Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Technology 1996: What we had and Hadn't? A list of 50 things

Technology 1996: What we had and Hadn't? A list of 50 things

10 years can really make so much difference! In 1996, no body knew about blogging and there was no social bookmarking site too. Mobile phone was in its infancy and was limited to a small number of countries, at the hands of a small number of rich people. PCs were too slow compared to today with primitive softwares that we don’t use anymore. The list can go for a long time.
After doing some search, I have tried to compile list of the things we had or hadn't in 1996.

Computer hardware
1. PC users did not have even Pentium II in 1996 (Pentium II came in 1997).
2. Celeron processors were a thing of the future.
3. PC market was very small and was mainly limited to some rich countries. So, Intel-AMD dual did not attract that much media attention.
4. To many people, computer was merely a good typing machine.
5. 16 MB RAM was a big deal.
6. 200 MHz P6 was released by Intel and it was a great thing that time.
7. Apple was sinking and few people could predict that Apple would make such a great comeback after few years.
8. CD-RW was announced. DVD was knocking on the door and came in the next year.
9. Palm Pilot hit the market for the consumers- a big milestone for the technology industry.
10. Digital camera was digital but not affordable.
11. Monochrome monitor (display) was the norm for PC. Did you have a color monitor?
12. LCD monitor was like a science fiction.
13. Sub $1,000 computers were emerging as a cool thing.
14. Microsoft launched IntelliMouse in 1996.

Computer Software
1. Java programming language started to catch attention of the technology world as a platform independent language.
2. Windows 95 was considered to be a cool thing. So cool, that 1 million copies were purchased by users in four days.
3. Microsoft's Office 97 was published in December 2006. It was published in a CD ROM but also 'on a set of 45 3½-inch floppy disks'.
4. In 1996, there was no MP3 format. Life was really dull for most PC users.
5. According to Wikipedia, there was no major virus attack in 1996. Strange, isn't it?
6. Macromedia Flash 1.0 was introduced. Would you like to work with it now?
7. Microsoft released DirectX 2.0 in 1996 and it is a milestone in computer gaming industry.
8. Microsoft also released Windows CE.
9. Bill Gates has just been listed by Forbes in 1995 as the richest man in the world. In 1996, he was not a household name like today.


Internet
1. Internet did not exists in many countries in the world.
2. Boradband! What is broadband? I don't know how many people back in 1996 thought that after 10 years they will watch live football matches.
3. Launched in 1995, Amazon.com started to catch attention.
4. Netgear came into existence.
5. Google was born in 1996 but hardly anyone knew about it outside of Stanford.
6. Web page design was like a nightmare in the absence of easy softwares and very few people could do it.
7. Hotmail was launched in 1996.
8. New York Times started its own website. It was a big deal that time as very few newspapers bothered to bear the expense of having a website and publishing their own materials in it.
9. eBay was there in 1996 but did buy or sell anything? Did you even know that it existed?
10. Microsoft launched Internet Explorer 3 on August 1996. In 1996, Microsoft had only 20% of the browser market share.
11. MSNBC was launched jointly by Microsoft and NBC.
14. Imagine a life without blogs.

Computer and Video Games
1. Pokémon was officially released in February 1996. It is one of the most successful games of all time.
2. Nintendo 64 was born and became popular.
3. Have you played FIFA 97 in 1996?
4. "Deep Blue" created media storm by playing with world chess champion Garry Kasparov. Deep Blue lost in 1996 but then won in 1997. I often feel that Deep Blue is neglected in the history of IT.
5. Quake still sends shockwaves in the heart of many gamers.
6. The House of the Dead is still not dead.

Mobile Phone and Wireless Technology
1. Many countries in the world did not have mobile phone.
2. SMS was theoretically there but 99% users did not find it to be useful. In fact, according to one statistics, in 1995 'on average only 0.4 messages per GSM customer per month'.
3. MMS was like a science fiction.
4. WIFI, WIMax- these things existed in the dream of researchers.
5. No Bluetooth technology.
6. Cell phones contained only melody. There was no ring tone industry.
7. Cell phone sets were too heavy and too expensive.

It is a very amateurish attempt from a person who is not a tech expert. However, while searching, I felt that need for such a list. Internet needs to be organized more. For example, I failed to find out much about the history of color monitors.
If you like or dislike the list and want to add something, feel free to do it in the comment section. If you feel that I have not given link to something that I should please let me know and I will happy to acknowledge it.

(I am writing in this blog with the hope that some of my visitors will visit my professional blogs SouthAsiaBiz and IndianRaj and be regular visitor there. So, if you like my writing please pay a visit- if you have the time.)

16 comments:

  1. Anonymous9:18 AM

    I do belive colour monitors were around, or the norm before 1996, I know that in 1993 i had one and it was normal. BUT normal was 13". 15" was either too expensive or not around, and 17" forget about it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous5:13 PM

      Shut up dumb ass nerd

      Delete
  2. Anonymous10:34 AM

    I already had a 15 inch VGA monitor in '96. This was after several other color monitors starting with CGA in the late 80's and EGA in the early 90's. I believe color monitors were not only the norm in '96, but monochrome was actually rare outside of Unix terminals.

    I also had hard disks full of MP3's in `96 and had already started burning them to CD-R's.

    I quick Wikipedia search would have saved some face on these obvious flaws in your list.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous10:35 AM

    Color monitors were VERY common. Monochrome displays were pretty much done by 1992. Macs even stopped being B/W by then.

    Blogs existed. It was called USENET.

    16MB in 1996 was not a big deal, it was the bare minimum. Windows 95 barely worked with that. 32MB was average.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous10:58 AM

    I had a colour monitor in 1996.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous11:04 AM

    Fraunhofer released i3enc in 1994 as the first mp3 encoder, and the .mp3 file extension was made official in 1995.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous12:07 PM

    The fact that Windows 95 was in heavy usage would prove that Color Monitors Existed long before 1996.
    Can you imagine 95 on a monochrome screen?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous2:58 PM

    Yes - while most of this list is right, the colour monitor thing is absolutely wrong. Colour monitors were completely common place in 1996, and even Windows 3.1 was run on colour machines in the vast majority.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous9:07 AM

    I had a 19" supamac colour monitor in ...1984...it wqs powered by a Mac FX that had 4 meg of Ram and a 40 meg hard drive... I had an Agfa 64 greyscale scanner at 800 DPi WOw!!! and a 64 greyscale apple Laser... the whole lot cost me £22,000 then I had to buy software... Good Grief.. I had a computer what did I need software for?

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous8:36 AM

    i was born in 96>.>...... oh ya

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous9:11 AM

    i was born in 96' (:

    ReplyDelete
  11. Anonymous11:07 AM

    mmmkayyyyyyyy gayyyyyyy(:
    jpjp love yall

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous10:47 AM

    Ur gay!

    ReplyDelete
  13. Ólafur Garðar4:18 AM

    just a reminder if you wanna remember what was cool in '95 just watch the awesome flick called Hackers...

    ReplyDelete
  14. im doing a project over a choice of technology that was made in 1996 but i cant seem to find anything interesting. Any technology u would recomend for me?

    ReplyDelete
  15. Anonymous8:11 PM

    MP3's may have been around but it was pretty hard getting them from one PC to the next without a LAN or internet connection (which the majority of people didn't have). And the 386/486 (average pc owner) platform had a difficult time processing them anyway. Furthermore, we had to rely on a 3.5 inch floppy disk which held a mere 1.44MB of data. USB 1.0 was released in '96 but it was useless because there were no devices to fit into it until '98 (USB 1.1) and forget about static memory flash drives. They were only a dream in 1996.

    ReplyDelete