• Hola,

    No se si ya alguien habia posteado este mismo tema.  confused .. aqui un Top 25 segun la Revista PC WORLD de las mejores PCs de todos los tiempos!.. Estan de acuerdo con esta lista?..

    1- 1977 Apple II
    2- 1986 Compaq Deskpro 386
    3- 1981 Xerox 8010 Information System
    4- 1986 Apple Macintosh Plus
    5- 1992 IBM ThinkPad 700C
    6- 1981 IBM Personal Computer, Model 5150
    7- 1985 Commodore Amiga 1000   ( biglaugh)
    8- 1983 Tandy TRS-80 Model 100
    9- 1982 Columbia Data Products MPC 1600-1
    10-1991 Apple PowerBook 100
    11-1998 Sony VAIO 505GX
    12-1975 MITS Altair 8800
    13-1984 IBM Personal Computer/AT Model 5170
    14-1979 Atari 800
    15-2001 Shuttle SV24 Barebone System
    16-1977 Tandy TRS-80 Model I
    17-1987 Toshiba T1000
    18-1993 Hewlett-Packard OmniBook 300
    19-2002 Apple iMac, second generation
    20-1996 Gateway 2000 Destination
    21-1998 Alienware Area-51
    22-1993 Hewlett-Packard 100LX
    23-1997 Apple eMate 300
    24-2006 Toshiba Qosmio G35-AV650
    25-1982 Non-Linear Systems Kaypro II

     

  • Estas algunas "Menciones Honorificas":

    The 25 Near-Greatest PCs of All Time (1971-1983)

    As we whittled down our picks for The 25 Greatest PCs of All Time, we realized that some machines that didn't make the cut were still worthy of celebration. Some were breakthroughs hobbled by drawbacks, some were obscure pioneers, some were intriguing one-trick ponies--but all are worth remembering. Here they are, in chronological order.

    Kenbak-1 (1971): Arguably the first personal computer--it was sold for $750 via a tiny ad in Scientific American magazine--this hobbyist kit was so ahead of its time that it had to use TTL (Transistor-Transistor Logic) components, instead of the newly invented microprocessor, to crunch binary code.

    R2E Micral N (1973): Developed in France, this system was the first fully assembled, general-purpose computer built around a microprocessor, Intel's 8-bit 8008 chip. And it featured software written by Philippe Kahn, later founder of the Borland software empire.

    Photograph: Courtesy of OldComputers.net

    Commodore PET 2001 (1977): Along with the Apple II and TRS-80 Model 1, this was one of 1977's pioneering trio of PCs aimed at the masses, but its weird calculator-like keyboard and kludgy all-in-one case made it the crudest of the group. PET stood for Personal Electronic Transactor; rumor had it that the name was also a nod to the Pet Rock craze of the 1970s.

    Heathkit H-89 (1979): When do-it-yourselfers wanted to build gadgets in the 1970s, they turned to Heathkit, and this $1800 computer kit made assembling your own color TV passé. It ran either H-DOS or CP/M, included a 90KB floppy disk drive, and was also sold in fully assembled form as the Zenith Z-89.

    Epson HX-20 (1981): The forgotten first laptop, Epson's HX-20 even included a tiny printer in a case that was the same size as the similar, far more popular TRS-80 Model 100.

    Osborne 1 (1981): In 1981 the first "luggable" computer was appealingly portable--all 26 pounds of it--and its array of bundled software made it a bargain. Osborne Computer crumbled when it preannounced a new model and customers stopped buying its old ones--a classic business blunder that's known as "The Osborne Effect" to this day.

    Photograph: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

    Commodore 64 (1982): In 1982 64KB was a heck of a lot of memory for a home PC, and the C64 had it. That advantage helped make it the most popular system of its era--maybe any era--with about 30 million units sold over its 11-year production run.

    Apple Lisa (1983): Call it the proto-Mac: The Lisa sported radical innovations such as a graphical user interface complete with bitmapped fonts, and a mouse. At $10,000 it was more mainstream than the Xerox Star but still too pricey. This model was one of the most important flops ever.

    Compaq Portable (1983): A hugely popular luggable PC, this workhorse put a startup called Compaq on the map--and was the first 100-percent IBM compatible clone.

    IBM PC XT 5160 (1983): IBM's follow-up to the PC was another hit. With its Intel 8086 CPU, it was the first 16-bit personal computer. Unlike the original IBM Personal Computer 5150, which used an 8088 processor for its 16-bit processing and an 8-bit data bus to keep costs down, the XT was 16-bit all the way. And its hard drive, all 10MB of it, helped mass storage go mainstream.

    More Near-Greatest PCs (1984-1989)

    Apple Macintosh (1984): Some people may wonder why the first Mac--the extraordinarily influential system whose development is superbly chronicled at Folklore.org--is on our list of also-rans rather than at the top of our list of the greatest PCs. Blame its placement on its skimpy 128KB RAM, which made it almost unusable. Apple quickly addressed that shortcoming with a 512KB model (the "Fat Mac"), and 1986's Mac Plus (number 4 on our list of the greatest) made the Mac truly usable.

     

  • Still More Near-Greatest PCs (1992-2005)

    GRiD Convertible 2260 (1992): Better in some ways than current Tablet PCs, this well-designed, extremely sturdy portable could work as a clamshell notebook or a tablet.

    SGI Indy (1993): As Unix workstations go, the $5000 Indy was semiaffordable, but it didn't lack for cool features, including a neat pizza-box case, a built-in camera for videoconferencing, and floppies that stored a massive 21MB.

    Canon NoteJet 486 (1994): In 1994 Canon made both printers and notebooks. The NoteJet combined the two, building a surprisingly decent inkjet under the laptop's keyboard. Canon bragged that celebs such as F. Lee Bailey, William F. Buckley, and Peter Max were fans.

    IBM ThinkPad 701C (1995): This subnotebook-like ThinkPad was nicknamed the "Butterfly" because it sported one of the most inventive PC features ever: When you opened it, the keyboard unfolded into a wider size than its small case would otherwise allow for.


    Toshiba Libretto 20 (1996): Toshiba's clever, teeny-tiny notebook had a (barely) touch-typeable keyboard and a pointing device mounted near the LCD screen--and it ran Windows 95, too. Arguably, it's a better ultramobile PC than today's UMPCs.

    Apple iMac (1998): Welcome back, Steve Jobs. The first iMac may not have been a great computer. Its all-in-one design, however, was unique and influential, and it also started the trend toward lollipop-style colors for computer cases. Most important, it marked the Mac brand's return to relevance.

    Apple PowerBook G4, 17-inch model (2003): This 17-inch wide-screen notebook proved that huge was cool, and its classy aluminum case only heightened its appeal.

    Fujitsu LifeBook P1500 (2005): With its touch-sensitive swivel screen and comfortable keyboard, this 2.2-pound featherweight, which runs either Windows XP or Windows XP Tablet Edition, may be the most highly evolved supersmall PC yet.
     
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  • No sabria decirte , por ejemplo en que se basan para armar la lista?. Por qué la Apple II fue lo mejor compu en 1977. Ademas me parece que hay baches, por ejemplo entre 1977 y 1986 no hay nada. Y lo mas importante de todo: por lo que pude ver en esta lista no esta la COMMODORE 64. Asi que para mi la lista no solo esta incompleta sino que ni siquiera la considero lista. Ja ja Ja!!!! Habrase visto irrespetuosos pssssss!!!!!   ;) ;D

     

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