In short
On August 12, 1981, IBM released its first personal computer, marking the company's entry into a market it had previously considered too small to matter. The IBM PC's open design and business focus quickly made it the standard in corporate offices across America. Within a decade, IBM-compatible machines running Microsoft's DOS would dominate personal computing, fundamentally reshaping the entire industry.
How it unfolded.
The five-minute version
What actually happened.
On August 12, 1981, IBM announced the IBM Personal Computer at a press conference at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York. The device, built around Intel's 8088 processor and running Microsoft's MS-DOS operating system, represented Big Blue's first serious foray into personal computing—a market the company had largely dismissed until then. IBM, which had dominated mainframe computing for decades, had watched from the sidelines as Apple II and Commodore PET machines captured hobbyists and small businesses. The IBM PC changed that calculation.
The machine itself was technically conventional for its time. It featured 64 kilobytes of RAM (expandable to 640KB), a 5.25-inch floppy disk drive, and a monochrome display. The processor speed of 4.77 MHz would seem laughable by any subsequent standard. But IBM did something its competitors hadn't: it published the technical specifications and left the architecture open to third-party developers. This decision would prove more consequential than the hardware itself.
Philip Don Estridge led the project from IBM's Entry Systems Division in Boca Raton, Florida, working under a deadline that pushed IBM to outsource critical components rather than build everything in-house. Microsoft provided the operating system; Intel supplied the processor; other vendors filled in peripherals. This distributed approach meant IBM couldn't lock down the market the way it had with mainframes, but it also meant the PC ecosystem could grow rapidly without waiting for IBM's approval.
The price tag was $1,565 for the base model, roughly equivalent to $5,200 in 2024 dollars. Despite the cost, early adopters—particularly in business and financial services—snapped them up. The IBM PC wasn't the first personal computer, and it wasn't the most powerful. But it carried IBM's reputation for reliability and its sales force's ability to reach corporate purchasing departments. Within two years, IBM PCs were appearing across American offices.
The real impact came not from the original machine but from what it enabled. Clone makers like Compaq, Dell, and later countless others could build IBM-compatible machines without designing from scratch. By the late 1980s, the IBM PC architecture—by then known as the x86 standard—had become the dominant platform in personal computing. The company that invented it would eventually cede market leadership to cloners, but the architecture it unleashed still powers most computers today.
Year by year.
Across 3 years, 7 pivotal moments.
Timeline
How it actually unfolded.
IBM greenlight for personal computer project
IBM's Entry Systems Division in Boca Raton, Florida, receives formal approval to develop a personal computer, tasking the team to move faster than IBM's standard development cycle would normally allow.
First IBM PC prototypes completed
The development team, led by Philip Don Estridge, finishes working prototypes of the machine that will become the IBM 5150, incorporating components sourced from external vendors including Intel and Microsoft.
IBM PC announced
IBM formally introduces the Personal Computer (model 5150) at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York, positioned as a professional business machine rather than a consumer or hobbyist device.
Press coverage of IBM PC
Major publications including The New York Times and trade press begin covering IBM's entry into personal computing, signaling the company's shift in market focus.
IBM PC shipping begins
The first units of the IBM Personal Computer begin shipping to early customers, primarily businesses and corporations in major markets.
First significant sales figures reported
IBM reports strong demand for the PC, with orders exceeding initial manufacturing capacity as corporate customers adopt the machine at an unexpected rate.
Compaq releases first IBM PC clone
Compaq Computer Corporation announces the Compaq Portable, a fully compatible IBM PC clone, establishing the beginning of the clone market that would eventually dominate the industry.
At the cinema, on the charts.
While the world watched Raiders of the Lost Ark, Endless Love topped the charts.
The world it landed in
What was on the radio, the screen, and everyone's mind.
Endless Love — Diana Ross & Lionel Richie
Dominated charts in summer of IBM PC launch
Bette Davis Eyes — Kim Carnes
Number one hit during August 1981
Tainted Love — Soft Cell
Synth-pop breakthrough; coincided with PC era emphasis on electronic music production
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Released June 1981; dominated box office same summer as IBM PC launch
Stripes (1981)
Bill Murray comedy, December 1981
For Your Eyes Only (1981)
James Bond film, competing for audience attention in 1981
Dallas
Peak popularity during Season 5; massive ratings in summer 1981
Magnum, P.I.
Debut series in December 1980; rising popularity through 1981
60 Minutes
Established news magazine format; consistently high ratings
Same week, elsewhere
August 1981 sat at the peak of the 1980s analog-to-digital transition. MTV launched a month earlier (August 1, 1981), emphasizing visual culture and emerging music video production. The IBM PC arrived into a cultural moment dominated by Dallas and prime-time television dominance, before cable and computing fragmented attention. Synthesizers and electronic music production were becoming mainstream (Soft Cell, Depeche Mode forming), creating an aesthetic alignment between computing and 1980s pop culture—though few in 1981 imagined that PCs would become the tools for producing that music and video within a decade.
The chain begins —
The chain of consequence.
Impact
What followed.
IBM's August 12, 1981 launch of the Personal Computer, designed by a skunkworks team led by Don Estridge and priced at $1,565, legitimized computing as a consumer product and established the x86 architecture as the dominant standard. Within a decade, IBM clones and compatibles would reshape the entire computer industry, displacing mainframe-centric computing and making microprocessors central to business and home life.
Threads pulled by this event
- 1982
IBM PC Clones Flood Market
Compaq Computer Corporation released the first legal IBM-compatible clone in March 1983 (correction: early 1982 saw pre-release activity), sparking a wave of compatible manufacturers that eroded IBM's hardware margins and established the open architecture as an industry standard.
- 1984
Intel 8086/8088 Dominance
The success of IBM's chosen Intel 8088 processor established Intel as the de facto CPU supplier for business computing, beginning a 40-year trajectory of market leadership that would face challenges only with AMD's emergence.
- 1985
Microsoft DOS Becomes Standard Operating System
Microsoft's MS-DOS, shipped with IBM PCs starting in 1981, became the platform standard by mid-decade. Bill Gates's decision to retain licensing rights (rather than selling exclusively to IBM) allowed him to license DOS to all compatible manufacturers, creating Microsoft's path to dominance.
- 1987
Decline of Proprietary Computer Architectures
By the late 1980s, proprietary systems from Data General, Wang, and Digital Equipment Corporation faced obsolescence as IBM-compatible PCs offered comparable performance at lower cost, accelerating the shift to open-architecture computing.
- 1990
Personal Computer Reaches 50 Million Units Installed Base
Cumulative shipments of IBM PCs and compatibles surpassed 50 million units, cementing the platform's role as the foundation of the emerging personal computing era and establishing x86 as the architecture for consumer and business use.
Where does this story go next?
Where this story continues
The iPhone Launch
January 9, 2007: Steve Jobs unveils the iPhone. The keynote, the lawsuits, the launch lines, the $200 price cut — and how a single product…
Or follow another branch
Apple II Computer Launch
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak unleashed the Apple II in 1977, proving computers belonged in homes, not just corporate bunkers. It was…
A small memory check
Test your memory.
Three quick questions about First IBM Personal Computer Launch. No score, no streak — just a beat to see what stuck.
1.What happened on March 1, 1982?
2.What was the Operating system?
3.What was the Maximum RAM?