Software:AES-90

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The AES-90 was a pioneering electronic word processing system developed by Stephen B. Dorsey and manufactured by his company, Automatic Electronic Systems (AES) Inc., and their subsidiary AES Data Ltd., beginning in late 1974.[1][2] By April 1977, the AES-90 cost $17,400.[3]

The AES-90 was notable for being one the first electronic word processors with interactive text editing capabilities, facilitated by the included CRT display, as well as being one of the earliest non-IBM computer systems to utilize floppy disks as a storage medium.[4]

Microprocessor

The AES-90 contained an entire minicomputer, the AES-80, built out of off-the-shelf TTL logic components. Despite often being described as a "microprocessor" in contemporaneous marketing, the AES-80 did not contain any LSI circuitry, and was merely termed as such due to its small size. The AES-80 had been introduced as a separate product in May 1972 as a low-cost (<$1,000) minicomputer for industrial and intelligent terminal applications.[5]

Display

The AES-90 offered a WYSIWYG display interface, which included commands for centering, justifying, cutting, inserting, and otherwise manipulating blocks of text, which could be instantly previewed on the display. Additionally, it also had the capability to split one page into two and produce up to 2000 personalized letters with custom mailing addresses.[4]

Storage

The AES-90 was one of the very first commercially available computer systems to utilize floppy disks and drives. According to the brochure, each disk could hold up to "340,000 words," which in this context were actual words, and not a unit of computer memory.[4]

Acquisition by Innocan

In May 1973, Innocan Investments Ltd. was formed, in which the Canada Development Corporation (CDC) acquired a 40% stake of interest. The 1974 annual report from CDC indicated that AES Data Ltd. had been acquired by Innocan, and that AES-90 systems were in full production.[6] By the end of 1975, Innocan had acquired an 82% share in AES Data.[7]

References

  1. Guide to Word Processing Systems, February 1981. p. 18: "...AES Data, whose first disc-based word processor, the AES-90, was launched late in 1974, to be followed by the AES-100B in 1976 and the AES Plus in 1977. The AES Plus was one of the first word processors..."
  2. The Archive (2020-12-08). AES: a Canadian cautionary tale. Retrieved 2026-05-15 – via YouTube.
  3. Datamation, April 1977. p. 69.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 AES-90 CRT Text Editor Brochure. Automatic Electronic Systems Inc., c. 1974.
  5. The AES-80 Microprocessor. Automatic Electronic Systems Inc., September 21, 1972.
  6. Canada Development Corporation (1974). Canada Development Corporation (1974). University of Alberta Library. http://archive.org/details/Cana2817_1974. 
  7. Canada Development Corporation (1975). Canada Development Corporation (1975). University of Alberta Library. http://archive.org/details/Cana2817_1975.