

EXTERNAL SSD THUNDERBOLT MACBOOK PRO 2012 TV
But PCs weren't commodities in 1981-buyers of the Model 5150 paid $1,565 for a unit with 16K of RAM, no monitor (you connected a TV set), and no disk drives (it used TRS-80-style cassette tape storage).
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IBM doesn't make low-profit-margin commodity products, which is why it sold its PC business to Lenovo in 2005 after losing nearly a billion dollars on it in the four years preceding. What was the most influential PC in your history? Let us know in the comment section below. Read on to celebrate our shared history and see what else makes the list. Nonetheless, we owe our existence to that first IBM PC, so it's only natural for us to start there. PC Magazine didn't cover 8-bit platforms, which is why you also won't find the Commodore 64 in this list. We also know the IBM PC was no more the first personal computer than ours was the first computer magazine-the MITS Altair 8800 kit reached hobbyists in 1975, with the Apple II narrowly beating the Radio Shack TRS-80 to market in 1977. Yes, we know: The first entry in this list is a cheat, as the IBM PC (released in August 1981) predates our first issue (February/March 1982).

So to commemorate our 40th anniversary, we couldn't resist looking back at the PCs that had the greatest impact-and to be honest, narrowing the list down to a mere 20 was no small feat. In 1982, PC Magazine was born at a crucial time in the history of computing: right as microprocessors were expanding from 8-bit to 16-bit architecture, and as computers were changing from consumer novelties to business essentials.
