The Top 100 PC Tech Innovations of All Time
30. Compaq Portable (1983)
It’s critical for two reasons: In one machine, Compaq invented the PC clone market and the portable computer. Not bad for a company with no track record at all.
29. Adobe Photoshop (1990)
This is the reason everyone looks better in photographs than they do in real life. It’s also reportedly the most pirated application ever.
28. ATX (1995)
Finally evolving the long-standard AT motherboard formfactor, ATX solved some key problems with the AT mobo and case, like its soldered power-supply connectors and archaic connector selection. Want to see how enduring ATX has been ever since? Look inside your PC.
27. AMD Athlon 64 (2003)
Intel’s hegemony of the processor world came to an abrupt, albeit temporary, end in 2003, with this first consumer 64-bit CPU. While Intel retook the performance throne with the Core 2 Duo’s release, A64 features such as an on-die memory controller are still groundbreaking.
26. CD-ROM (1984)
It was a short hop from digital audio to computer data, with software manufacturers finally shipping titles (initially heavy on reference books) on CD instead of floppy. The optical disc format would eventually lead to the floppy’s demise and remains popular today.
25. Half-Life (1998)
The best-selling PC shooter of all time, and for good reason. Half-Life combines groundbreaking graphics with an intriguing storyline, unique among FPSes, and spawned a new generation of immersive first-person games.
24. IBM CGA Card (1981)
The popular Hercules Graphics Card gave you every color you could want, as long as it was green. IBM’s CGA standard upgraded you to 16 glorious colors—profoundly changing our Castle Wolfenstein experience.
23. Cable Modem (1996)
Consumers initially fretted that cable broadband’s “shared” connection would cause prime-time traffic jams, but that never really happened. Cable’s superior throughput and better stability have made it the broadband connection of choice for the digerati, at least for now.
22. DDR SDRAM (2000)
For a while in 2000, it looked like we might be forced to shell out for pricey RDRAM to prevent memory bottlenecks in our PCs. DDR SDRAM saved the day by doubling memory bandwidth at a reasonable price.
21. IBM PC Keyboard (1981)
The IBM 5150 (see #8) isn’t notable for just its innards, it also had one of the most reliable and usable keyboards ever—a loud, mechanical beast that was rated for over 100 million keystrokes... per key.