Outside of the garden you need a computer that can grow - Ithaca InterSystems DPS1 This adverts shows one of many ageing Zilog Z80-based machines of this era running on an S-100 bus - the Ithaca InterSystems DPS1. It seemed to aimed at the laboratory market, with no fewer than 20 I/O slots, and the ability to interface to an oscilloscope, but was launched in the era of the Commodore PET and Apple II - the form-factor of which had quickly become the de-facto for mainstream business and education. However, it gave nod to the near future as it also provided for 16-bit upgradeability, via a Zilog Z8000 add-on board, although none of this stopped it from looking like a big cassette or CD case. It was, however, notable for being the last computer released that had front-panel switches as its interface, as well as being one of the first "home", or at least small, computers that would run Unix[source: www.old-computers.com/MUSEUM/computer.asp?st=1&c=574 (dead link)]. Ithaca had established a London office by October 1979 and had appointed Newbear Computing Store in Newbury as its main UK distributor, whilst also appointing Jim Wood, formerly of Comp Shop, as its European sales manager. The DPS1 that Newbear was selling was considered very well designed and well-built and went up against Cromemco and North Star machines, all of which were similarly based on the S-100, or "Standard 100" bus - so-called thanks to its 100-pin edge connectors. [picture: ithaca_s100_praccomp_aug80.jpg|An Ithaca InterSystems advert featuring a range of the company's S-100 boards, but based on the in-progress IEEE 696-1983 S-100 standard. From PRAC, August 1980] S-100 - originally known as the Altair bus - had been around since 1975, but was still in the process of being ratified as an IEEE standard in 1979, which it finally achieved in 1983, becoming known as IEEE 696-1983. Ithaca played its part in that process as Kells Elmquist, the company's chief engineer, was one of the prime architects of the IEEE S-100 bus specification, along with Howard Fullmer, David Gustavson, and George Morrow - who would later found the company Morrow Designs. In 1979, the DPS1 retailed for £695 ([[695|1979]] in [[now]] money) or £2,799 ([[2799|1979]]) in the form of a complete Pascal development system[source: "Ithaca moves in", p.34, Personal Computer World, October 1979]. [picture: s100_problemsolver_byte_jan78.jpg|A 16K static RAM S-100 plug-in memory card, built by Problem Solver Systems, Inc. Each of the 32 Hitachi HM472114 chips on the board stored 1024 x 4 bits, i.e. 512 bytes. From Byte, January 1978] After the IBM PC was launched in 1981 - and as the performance of IBM PCs improved - S-100 micros were pushed towards more powerful multi-user and specialist applications. Despite the competition, S-100 systems did however remain in the market until the early 90s, with the IEEE retiring the S-100 bus standard in June 1994[source: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/servlet/opac?punumber=4405].