Lowe received a bachelor's degree in physics at
Lafayette College in Pennsylvania in 1962 and joined
IBM as a product test engineer. In 1975, he was named director of development and manufacturing operations for the General Systems Division in
Atlanta,
Georgia. In January 1977, he was appointed director of strategic development for GSD and, later that year, administrative assistant to the division's president. In January 1978, Lowe was named systems manager, Entry Level Systems Division, for GSD in
Boca Raton, Florida, and in November, 1978, lab director for the site. In March 1981, he was appointed a vice president of the Information Systems Division and general manager of the IBM's
Rochester, Minnesota, facility. In 1982, he became vice president for the System Products Division in
White Plains, New York and in 1983 was appointed assistant group executive for the Information Systems and Communications Group. Lowe returned to Entry Systems Division in March 1985 and served as ESD President through 1988. He was elected an IBM vice president in January 1986. In 1973, while an executive in General Systems Division, Lowe was instrumental in fostering an engineering prototype called SCAMP (Special Computer APL Machine Portable) created by Dr. Paul Friedl and a team at the IBM Los Gatos Scientific Center. SCAMP has been dubbed in
PC Magazine as "the world's first personal computer" and this seminal, single-user portable computer now resides in the
Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C. A non-working industrial design model was also created in 1973 illustrating how the SCAMP engineering prototype could be transformed into a usable product design for the marketplace. The engineering prototype and design model were utilized internally by Lowe in his early efforts to demonstrate the viability of creating a single-user computer. Throughout the 1970s he continually demonstrated numerous single-user computer design concepts in an effort to convince IBM to enter the personal computer business. A selection of these early IBM industrial design concepts created in the infancy of personal computing is highlighted in the book
DELETE: A Design History of Computer Vapourware. ==Role in the birth of the IBM PC==