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1969 |
Bell Laboratories programmers Kenneth Thompson
and Dennis Ritchie developed the UNIX operating system on a spare DEC minicomputer. The RS-232-C standard for communication permitted computers and peripheral
devices to transmit information serially -- that is, one bit at a time. |
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1968 |
The Apollo Guidance Computer System made its
debut orbiting the Earth on Apollo 7. |
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1967 |
Seymour Papert designed LOGO as a computer
language for children. |
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1965 |
Digital Equipment Corp. introduced the PDP-8,
the first commercially successful minicomputer. |
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1964 |
Thomas Kurtz and John Kemeny created BASIC, an
easy-to-learn programming language, for their students at Dartmouth College. Online transaction processing made its debut in IBM's SABRE reservation
system, set up for American Airlines. |
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1963 |
Ivan Sutherland published Sketchpad, an
interactive, real time computer drawing system, as his MIT doctoral thesis. ASCII: (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) permitted
machines from different manufacturers to exchange data. |
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1962 |
Virtual memory emerged from a team under the
direction of Tom Kilburn at the University of Manchester. |
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1960 |
Virtual memory emerged from a team under the
direction of Tom Kilburn at the University of Manchester. A team drawn from several computer manufacturers and the Pentagon developed
COBOL, Common Business Oriented Language. |
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