4. Commodore 64: 1982
The Commodore 64 was the highest selling PC ever with more than 17 million units sold. At $600, the machine could be hooked to any home TV set and it came equipped with a 1.023-MHz CPU, 64KB of RAM, and 16-bit colour graphic. With its ability of adjusting office productivity programming and wide assortment of games, the C64 emerged as the most flexible PC before the computer game crash of ’83. Its legacy keeps on living on through various programming emulators and restored hardware renditions as seen in 2011.
3. VHS Player: 1980
If there was one media format to break home entertainment barriers quicker than any other, it was the video home system. Families over the globe hurled their Betamax players for the VHS, fundamentally in light of its lower cost, 120-minute max length, and recording capacities. However, a few experts believe that the silver coating pushed the stage over porn accessibility, as grown-up substance was a ghost on Beta. It was the one gadget we used and clutched onto in the past decade.