Workstation
From Computer History Wiki
Revision as of 07:34, 24 March 2021 by Larsbrinkhoff (talk | contribs) (Name some (early, interesting) workstations)
A workstation was a high-end personal computer (physically a desktop, not a laptop), capable of running computationally demanding applications. Almost ubiquitously, they included a bit-mapped display, a mouse, and a data network connection (usually Ethernet). With the increasing power of later personal computers, they faded out as a separate category.
Some workstations
- Apollo, 1980: DN series.
- MIT, 1979: Nu Machine.
- Silicon Graphics, 1984: IRIS 1000.
- Stanford University, 1981: SUN.
- Three Rivers, 1979: PERQ.