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NAME  

Kenbak-1

MANUFACTURER  

Kenbak Manufacturing Comapny

TYPE  

Home Computer

ORIGIN  

USA

YEAR  

1971

BUILT IN END OF PRODUCTION 

1973

KEYBOARD  

None. Front panel keys only

CPU  

None - TTL based logic

SPEED  

approx 1 MHz

RAM  

256 bytes of shift-register memory

ROM  

None

TEXT MODES  

None

GRAPHIC MODES  

None

COLORS  

None

SOUND  

None

SIZE / WEIGHT  

49 (W) x 27 (D) x 12 (H) cm / 6.2 kg

I/O PORTS  

None

POWER SUPPLY  

Built-in linear

PERIPHERALS  

None

PRICE  

$750

 

Kenbak-1


The Kenbak-1 is considered by many to be the world's first "Personal Computer." The Computer History Museum granted it this designation when they were still located in Boston in 1986. More specifically, the machine represents the first commercially available Von Neumann (stored program) computing device intended and priced for personal use.

John V. Blankenbaker designed the Kenbak-1 and marketed in the pages of Scientific American in 1971. The machine's name was taken from the middle of John's last name.

The Kenbak-1 was designed in 1970 and


pre-dated microprocessors. The Intel 4004 (the worlds first microprocessor) was introduced in 1971. Instead of being microprocessor based the Kenbak-1 was built almost entirely from TTL components.

Unlike many earlier machines and calculating engines, the Kenbak-1 was a true stored-program computer that offered 256 bytes of memory, a wide variety of operations and a speed equivalent to nearly 1MHz.

Approximately 40 of these machines were built and sold before they were discontinued. The world just wasn't quite ready for personal computing and the Kenbak-1 lacked some critical capabilities (such as expandability and I/O) that were needed to foster the revolution. 14 are currently known to exist with 7 of them located in the Computer Museum of Nova Scotia.

The Kenbak-1 serial # 183 is from the first and only production run of fewer than 50 computers. Since the serial numbers started with 167, this particular machine was the seventeenth in the sequence. During Kenbak's original production run, problems were found with number 183, but never corrected and the machine remained in limbo. When Kenbak Corporation ceased operations, a few completed machines were sold but John Blankenbaker kept the prototype and two production machines, including number 183. Computer was repaired by Mr. Blankenbaker himself around 2010 and is now in fully operational condition.

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