Digi-Comp 1 — The First Home Computer

When I was a kid, it bothered me that most people were more interested in the ads in comic books than in the stories. Most of what was sold was junk, of course — the notorious X-Ray Specs for example — but once in a while a legitimately interesting product was offered. So, in acknowledgment of that, here’s an ad from a 1967 Marvel comic book. It’s the Digi-Comp 1!

If not exactly the first home computer, the Digi-Comp 1 was a working binary counting machine. Here’s a Digi-Comp 1 in action, counting from 0 to 7 in binary. It’s even done twice, in case you miss it the first time. 😉

Exciting, huh? But compared to the comic book ad the Digi-Comp 1 must have been a disappointment. First, there’s nothing electronic about it, and the atomic symbol would seem to imply it’s nuclear in some way. But at least the Digi-Comp 1 is described accurately as being a “mechanical analog of a binary computer.”

I hope the person who wrote the ad copy didn’t use a Digi-Comp 1 to figure out the price, because it’s listed first at $4.99, then in the coupon at $4.98. Oh well, they didn’t claim “down to the penny precision!”

The Digi-Comp 1 has, as you might expect, something of a cult following. Original units are often auctioned in eBay, and there is a replica of it available at Minds on Toys.

2 thoughts on “Digi-Comp 1 — The First Home Computer”

  1. In my old age I have come to embrace the entire “old comics experience” and now accept and, indeed, celebrate the goofy ads that once embarrassed me as a serious comic book fan, but delighted casual onlookers.

  2. Cool! Actually, the ads were one of my FAVORITE parts of the comics! I actually mailed away for a bracelet once and got this cheap thing from Taiwan that fell apart when I took it out of the envelope. Probably totally made of lead, too. 😉

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