Willard wrote:
Funny how transistors were developed late 40s, but didn't make the open consumer marketplace until the mid sixties. I remember seeing someone listening to a baseball game on a transistor radio for the first time when I was around five or six years old.
Now the new iDevice is on the street 30 days after the prototype is complete.
I still marvel over the fact that after spending years compiling music libraries for radio stations of every type and format, I now carry more music in my pocket than the entire libraries of all those radio stations
combined, in a device smaller than those transistor radios.
Do they even make wind-up wristwatches anymore?

The earliest transistors were NOT integrated circuits. They were rather large (about the size of a peanut). However they required much less energy than vacuum tubes. Integrated circuits were not developed until the early or mid sixties. At that point the Transistor Revolution made its full impact on the design and production of electronic devices.
In addition there was the issue of quality control Most of the early transistors were duds. They did not have the write amount of "doping" (impurities) to work properly. Getting the quality right for integrated circuits was the big hump that had to be crossed before transistors could really be used effectively. Integrated circuits also brought the cost of switching elements down to a very small amount so that large circuits could be produced at a reasonable cost.
ruveyn
ruveyn