During the design of the Altair, the hardware required to make a usable machine was not available in time for the January 1975 launch date. The designer,
Ed Roberts, also had the problem of the backplane taking up too much room. Attempting to avoid these problems, he placed the existing components in a case with additional "slots", so that the missing components could be plugged in later when they became available. The backplane is split into four separate cards, with the
CPU on a fifth. He then looked for an inexpensive source of connectors, and he came across a supply of military surplus 100-pin
edge connectors. The 100-pin bus was created by an unknown draftsman at MITS, who selected the connector from a parts catalog and arbitrarily assigned
signal names to groups of connector pins. A burgeoning industry of "clone" machines followed the introduction of the Altair in 1975. Most of these used the same bus layout as the Altair, creating a new industry standard. These companies were forced to refer to the system as the "Altair bus", and wanted another name in order to avoid referring to their competitor when describing their own system. The "" name, short for "Standard 100", was coined by
Harry Garland and
Roger Melen, co-founders of
Cromemco. While on a flight to attend the Atlantic City PC '76 microcomputer conference in August 1976, they shared the cabin with Bob Marsh and
Lee Felsenstein of
Processor Technology. Melen went over to them to convince them to adopt the same name. He had a beer in his hand and when the plane hit a bump, Melen spilt some of the beer on Marsh. Marsh agreed to use the name, which Melen ascribes to him wanting to get Melen to leave with his beer. The term first appeared in print in a Cromemco advertisement in the November 1976 issue of
Byte magazine. The first symposium on the bus, moderated by
Jim Warren, was held November 20, 1976 at
Diablo Valley College with a panel consisting of
Harry Garland,
George Morrow, and
Lee Felsenstein. Just one year later, the Bus would be described as "the most used busing standard ever developed in the computer industry."
Cromemco was the largest of the manufacturers, followed by
Vector Graphic and
North Star Computers. Other innovators were companies such as
Alpha Microsystems,
IMS Associates, Inc., Godbout Electronics (later
CompuPro), and
Ithaca InterSystems. In May 1984,
Microsystems published a comprehensive product directory listing over 500 "/IEEE-696" products from over 150 companies. The bus signals were simple to create using an 8080 CPU, but increasingly less so when using other processors like the 68000. More board space was occupied by signal conversion logic. Nonetheless by 1984, eleven different processors were hosted on the bus, from the 8-bit Intel 8080 to the 16-bit Zilog
Z-8000. == IEEE-696 Standard ==