Day in Tech History

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I love history. That is why I started Day in Technology History podcast. It's a Daily rundown of events in science, tech and geek news. Find out what was released, in a chronological order. This Podcast is produced 7 days a week, 365 days a year. www.dayintechhistory.com

Jeffrey Powers

Madison, WI

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    • Jan 30, 2020 LATEST EPISODE
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    Latest episodes from Day in Tech History

    January 31, 1984: Apple Reorganizes

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2020 7:08


    1984 – Apple announced they would split up the Cupertino based company into three divisions – Apple II (handling all Apple III computers as well), the Apple 32 division (Lisa, and new Macintosh line of computers) and Accessory Products (Printers, keyboards, etc). Delbert Yocam led the Apple II group which Steve Jobs would take care of […]

    January 30, 2004: Gateway Acquires eMachines

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2020 8:08


    Gateway computer makes a bold move and purchases rival eMachines for 50 million shares of Gateway common stock and $30 million in cash. eMachines was a company founded by Lap Shun Hui along with South Korean companies Korea Data Systems, and TriGem. Their strategy was to put a PC in every house starting at $399. […]

    January 29, 2014: Google Sells Motorola Mobility

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 7:22


    Google owned Motorola Mobility for only 2 years before deciding to sell it off. They chose to sell to Lenovo for $2.91 billion. A major change in the $12.5 billion acquisition they made in 2011. But of course that was after Google striped the company down a little and sold items like their cable modem […]

    January 28, 1984: Tim McVey Day

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2020 8:19


    1984 – One billion points on one quarter. That was the reason for Tim McVey Day. At the Twin Galaxies arcade back on January 17th, Tim scored 1,000,042,270 points on one quarter to the game “Nibbler” – a hybrid Pac-Man and Centipede game. McVey got his name in Computer Games Magazine for it, and so he […]

    January 27, 2006: Western Union discontinued Telegram and Commercial Messaging services

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2020 6:31


    2006– Founded in 1851, Western Union was responsible for getting the important messages from point A to B. Whether through telegram or commercial messaging, Western Union was synonymous with the service. But on January 27, 2006, that all ended. As Western Union wrote: “Effective 2006-01-27, Western Union will discontinue all Telegram and Commercial Messaging services. […]

    January 26, 2006: Grand Theft Auto Lawsuit: Hot Coffee

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2020 7:14


    2006 – Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas was a game that changed perception of the industry. The grit and cruelty of the GTA franchise has not only brought controversy, its also brought the fans. One bit of controversy was the “Hot Coffee” minigame within GTA. Hot Coffee was a euphemism for sex. In the minigame, the […]

    January 25, 1881: The Oriental Telephone Company

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2020 5:53


    1881 –  Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison establish the Oriental Telephone Company of New York and the Angle-Indian Telephone Company Ltd. These companies were licensed to sell telephones in other countries such as Greese, Turkey, India, Japan, China and more. Countries recieving phones would have 3-digit numbers, which changed to 4, 5, then finally 7. […]

    January 24, 1948: IBM Dedicated Poppa in New York City

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2020 10:00


    1948 – At IBM world headquarters, IBM dedicated the Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator (SSEC). The machine – otherwise known as Poppa – was the first computer to combine electronic computation with stored instruction. The 13,500 vacuum tube computer contained 21,000 relays. The 1,800 square foot computer room had a large glass window so the public could […]

    January 23, 1896: The First Public X-Rays

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2020 6:12


    1896 – Although he was not the only person to be working on the technology and not the first X-ray, Wilhelm Roentgen gave the first public lecture and demonstration of his device. He photographed Dr. Albert von Kolliker’s hand at the Wurzburg Physical Medical Society. The first X-ray he ever took was of his wife’s hand (with […]

    January 22, 1998: Microsoft and US Department of Justice

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2020 7:15


    1998 – Microsoft reached an agreement with the US Department of Justice regarding Internet Explorer on Windows 95. In the agreement, computer manufacturers could have the IE link removed. This was a small step in the antitrust suit against Microsoft and using bundled software and drive out competition. The Microsoft antitrust trial would begin on May […]

    January 21, 1981: The First Delorean DMC-12

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2020 6:29


    1981 – While getting this up to 88 miles per hour doesn’t take you back in time, it was still a cool car to have. The First production Delorean DMC-12 was built. A prototype was made back in 1976 and all Deloreans were made in Ireland. 9,000 Deloreans were made before financial issues got to […]

    January 20, 1885: the Gravity Pleasure Switchback Railway Patent

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2020 6:48


    1885 – Sounding like anything but a roller coaster, the Gravity Pleasure Switchback Railway was the first American designed amusement coaster designed by LaMarcus Adna Thompson. Only 5 cents to ride, the Switchback was a simple coaster that took you about 600 feet to the next tower at six miles per hour. It had a height of […]

    January 19, 1983: Apple Lisa is Introduced

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2020 5:18


    Happy Birthday to me. 1983 – at an introductory price of $9995, Apple introduces the Lisa computer – the first computer with a GUI (Graphical User Interface). The computer featured a 5 MHz 68000 microprocessor, 1 MB RAM, 12″ monochrome monitor, dual 5.25″ 860 KB floppy drives, a 5 MB hard drive and more.  Lisa […]

    January 18, 1983: The Franklin Ace 1200 PC

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2020 7:20


    1983 – During the CP/M Show, Franklin Electronic Publichers revealed the Franklin Ace 1200 computer. The main feature of this computer (like the other Franklin computers before) was the fact they copied Apple’s ROM and operating system code. The Ace 1200 came with a Zilog Z80 processor a 1 MHz, 48K RAM, 16K ROM,2 – 5.25 […]

    January 17, 2012: Jerry Yang Resignes from Yahoo!

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2020 5:48


    2012 – Yahoo! had some turbulent times from 2007 when founder Jerry Yang was CEO. Of course the big debacle being the Microsoft bid, which took over 9 months to settle with Carl Icahn being a major instigator. Add to that the 2007 incident of the arrest of Shi Tao and Yahoo’s stance. Tao was arrested for […]

    January 16, 1956: Semi-Automatic Ground Environment – SAGE Disclosed to Public

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2020 8:49


    1956 – The U.S. Semi Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE) was disclosed to the public. SAGE is a computer that connected hundreds of radar stations in the US and Canada as a one-stop monitoring of the sky. SAGE was commissioned and developed by MIT. The project started in 1950 and SAGE became fully operational on June 26, […]

    January 15, 1990: The AT&T Reboot

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2020 8:40


    1990 – AT&T suffers the oddest outage nationwide. A switch in New York crashed, then rebooted. This caused the other switches linked to the New York switch to also reboot. The cascade continued on until all 114 switches were rebooting on 6 second intervals. The continued failure lasted for 9 hours, leaving 60,000 customers without long […]

    January 14, 1973: Live Via Satellite – Elvis Presley!

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2020 4:58


    1973 – Elvis is broadcast via satellite to over 1 billion viewers in over 40 countries. That is, except for the U.S. because Superbowl VII was being played. The U.S. finally got to see the concert on April 4, 1973 on NBC. The show, entitled “Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite”, cost $2.5 million to produce. Presley […]

    January 13, 2000: Steve Ballmer Takes the Microsoft Reins

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2020 5:39


    2000 – Microsoft CEO Bill Gates announces he will be stepping down from his role but remain on the Board and embrace a new role as Chief software architect. Steve Ballmer will take over the CEO role and also remain president. Love him or hate him, Ballmer kept Microsoft running and helped raise annual revenues. Ballmer would […]

    January 12, 1966: Batman on ABC

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2020 5:41


    1966 – Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson entered our lives via ABC on Wednesdays. The television series “Batman” debuted with the episode Hi Diddle Riddle. Each half hour episode contained either part 1 or part 2 of the dynamic duo’s fight against the criminal of the week. Get Batman: The Complete Television Series (Limited Edition) [Blu-ray] […]

    January 11, 2001: Podcasting is Technically Created

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2020 7:20


    2001– Dave Weiner added a new functionality to the RSS feed called “Enclosure“. It was defined as passing any audio file (mp3, wav, ogg, etc), video file (mpg, mp4, avi, mov, etc), PDF, or ePub (electronic publication) into the syndicated feed. Weiner demonstrated by enclosing a Grateful Dead song in his website at Scripting News. […]

    January 10, 1996: TI-83 Graphing Calculator

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2020 8:00


    1996 – Texas Instruments announced it would release the TI-83 and became one of the most popular calculators. The TI-83 had many graphing modes including polar, parametric, sequence and function graphs. It could also run statistics, trigonometry and algebraic functions. The TI-83 was replaced by the 83 Plus in 1999 which added flashable memory for upgrades. […]

    January 9, 2001: Mac OSX, iTunes Media Platform Announced

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2020 6:11


    At MacWorld 2001, Steve Jobs announced Mac OSX – the base OS for Apple for the next couple decades. With Darwin, an open source BSD Unix service, 2D (Quartz), 3D (OpenGL) and Quicktime (QT5). The programming language of Classic, Carbon and Cocoa allowed programs from OS9 to run. Cocoa is an object oriented API for […]

    January 8, 1940: Bell Labs Complex Computer

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2020 7:17


    1940 – a full-scale relay calculator designed by Bell Labs engineer Dr. George Stibitz, becomes operational. The machine was first designed in February 1938, and construction began in April, 1939. Although the device was ready by October, 1939, it didn’t go into operation until this day. The Complex Computer used 400-450 binary relays and initially could […]

    January 7, 1943: Nikola Tesla Passed Away

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2020 9:05


    Born in 1856, Nikola Tesla was the inventor of alternating current. Tesla even worked for Edison from 1882 to 1886. He then started the Tesla Electric Light & Manufacturing company in where he worked more on AC electricity. This started the “War of Currents”, which we talked about on January 3rd when Edison electrocuted Topsy, the […]

    January 6, 2001: Microsoft XBox Unveiled

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2020 8:41


    2001– It was CES where Microsoft unveiled the XBox video game system. The system had a 733 MHz processor, hard drive and 250MHz graphics processor. The console didn’t release until November 15, 2001. XBox was the first American gaming system since the Atari Jaguar, which folded in 1996. XBox live was added to the unit […]

    January 5, 1984: GNU Project Founded

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2020 8:26


    1984 – Richard Stallman quit his job at MIT to begin the writing of GNU software. GNU – a recursive acronym for “Not Unix” and reference to the song “the Gnu” – is an operating system that is compatible with Unix software. Stallman wanted to bring a free software operating system for the masses to use […]

    January 4, 1904: Thomas Edison Electrocutes an Elephant

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2020 9:44


    1904– To show the effects of how dangerous Nikolai Tesla’s Alternating current was, Thomas Alva Edison filmed the electrocution of the elephant, Topsy. This was falsely advertised as the first Elephant to be born in America by the Forepaugh Circus. Topsy was named after a slave girl in the book “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”. Topsy was […]

    January 3, 1977: Apple Computer Corporation is Incorporated

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2020 7:08


    1977 – Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak officially incorporate the Apple Computer Corporation. Mike Makkula jr. invests $250,000 in venture capital and becomes the first chairman of Apple. They also decided to move operations of the company outside of Steve Jobs parent’s garage and rent a building in Coupertino. This was so they could improve production of the […]

    January 2, 1975: Bill Gates and Paul Allen BASIC for MITS

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2020 4:23


    1975 – Bill Gates and Paul Allen write a letter to the Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry System (MITS) stating they have BASIC language for the Intel 8080 processor and would like to incorporate on the Altair computer in exchange for royalty payments. MITS agrees and Micro-soft was born. Later it would become Microsoft. Coleco sells Adam […]

    January 1, 1994: Happy Anniversary Bill and Melinda Gates

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2020 8:49


    Happy New Year! 1994 – It was a 6 year office romance that ended in marriage. Best part – where we hear marriages dissolve, this one has continued on for over 20 years. So we wish Bill and Melinda (French) Gates a happy and joyous wedding anniversary. Since then the couple has been active in world […]

    December 31: Technology Roundup

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2019 11:45


    On this day, we basically crunch numbers. This is where you will see companies let you know how much of their products are out there. How many copies of Windows have been sold, how many PC‘s were bought – how much shareware has been downloaded. These stats will drive how the next year is to […]

    December 30, 2008: Does Facebook Allow Breastfeeding?

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2019 3:46


    2008 – Facebook made an initiative to remove any picture showing breastfeeding. In return, 11,000 women posted pictures in protest. On June 15, 2014, after the #FreeTheNipple campaign brought success, Facebook officially changed their stance on the subject. According to their “Does Facebook Allow Breastfeeding” FAQ page: Yes. We agree that breastfeeding is natural and […]

    December 29, 2004: Commodore Acquired

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2019 4:26


    2004 – Once Commodore dropped from the market in the 80’s, it pretty much started bouncing around the world from company to company. Ultimately it landed in the lap of  KMOS – a Deleware company. However, on this day, Dutch Manufacturer Tulip sells the company to Yeahronimo Media Ventures for about US$32.7 million. Virtual Hydlide

    December 28, 1995: 200 Sites Blocked by Compuserve

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2019 3:57


    1995 – Compuserve blocks access to over 200 sites that have explicit content. They do it to avoid issue with the German Government. The sites would be blocked until Feb 13, 1996 when all but 5 sites were restored. IBM 1420 Bank Transit System is released Windows 7 Beta 1 Nintendo Wii runs Linux

    December 27, 2001: HotJobs Acquired by Yahoo

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2019 5:40


    2001 – Yahoo announces that they will acquire 98.6 percent of the outstanding stock to Sun Microsystems discontinues

    December 26, 2007: Apple Hits $200 a share

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2019 3:57


    2007 – With iTunes just signing a deal with FOX and their content for iTunes, stocks pushed upward to $200 a share. It was the first time Apple hit that barrier, and promptly dropped after. The company has been up and down, and in mid-2008 were at only $90 a share. However, after March 6th, […]

    December 25, 1998: Official Y2K Compliance

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2019 5:49


    1998 – during the last couple years of the 20th century, the race was on to fix an oversight in multiple computer systems. The problem was dubbed “Y2K” or the Millennium bug. Bottom line was that all computers worked on a 2 digit year system instead of 4. Because of this, once the clock rolled, […]

    December 24: Watch out for Werewolves

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 4:28


    An interesting fact: Russian folklore believed that December 24th was the day people could be turned into Werewolves. Any child that is born on December 24th would be considered a werewolf. There are many ways to detect a werewolf – bristles under the tongue was one way to check. Fox-Linux 1.0 Released Verizon awarded $33 million against […]

    December 23, 2008: Santa Claus via Google Earth

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2019 4:14


    2008 – Santa Claus is spotted on Google Earth. Of course the story of St. Nicholas is an interesting one that doesn’t really involve religion. But now we know where he resides, thanks to Google! Of course, watching Santa’s route is big for children, who know they should be going to sleep before he gets […]

    December 22, 1845: the First Euphonium

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2019 5:51


    1845 – Today, we’re travelling to the Geek side of things. It’s not everyday that I get to talk about my other passion – Music. The Euphonium – often mistaken for a Tuba – was created. It was also coined in later years as “P.T. Barnums’ Euphonium. The word itself comes from the Greek word […]

    December 21, 2000: Child Internet Protection Act into Law

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2019 4:56


    2000 – President Bill Clinton signs the Child Internet Protection Act into law. The law is implemented to set rules for the web to expose them to pornography and sexual content. In 2003 the law will be challenged, but will be upheld. COPA required websites with “material harmful to minors”  to restrict their sites access […]

    December 20, 1996: Apple Buys NeXT

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2019 7:27


    1996 – Steve Jobs started Apple. When he left Apple, he started NeXT. When Apple started to fall, Steve Jobs came back. Of course, having 2 computer companies is not a good idea – So why not buy it out?That is what Apple did. In a $400 Million deal, they got a new OS and […]

    December 19, 1974: Do it Yourself Altair Kit

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2019 6:51


    1974 – Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) puts out the first ever “Do it yourself” Altair 8800. You would get it through Popular Mechanics Magazine, then assemble it yourself. This is a turning point in home computer setup. The price for an Altair 8800 kit – $397 – and it included Microsoft Altair BASIC. […]

    December 18, 1926: Photon is Coined

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2019 4:21


    1926 – The term “Photon” is coined. Of course a photon is the basic “unit” of light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation. Newton Lewis is the one who coins the term. HTML 4.0 is published .au goes back to auDA Dan Hesse becomes CEO of Sprint.

    December 17, 1989: First Simpsons Episode

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2019 5:46


    1989 – The first full episode of the Simpsons airs on FOX TV network. 21 years and 1 movie later, the show still continues on strong. The cast stayed pretty much the same since 89. The Simpsons started on FOX as an animated short on the Tracy Ullman Show. It was on that show for […]

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