This article presents a detailed timeline of events in the history of computing from 2010 to 2019. For narratives explaining the overall developments, see the history of computing.
2010
2011
- May 4
- Intel announces the commercialisation of 3D transistors,[5] a variant of the FinFET.
- May 17
- Lenovo releases the first ThinkPad X1.[6]
- June 15
- The first Chromebooks, by Acer and Samsung, go on sale.[7]
- September 7
- The first 4 terabyte hard drive is released by Seagate.[8]
2012
- February 29
- Raspberry Pi, a bare-bones, low-cost credit-card sized computer created by volunteers mostly drawn from academia and the UK tech industry, is released to help teach children to code.[9][10]
- September 11
- Intel demonstrates its Next Unit of Computing, a motherboard measuring only 4 × 4 in (10 × 10 cm).[11]
- October 4
- October 26
- November 18
2013
- June 11
- Apple releases the first Retina Display MacBook Pro.
- September 20
- November 15
- Sony releases the PlayStation 4 in the United States.[16]
- November 22
- November 29
- Sony releases the PlayStation 4 in Europe.[18]
2014
2015
- July 29
- Microsoft releases the operating system Windows 10.
- October 15
- AlphaGo was the first Go AI computer program developed by Google to defeat a professional human opponent on a full-sized board without handicap.
2016
- January 12
- The High Bandwidth Memory 2 standard is released by JEDEC.
- January 13
- Fixstars Solutions releases the world's first 13 TB SSD.[25][26]
- March 4
- Scientists at MIT created the first five-atom quantum computer with the potential to crack the security of traditional encryption schemes.[27]
2017
- March 2
- March 3
- Nintendo releases the hybrid gaming console Nintendo Switch.
2018
2019
References
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