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Inventors
Inventors of the Modern Computer
The First Spreadsheet - VisiCalc - Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston
Inventors of the Modern Computer Series
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More on VisiCalc, Dan Bricklin, and Bob Frankston
Dan Bricklin
The inventor Dan Bricklin's Website, with his first-hand account of VisiCalc history and photos you will not find elsewhere.
Bob Frankston
The inventor's Website.
Patenting VisiCalc
Why didn't we patent the spreadsheet? Were we stupid?
Dan Bricklin
Like many computer pioneers, Dan Bricklin grew frustrated with the way things were. In 1978 he invented VisiCalc, a simple way to do complex spreadsheets, and the world beat a path to not only his door, but also the door of Apple Computer.
Spreadsheets - History & Introduction
Everything you wanted to know about spreadsheets but were afraid to ask.
VisiCalc
Photo of screen capture.
By Mary Bellis

""Any product that pays for itself in two weeks is a surefire winner." - Dan Bricklin on VisiCalc

VisiCalc was the first computer spreadsheet program. It was released to the public in 1979, running on an Apple II computer. While most early microprocessor computers had been quickly supported by BASIC and a few games, VisiCalc introduced a new level in application software. It was considered a fourth generation software program. Companies invested time and money in doing financial projections with manually calculated spreadsheets, where changing a single number meant recalculating every single cell in the sheet. With VisiCalc, you could change any cell, and the entire sheet would be automatically recalculated.

"VisiCalc took 20 hours of work per week for some people and turned it out in 15 minutes and let them become much more creative." - Dan Bricklin

Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston invented VisiCalc. While a masters student in business administration at Harvard Business School, Dan Bricklin joined up with Bob Frankston to help him write the programming for his new electronic spreadsheet. The two started their own company, Software Arts Inc., to develop their product.

"Early Apple machines -- don't know how to answer what it was like since there were so few tools. Just had to keep debugging by isolating a problem, looking at memory in the limited debugging (weaker than the DOS DEBUG and no symbols) patch and retry and then re-program, download and try again. And again..." - Bob Frankston on programming VisiCalc for the Apple II

By the fall of 1979, an Apple II version of VisiCalc was ready, and the team started writing versions for the Tandy TRS-80, Commodore PET and the Atari 800. By October, VisiCalc was a fast seller on the shelves of computer stores at US $100.

In November of 1981, Bricklin received the Grace Murray Hopper Award from the Association for Computing Machinery in honor of his innovation. VisiCalc was soon sold to Lotus Development Corporation, where it developed into the Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet for the PC by 1983. Bricklin never received a patent for VisiCalc. It was not until after 1981 that software programs were made eligible for patents by the Supreme Court.

"I'm not rich because I invented VisiCalc, but I feel that I've made a change in the world. That's a satisfaction money can't buy." - Dan Bricklin

"Patents? Disappointed? Don't think of it that way. Software patents weren't feasible then so we chose not to risk $10,000." - Bob Frankston on not patenting VisiCalc.

More On Spreadsheets

  • In 1980, the DIF format was developed allowing spreadsheet data to be shared/imported into other programs, such as word processors, making spreadsheet data was more portable.
  • Also in 1980, SuperCalc was introduced, the first spreadsheet for popular micro OS called CP/M.
  • In 1983, the popular Lotus 123 spreadsheet was introduced. Mitch Kapor was the founder of Lotus, and used his previous programming experience with VisiCalc to create 123. 123 was based on VisiCalc.
  • From 1987, Excel and Quattro Pro spreadsheets were introduced with a more graphical interface.
Next Chapter > WordStar - The First Word Processor

all artwork ©MaryBellis

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