MicroWAT (C. 1980)
physical object
Identifier
2016.7.3
Description
The MicroWAT was created here at the University of Waterloo to solve a teaching problem: too many students learning to program, and not enough computers.
In the late 1970s, there were plenty of cheap personal computers, such as the Apple II, the Commodore PET, and the Radio shack TRS-80. But computer scientists here felt that these were not powerful enough for "real" programming languages, such as FORTRAN or APL.
The MicroWAT was designed with an advanced Motorola 6809 microprocessor to use the Waterloo micro languagesand to be plugged into a standard "dumb" terminal- essentially a screen and keyboard.
Jerry Krist founded Northern Digital Inc (NDI) to manufacture the MicroWat, but its almost certain than less than one hundred were ever made.