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2021 BCE
The Game Boy
Name: The game boy
who develop or created it: Gunpei Yokoi
date it was introduced: April 21, 1989
Major features: the dull-green dot-matrix screen with adjustable contrast dial, five buttons, a single speaker with adjustable volume dial
the different models: game boy classic, game boy color, game boy advance, game boy system, game boy micro, game boy pocket, game boy light, game boy color family. -
The pager
Name: The Pager
who developed it: Al Gross
date it was introduced: 1921
Major features: GPRS, GPS, camera, games, compass, accelerometer -
Cassette Tape
Name: Cassette Tape
who developed it: Lou Ottens
date it was introduced: August 30, 1963
Major features: two miniature spools -
Seiko Tv Watch
name: Seiko tv watch
person who developed it : Kintaro Hattori
date it was introduced: 1982
major features: liquid crystal display for the screen as this technology was best for running small images on a lower power consumption. -
Boombox
name: Boombox
who developed it: Philips of the netherlands
date it was introduces: 1966
major features: composed of two or more loudspeakers, an amplifier a radio tuner and a cassette and/or CD player component all housed in a single plastic or metal case with a handle for portability. -
Rotary phone
Name: Rotary phone
Who developed it: Almon Brown Strowger
date it was introduced: 1919
major features: Emergency calling,Recoil spring,Dials within handsets ,Push-button pulse phones. -
Apple Emate 300
Name: Apple Emate 300
who developed it: Apple Newton
date it was introduce: March 7, 1997
major features: designed for the education market, features a 25 MHz ARM 710a processor, 8 MB of ROM, 3 MB of RAM (1MB of DRAM, 2 MB of Flash Memory for user storage), a PCMCIA slot, IrDA-beaming capabilities, and a Newton InterConnect port for multiple connectivity options. -
Palm Pilot
Name: Palm Pilot
who developed it : Jeff Hawkins
date it was introduce: March 10, 1997
major features: elegantly tracked contacts, notes, to-dos and events, all synchronized to your desktop computer using the included cradle. It was a general-purpose computer used for specialized applications, and was small enough to fit in a shirt pocket.