The very first x86, Intel compatible logic board used a Datapoint 1201 chipset not made by Intel. This is the TTL implementation done for the world’s first microcomputer the Datapoint 2200. It has four early production Intel 3101 memory chips that provide an interconnect for simple shift register memory also supplied by Intel in large quantities.
Recently arrived in the lab is a Datapoint CPU board with 6947 date code on four blue memory slots each flanked by an Intel 3101 static memory chip – Intel’s first product from 1969. Fleetwood Mac was just climbing the charts when these babies were made.
Datapoint 1-Bit, Intel Compatible, Rev A. Logic Board
In the first year of Intel’s operation memory chips were a priority over microprocessor design. The 3101 you see in the picture is Intel’s very first product having gotten done eight months after the company’s founding. Intel then contracted with Computer Terminal Corp. to design a microprocessor called the 1201.
Two ex-NASA engineers at Computer Terminal Corp were fresh off a success with their 3300 terminal and wanted something with an “improved control unit” according to their business plan.
Enter Intel and Texas Instruments pitted in a battle to develop the world’s first 8-bit microprocessor. Both built the 1201 CPU for the Texans but in one of the biggest business blunders in history CTC did not secure the rights to the CPU for a mere fifty thousand dollars. They could have easily owned Intel at that point.
Instead the company rushed out our board in the pictures using TTL (transistor to transistor logic). It was actually quite fast. But thanks to the design’s inability to access memory directly through the blue “69” slots we have this stunning gold 3101 four-banger. The first x86 compatible in history.
Intel sent its main salesperson out into the field in the summer of 1971. He reported back that there was some tepid interest in the 1201 which Intel renamed 8008 to fit with the entirely incompatible 4004.
Datapoint technology evolved very quickly going through four major archetecture iterations between 1969 and 1974. 3300 base (3360), Datapoint 1 (1-bit Serial), Datapoint 2 (8-bit Parallel) and 5500 (16-bit). With the exception of 3300, Intel stumbled through these same iterations after a delay in 1976 with i432 (8086 was an emergency replacement).
Intel's CPU voltages continued to be hamstrung by Datapoint's original 15V design creating a major opportunity for ex-Intel designer Faggin to create the Z80, a superior 8-bit design that required only 5V. Zilog rocketed to the top of the 8-bit heap but was quickly at a dead end with the 16-bit Z8000 introduced in 1979.
1973 Revisions, 2200 (H) and 5500 (Sample)
The
2200 and 5500 use the same form factor however the 5500 uses a
16-bit architecture that is incompatible with Intel 8088.
Victor
Poor completed one of the key milestones in computer evolution over Thanksgiving weekend 1969 - 8008 logic on his living room floor!
Datapoint breadboard logic
The
15V leads and proprietary Datapoint connector (3300) tie it to Victor
Poor's early R&D department. The spelling of "Buss" is old school
Navy electrical buss not the more modern spelling referring to a modern
Data "Bus" although it is impossible to tell which engineer did this
unless the handwriting is recognized.