Someone Else’s Computer: The Prehistory of Cloud Computing

Well before Amazon Web Services, there was time-sharing and Tymshare’s Tymnet

3 min read
Photo of the "TYMSHARE" button
Photo: Mark Richards/Computer History Museum

“There is no cloud,” goes the quip. “It’s just someone else’s computer.”

The joke gets at a key feature of cloud computing: Your data and the software to process it reside in a remote data center—perhaps owned by Amazon, Google, or Microsoft—which you share with many users even if it feels like it’s yours alone.

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How Ted Hoff Invented the First Microprocessor

Hoff thought designing 12 custom chips for a calculator was crazy, so he created the Intel 4004

14 min read
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How Ted Hoff Invented the First Microprocessor
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The rays of the rising sun have barely reached the foothills of Silicon Valley, but Marcian E. (Ted) Hoff Jr. is already up to his elbows in electronic parts, digging through stacks of dusty circuit boards. This is the monthly flea market at Foothill College, and he rarely misses it.

Ted Hoff is part of electronics industry legend. While a research manager at Intel Corp., then based in Mountain View, he realized that silicon technology had advanced to the point that, with careful engineering, a complete central processor could fit on a chip. Teaming up with Stanley Mazor and Federico Faggin, he created the first commercial microprocessor, the Intel 4004.

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