- 1970s in technology
The birth of modern computing was in the 1970s. The world's first general
microprocessor — theIntel 4004 , came out on Nov.1971 . The C programming language was developed early in the decade with theUnix operating system being rewritten into it in1973 . With "large-scale integration" possible forintegrated circuit s (microchips) rudimentarypersonal computer s began to be produced along withpocket calculator s. Notablehome computer s released in North America of the era are the Apple II, theTRS-80 , theCommodore PET , and Atari 400/800 and the NEC PC-8001 in Japan.The availability of affordable personal computers led to the first popular wave of
internetworking with the firstbulletin board system s. In 1976, Cray Research, Inc. introduced the first supercomputer, theCray-1 , which could perform operations at a rate of 240,000,000 calculations per second. Supercomputers designed by Cray continued to dominate the market throughout the 1970s. The 1970s was also the beginning of thevideo game era.Atari established itself as the dominant force in home video gaming, first with its home version of thearcade game "Pong " and later in the decade with theAtari 2600 console (originally called the "VCS", or Video Computer System). By the end of the decade, the scene was set for theGolden Age of Arcade Games .The 1970s were also the start of Fiber Optics. In 1970 Corning glass announced that it had created a glass fiber so clear that it could be used to communicate pulses of light. Soon after, GTE and AT&T began experiments to transmit sound and image data using fiber optics, which transformed the communications industry. In automotive technology, post 1973, saw direction in both the United States and Europe turn away from the large and heavy mainstream automobiles, and towards lightweight, fuel efficient and environmentally conscious vehicles. The
Lotus Esprit was an example of a 1970ssupercar , producing high performance from a small engine. TheVolkswagen Golf GTI of 1974 made the concept of a performancehatchback part of automotive mainstream thinking, though it had many precedents.The United States lagged badly in the development of compact and fuel-efficient vehicles, a side effect of industrial inexperience on the part of the manufacturers in Detroit, and two giants of the industry, GM and
Ford both produced vehicles that fell drastically short of customer desires and economic demands; In the case of GM the Vega and for Ford the Pinto. The most easily recognized and iconic compact cars for the 1970s were theAMC Gremlin and theAMC Pacer produced in the United States by theAmerican Motors Corporation .Automotive historians have also described the period as 'the era of poor quality control', and manufacturers internationally produced vehicles that have now become by-words for poor technological integration. Notably, the 1970s saw the introduction in the automotive field of novel technologies that would begin to mature in the 1990s and 2000s as viable
alternative propulsion sources, such ashybrid vehicles ,Stirling engines , as well as solar-electric and pure-electric vehicles. The integration of the computer and robot, particularly in Japan, saw unprecedented improvements in mass-produced automotive quality. Japanese manufacturers began at this time to make their presence felt in international markets.During the 1970s,
microwave oven s experienced a surge in popularity as price and size decreased rapidly towards the end of the decade. Cassette tapes also continued to surge in popularity after their introduction in the1960s .VHS andBetamax waged a war as the primary recording and video devices beginning in1976 , but by the end of the decade VHS had become the dominant format.
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