The new GEC 1450 makes building a system child's play. GEC - or General Electric Company plc - was a large British conglomerate with interests in defence, electronics, communications and engineering. It was founded in 1886, making it one of the oldest companies in the computer industry[source: https://web.archive.org/web/20100329015638/http://www.ipdgroup.com.au/Page/About%2BUs/GEC%2BHistory.aspx]. It was also a company that whilst not known particularly for its own computers had a hand in those from many other manufaturers, especially via its associations with Plessey (known as GPT) and Amstrad, and Marconi and its chip factory[source: "GEC plans £150 million chip factory", Popular Computing Weekly, 18th July 1985, p. 5]. Its also had its own financial interests in companies like Dragon, which it first rescued and then owned outright for a while, as well as Acorn offshoot Torch, which it nearly bought. One of its mainframes - the GEC 4082 - even hosted dial-up service Prestel [source: "London calling", Steve Gold, POCW, 2nd October 1987, p. 36] This advert is for the company's 4150 system - a multi-processor machine which supported 16- and 32-bit processes and no fewer than nine high-level languages. It could also support up to 16 terminals with 160MB of hard drive storage. Entry-level 4150 systems, which were apparently "low cost", started at £9,250 - about [[9250|1983]] in [[now]]. Once Britain's largest non-public-sector employer, parts of the company were sold off to British Aerospace to become BAE Systems, with the rest of GEC continuing as Marconi Communications. Most of Marconi was eventually bought by Swedish telecoms manufacturer Ericsson, with what was left of GEC becoming Telent.