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Revision as of 15:57, 18 October 2018
Digital Equipment Corporation, or DEC, was a large computer company (at one time, the second-largest in the world after IBM). They made minicomputers, their signature product (and the one that led to their success), for a period, the most popular kind of computers in the world. Their product range eventually extended from small mainframes to personal computers.
It was started in 1957, in an old wool mill in Maynard, Massachusetts. The original product line was modules, System Modules. Once those were established, they started producing computers using them.
They reached the peak of their success in the 1980s, with their VAX line. However, they were unable to successfully adapt to the rise of personal computers, which turned computers into commodities, and were bought by Compaq in 1998.
See also
- Category:DEC Hardware
- Category:DEC Architectures
- Category:DEC Buses
- Category:DEC Systems
- Category:DEC Processors
- Category:DEC Memories
- Category:DEC Peripherals
- Category:DEC Storage Controllers
- Category:DEC Disk Drives
- Category:DEC Terminals
- Category:DEC Software
- Category:DEC Operating Systems
Further reading
- Glenn Rifkin, George Harrar, The Ultimate Entrepreneur: The Story of Ken Olsen and Digital Equipment Corporation, Contemporary, Chicago, 1988 - The best general history of DEC, but stops at 1987
- Edgar H. Schein, DEC is Dead, Long Live DEC, Berett-Koehler, San Francisco, 2003
- Clayton M. Christensen, The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail, Harvard Business School, Boston, 1997 - Briefly discusses DEC's inability to adapt to the world with personal computers
- Jamie Parker Pearson,Digital at Work: Snapshots from the First Thirty-Five Years, Digital, Burlington, 1992
- Alan R. Earls, Digital Equipment Corporation (Images of America), Arcadia, Charleston, 2004 - Mostly covers the early years