jmjohnson says: "If the Apple II made it into the list, I'll vote for the Atari 800 and its successor the Atari 128XL. Neither the Apple nor Commodore 64 had a true OS. Rather they used BASIC and machine language subroutines for everything. The Atari 8-bit used a true operating system (several were available in fact) and introduced several architectural features used in later PCs, including many current models:* banked RAM to grow beyond the 64K the 8-bit processor could directly address. (I had more than 1MB installed), * the use of extra RAM as though it were a disk drive (RAMDrive), * video that dynamically shared addressable RAM, * separately addressable video layers,* polyphonic sound,* multi-tasking (you could program alternate tasks to run during the vertical blank interupt between screen refreshes), * greater mathematical precision than PCs without a separate math co-processor."
Cameras
Camcorders
Cell Phones
Components
Desktops
HDTV
Home Theater
GPS
Laptops
Monitors
MP3 Players
Networking &
Printers
Storage



























