Kutt, a professor of mathematics at
Queen's University in
Kingston, Ontario, during the late 1960s, noted that the efficiency of computer users there was hampered by the long wait times involved in submitting
programs in
punched card form for
batch processing by a shared
mainframe computer. In 1968, Kutt and Donald Pamenter started a firm, Consolidated Computer Inc., and began to produce a data-entry device named
Key-Edit. This was a low-cost terminal, with a one-line
display device, which bypassed the need for
keypunching. In 1971, Kutt, no longer part of CCI, began planning a machine to support software development in the recently developed
programming language APL. APL was best programmed using a custom keyboard and these were very rare at the time. He initially named his design the
Key-Cassette; similar in design and concept to Key-Edit, it would offer editing ability and support for either two
cassette decks or one cassette and an
acoustic coupler to upload programs to other machines. The original design resembled a desktop
electronic calculator. Kutt's notes of the era showed his intent to use the cover and display from an extant calculator with a modified power supply, to include a small keyboard with 32 keys, and a display made of either 13 or 15 segmented
LEDs. Kutt also created a company, Micro Computer Machines, which would later manufacture the devices. ==Development==