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'''Commodity computing''' is quite simply, computing done on commodity computers as opposed to supermicrocomputers or boutique computers.
In the beginning, computers were large, expensive, complex and proprietary. The move towards commodity computing began when [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]] introduced the [[PDP-8]] in 1965. This was a computer that was relatively small and inexpensive enough that a department could purchase one without convening a meeting of the board of directors. The entire [[minicomputer]] industry sprang up to supply the demand for 'small' computers like the PDP-8. Unfortunately, each of the many different brands of minicomputers had to stand on their own because there was no software and very little hardware compatibility between them.
When the first general purpose [[microprocessor]] was introduced in 1974 it immediately began chipping away at the low end of the computer market, replacing [[embedded systems|embedded minicomputers]] in many industrial devices.
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This process accelerated in 1977 with the introduction of the first commodity - like computer, the [[Apple II]]. With the development of the [[Visicalc]] application in 1979, microcomputers broke out of the factory and began entering office suites in large quantities, but still through the back door.
The [[IBM PC]] was introduced in 1981 and immediately began displacing Apple II
During the
The old systems began to fall, first minis, then [[supermini|superminis]], and finally [[mainframe|mainframes]]. By the mid
As the power of microprocessors continues to increase, there are fewer and fewer business computing needs that cannot be met with off-the shelf commodity computers. It is likely that the low end of the supermicrocomputer genre will continue to be pushed upward by increasingly powerful commodity microcomputers. There will be fewer non-commodity systems sold each year, resulting in fewer and fewer dollars available for non-commodity R&D, resulting in a continually narrowing performance gap between commodity microcomputers and proprietary supermicros.
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When 10 gigabit Ethernet becomes standard equipment in commodity microcomputer servers, multi-processor [[cluster]] or [[grid]] systems based on off-the-shelf commodity microcomputers and Ethernet switches will take over more and more computing tasks that can currently be performed only by high end models of proprietary supermicros like the IBM p-series, further eroding the viability of the supermicro industry.
== See also
* [[Commodity computer]]
[[Category:Computing platforms]]
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