Interact Home Computer (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

The Interact Home Computer is a 1978 American home computer made by Interact Electronics Inc of Ann Arbor, Michigan. It sold under the name "Interact Model One Home Computer". The original Interact Model One computer was designed by Rick Barnich and Tim Anderson at 204 E. Washington in Ann Arbor, then moving to the Georgetown Mall on Packard St. in Ann Arbor. Later on the design was sold to a French company, Lambda Systems, and re-branded as the "Victor Lambda" for the French market.

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract The Interact Home Computer is a 1978 American home computer made by Interact Electronics Inc of Ann Arbor, Michigan. It sold under the name "Interact Model One Home Computer". The original Interact Model One computer was designed by Rick Barnich and Tim Anderson at 204 E. Washington in Ann Arbor, then moving to the Georgetown Mall on Packard St. in Ann Arbor. Interact Electronics Inc was a privately held company that was funded by Hongiman, Miller, Swartz and Cohn, a law firm out of Detroit. The President/Founder of Interact Electronics Inc was Ken Lochner, who was one of the original developers of the BASIC language based out of Dartmouth College. Ken had started Interact Electronics Inc after founding the successful computer time-sharing company Cyphernetics in Ann Arbor, which was purchased by ADP in 1975. The Interact Model One Home Computer debuted at the Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago in June 1978, at a price of US$499 (equivalent to $2,100 in 2021). Only a few thousand Interacts were sold before the company went bankrupt. Most were sold by the liquidator Protecto Enterprizes of Barrington, Illinois, through mail order sales. It was also sold at Highland Appliance in the Detroit area, Newman Computer Exchange in Ann Arbor, and Montgomery Wards in the Houston, TX, area. Probably the most successful application available for the Interact was a program called "Message Center". With it, a store could program a scrolling message which appeared on a TV screen (such as advertisements, or a welcome message to guests). Although it was mostly a game machine (with games such as Showdown, Blackjack and Chess), users could also create their own programs using the BASIC computer language. Customers began hooking up the Interact to control everything from lights in their house, doors, windows, smoke detectors, to a Chevrolet Corvette. Later on the design was sold to a French company, Lambda Systems, and re-branded as the "Victor Lambda" for the French market. (en)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Interact_One_-_computer.jpg?width=300
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink https://www.old-computers.com/MUSEUM/computer.asp%3Fc=1004 https://web.archive.org/web/20180802032743/https:/interactfamilycomputer.com/
dbo:wikiPageID 30214079 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 3449 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1122148633 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Barrington,_Illinois dbr:Blackjack dbr:Joystick dbr:Cyphernetics dbr:Montgomery_Ward dbr:Ann_Arbor,_Michigan dbr:Computer_liquidator dbr:Mail_order dbr:BASIC dbr:Hector_(microcomputer) dbr:ADP_(company) dbr:Dartmouth_College dbr:France dbr:Power_supply dbr:Bankrupt dbr:AC_transformer dbc:Home_computers dbr:Chess dbr:Home_computer dbc:Computer-related_introductions_in_1978 dbr:Intel dbr:Octave dbr:Random-access_memory dbr:CPU dbr:MHz dbr:Time-sharing dbr:I8080 dbr:SN76477 dbr:Cassette_recorder dbr:Chicklet_keyboard dbr:File:Interact_One_-_computer.JPG
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Cn dbt:Inflation dbt:More_citations_needed dbt:USD dbt:Inflation/fn dbt:Compu-stub
dct:subject dbc:Home_computers dbc:Computer-related_introductions_in_1978
rdf:type yago:Artifact100021939 yago:Computer103082979 yago:Device103183080 yago:HomeComputer103528523 yago:Instrumentality103575240 yago:Machine103699975 yago:Object100002684 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:WikicatHomeComputers yago:Whole100003553
rdfs:comment The Interact Home Computer is a 1978 American home computer made by Interact Electronics Inc of Ann Arbor, Michigan. It sold under the name "Interact Model One Home Computer". The original Interact Model One computer was designed by Rick Barnich and Tim Anderson at 204 E. Washington in Ann Arbor, then moving to the Georgetown Mall on Packard St. in Ann Arbor. Later on the design was sold to a French company, Lambda Systems, and re-branded as the "Victor Lambda" for the French market. (en)
rdfs:label Interact Home Computer (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Interact Home Computer yago-res:Interact Home Computer wikidata:Interact Home Computer https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4nnWr
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Interact_Home_Computer?oldid=1122148633&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Interact_One_-_computer.jpg
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Interact_Home_Computer
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of dbr:Interact
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Victor_Lambda
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:List_of_home_computers_by_video_hardware dbr:List_of_home_computers dbr:Interact dbr:VideoBrain_Family_Computer dbr:Texas_Instruments_SN76477 dbr:Hector_(microcomputer) dbr:Victor_Lambda
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Interact_Home_Computer