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IBM-PC wasn't the first device to use the acronym "PC". There were many others before that including the IBM themselves. I believe the first actual device marketed as PC was HP's 9100A. HP marketed it as a personal computer actively, and used the acronym "PC" for it.
However the first actual PC was probably according to some guys this device called "SIMON"... http://www.blinkenlights.com/pc.shtml
You're wrong
http://splorp.tumblr.com/post/27789062439/new-sinclair-zx81-persona...
Edited 2012-10-22 00:53 UTC
The term "Personal Computer" was commonly used for home or microcomputers.
In fact my Amstrad CPC 464, Locomotive BASIC + Zilog Z80 CPU, physically had "Personal Computer" branded on it in metallic lettering.
I checked my C=64 (kinda dead, probably its failing PSU killed it a long time ago; but it doesn't take much space in the closet), and it also has "personal computer" on its case.
But the best term was probably Volkscomputer ;> ( http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vic-20-cassette-game-Luftkam... & the box of VC-20 - yes, without "i")
PS. Nicely visible on http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:C64-IMG_5318.jpg (though it seems only the "post-PC" C64C has it, not the original form)
Edited 2012-10-28 04:00 UTC




Member since:
2011-04-11
Well, "PC" was what IBMs original IBM PC was called. It was the first device to use the term. So, home computers with non-IBM PC compatible architecture are not really PCs. They are home computers.