respect to "electronic data processing machines".
-
(month unknown)
-
The Nobel Prize in physics is awarded to John Bardeen, Walter Brattain,
and William Shockley for their work on the transistor. [266.xiv]
1957
-
(month unknown)
-
A group of eight engineers leave Shockley Semiconductor to form Fairchild
Semiconductors. [202.160] [266.xiv] (1958 [185.88])
1958
-
(month unknown)
1959
-
July
-
Fairchild Semiconductor files a patent application for the planar process
for manufacturing transistors. The process makes commercial production
of transistors possible and leads to Fairchild's introduction, in two years,
of the first integrated circuit.
-
(month unknown)
1960
-
(month unknown)
-
IBM develops the first automatic mass-production
facility for transistors, in New York.
1961
-
(month unknown)
-
Fairchild Semiconductor releases the first commercial integrated circuit.
[556.9]
1962
-
June
-
Teletype ships its Model 33 keyboard and punched-tape terminal, used for
input and output on many early microcomputers.
-
(month unknown)
-
Ivan Sutherland creates a graphics system called Sketchpad. [30]
1964
-
(month unknown)
-
John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz develop the BASIC programming language at
Dartmouth College. [9] [132] [266.140]
-
(month unknown)
1966
-
May
-
Steven Gray founds the Amateur Computer Society, and begins publishing
the ACS Newsletter. Some consider this to be the birthdate of personal
computing. [208.64]
1967
-
June
-
The first Consumer Electronics Show is held in New York City.
-
(month unknown)
-
IBM builds the first floppy disk.
1968
-
(month unknown)
-
Douglas C. Engelbart, of the Stanford Research Institute, demonstrates
his system of keyboard, keypad, mouse, and windows at the Joint Computer
Conference in San Francisco's Civic Center. He demonstrates use of a word
processor, a hypertext system, and remote collaborative work with colleagues.
[180.42] [185.98]
-
(month unknown)
-
Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore leave Fairchild Semiconductors. [202.160]
[266.xiv] [346.58] [556.9]
-
(month unknown)
-
Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore found Intel
Corporation.
-
(month unknown)
-
Ed Roberts and Forest Mims found Micro Instrumentation Telemetry Systems
(MITS). [266.28] [346.19]
1969
-
May
-
October
-
Engineers from Japan's ETI company meet with Intel
to inspect work on their calculator IC project. They accept the Intel
design for a chip set, and sign an exclusive contract for the chips.
-
(month unknown)
-
(early) Intel receives a request from
Japan's ETI company to develop integrated circuits for a line of calculators.
-
(month unknown)
-
Intel's Marcian (Ted) Hoff designs an
integrated circuit chip that could receive instructions, and perform simple
functions on data. The design becomes the 4004 microprocessor.
-
(month unknown)
-
Intel announces a 1 KB RAM chip, which
has a significantly larger capacity than any previously produced memory
chip.
-
(month unknown)
-
Bill Gates and Paul Allen, calling themselves the "Lakeside Programming
Group" sign an agreement with Computer Center Corporation to report bugs
in PDP-10 software, in exchange for computer time. [346.7]
-
(month unknown)
-
(month unknown)
1970
-
December
-
Gilbert Hyatt files a patent application entitled "Single Chip Integrated
Circuit Computer Architecture", the first basic patent on the microprocessor.
[162] [185.193] [590.5]
-
Information Sciences contacts Bill Gates and Paul Allen, offering them
PDP-10 computer time in exchange for their programming expertise. [346.9]
-
(month unknown)
-
(spring) Work begins at Intel on the
layout of the circuit for what would be the 4004 microprocessor. Federico
Faggin directs the work.
-
(month unknown)
-
Intel creates the first 4004 microprocessor.
-
(month unknown)
-
Intel creates the 1103 chip, the first
generally available DRAM memory chip.
End of 1947-1970 - The Early Years
Continue to 1971-1976 - The Birth of the Microcomputer
Copyright (C) 1995-97 Ken Polsson
internet e-mail: kpolsson@islandnet.com
URL: http://www.islandnet.com/~kpolsson/comphist.htm