http://tedium.co/2017/02/14/wang-comput ... %3A+tediumThe minicomputer maker Wang Laboratories ran an ad on the Super Bowl long before Apple did. So why did the company and its minicomputers become a footnote?
We’re Gunning For IBM
- seebart
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- vivalarevolución
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Wild guess without reading the article: they should have made better keyboards for their computers.
- vivalarevolución
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Interesting article, though. I would like to know why Wang is compared to Dell, because Dell still exists and has been able to innovate over the past few years.
- seebart
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No, I don't think that would have helped.
Not sure either, no one said this was great journalism.
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At the time, the second biggest company was DIGITAL(later incorporated by Compaq), anybody has any memory about this company? I doubt it; many companies failed along the way due to all sorts of "flaws"; IBM was founded in 1911 if I remember right, and it's still there, still functioning well, still being innovative, we have to admit IBM does have something that other giants don't.
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I always had the feeling that Wang never really pivoted well to the microcomputer. Importantly, the mindset of "you're selling a commoditized device" aspect.
Just think of those old 725 keyboards... even though they were full-scale into the PC era then, they were still shipping hardware with a distinct "we expect you to use it with our specific integrated package" mindset.
I suppose it was fundamentally a big shift from the calculator/wordprocessor and even minicomputer market, where you were usually selling a package deal, not "does it boot DOS? I'm bringing my own software".
I once saw an early Wang PC clone. -- something like http://home.total.net/hrothgar/museum/W ... index.html -- and it was clear they didn't get the memo everyone in the 1980s PC industry did-- if you're not building something like a luggable/portable/laptop, the right way to make a 5150 clone is to slavishly mimic the appearance, feature set and connectors and slots of the real deal.
Just think of those old 725 keyboards... even though they were full-scale into the PC era then, they were still shipping hardware with a distinct "we expect you to use it with our specific integrated package" mindset.
I suppose it was fundamentally a big shift from the calculator/wordprocessor and even minicomputer market, where you were usually selling a package deal, not "does it boot DOS? I'm bringing my own software".
I once saw an early Wang PC clone. -- something like http://home.total.net/hrothgar/museum/W ... index.html -- and it was clear they didn't get the memo everyone in the 1980s PC industry did-- if you're not building something like a luggable/portable/laptop, the right way to make a 5150 clone is to slavishly mimic the appearance, feature set and connectors and slots of the real deal.
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