The Honeywell Kitchen Computer

I have done a few articles recently about retro computing. (here and here)

Here is another one for the books: From Old-Computers.COM

This odd-looking and almost laughable computer was released by Honeywell under the official name H316 Pedestal Model, but was featured on the cover of a Nieman-Marcus catalog under its more commonly-known name, the "Kitchen Computer".

The Kitchen Computer is most likely where the classic recipe storage cliche originated, as this was the primary use advertised for the Kitchen Computer. In fact, storing recipes was about all the Kitchen Computer was capable of doing. The recipes were programmed into the computer and it would store them for you. In other words, it was an electronic recipe storage box, nothing more.

Supposedly it was quite a chore to program recipes into the Kitchen Computer, mainly because it took about two weeks to learn how to program the thing. However, the Kitchen Computer was shipped with some recipes already programmed into it. Could this be the iMac of it's time? From box to dinner in only 10 minutes? I doubt it, but we can imagine the pre-programmed recipes were included so anyone who purchased the Kitchen Computer could begin using it right away rather than having to suffer through learning how to program it first.

When one thinks of computer hardware, they often think of a monitor or a keyboard or a printer. Well, the Kitchen Computer has perhaps the oddest piece of "hardware" I have ever heard of -- a cutting board. Yes, a cutting board! This oddity was most likely added so the food could be prepared right there without having to walk away from the recipe display, considering the Kitchen Computer isn't as portable as a good old-fashioned cookbook (It weighed a staggering 150 pounds).
Honeywell_H316_System_1.jpg

The price of this modern marvel was $10,600 which works out to $61,874.76 in today's money! You wonder if they ever sold even one...

There have been other Kitchen Computers that tried to penetrate the market but these have not done well either. Computers in refrigerator doors, little email and surfing gadgets that flip down from under your upper cabinets. Nothing seems to replace the convenience of a simple cookbook.

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This page contains a single entry by DaveH published on March 8, 2005 2:57 PM.

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