90s computer brands

Last Updated on March 13, 2024 by Dave Farquhar

Some 90s computer brands are the same as today, but a lot more companies played in the field than now. Profit margins were higher then, so industry consolidation wasn’t the matter of survival that it is now. The most popular computer brands of today were among the most popular brands in the 90s, but some popular 1990s computers no longer exist in any form.

Here’s a look back at some of the brands of old, including some famous PC brands, some not-so-famous, and some notorious. The 1990s were certainly a make or break time for many of them, arguably just as volatile as the merciless 1980s had been.

Acer

Acer computers of the 1990s were decidedly average. There was nothing glamorous about them, but providing average reliability at a below-average price turned out to be a winning formula. They are one of the few surviving 90s computer brands still around today. Was Acer a popular computer brand? They sold a lot of machines, but they did it without calling a lot of attention to themselves. Even if they never won any popularity contests, they did something right, because they’re still around today, and ended up owning several other computer brands that were very popular.

ALR

ALR sold high-end PCs and was a pioneer of dual-CPU systems. Primarily business-oriented, they aren’t a famous brand today but they were important because they pushed the envelope. They were one of a few companies selling workstation-class PCs at modest prices. ALR eventually sold out to Gateway 2000. They’re one of the more obscure 90s computer brands, but the people who remember them will remember them fondly.

Ambra

In 1992, IBM decided to try out direct sales. After considering purchasing Gateway 2000, Northgate, or Zeos outright and even entering into some formal discussions, IBM opted to source PCs from Acer, bundle them with Model M keyboards, back them with IBM support and service, and launch a subsidiary claiming to be a new kind of computer company. When Ambra didn’t meet IBM’s goal of capturing 10% of the direct market, IBM pulled the plug in 1994.

Apple

Apple is the only surviving member of the class of 1977. The 90s were a struggle for Apple until Steve Jobs returned to the company in 1998, but they were a presence in the 90s. And even in their darkest times, Apple had a cult following. They were always one of the most popular computer brands, regardless of what their market share or stock price was doing.

AST: Popular computers largely forgotten today

AST made popular 1990s computers
AST’s computers in the early and mid 1990s were popular because of their good quality and good value, but by mid-decade, other companies were undercutting AST prices.

AST was a major peripheral maker in the 80s and branched into entire PCs in the 90s. They offered good reliability at a middle-of-the-road price, so their computers were very popular in the early 1990s. People bought AST to get Compaq-like reliability at a price closer to Acer.

Things went great for AST until Compaq started cutting prices. AST tried to keep prices steady, but they found people were less happy to pay what was now a premium price to get the AST name. AST struggled to respond and found itself vulnerable.

AST changed hands several times in the late 90s, fading fast after 1998 and disappearing from the market entirely by 2001. But for a time, especially early in the decade, they were one of the more sought after 90s computer brands.

AT&T

Yes, AT&T tried its hand at computers a few times. They typically stayed out of consumer PCs, trying to sell PCs to businesses. In the 90s, most of their PCs came as a result of purchasing NCR and rebranding NCR designs as AT&T. Its PCs never really caught on.

Commodore

A high flying brand in the 80s, Commodore limped into the 90s and went out of business in early 1994. So they were a presence in the early 90s, but didn’t have the impact they wanted.

Compaq: A popular but bygone computer brand

Compaq was an independent company in the 90s. Initially a premium brand, it got aggressive on price early in the 1990s and grew rapidly. It acquired DEC in 1998, which proved not to be the best fit. It merged with HP in 2002 following a few brutal quarters, and HP phased out the brand in 2010, stopped using it in 2012, and started licensing it to others in 2013.

But in the 1990s, Compaq made very popular computers, always near the top in market share throughout the decade. Consumers who wanted IBM-like quality but didn’t trust IBM gravitated to Compaq, who became the de facto PC standard after IBM tried to take the PC industry in a different, proprietary direction with Microchannel in the late 1980s. Besides being noteworthy as a maker of popular 90s computers, Compaq is an interesting might-have-been. Had they taken an acquisition path more similar to Acer, they might still be a dominant player today.

CompuAdd

CompuAdd had 200 of  its own retail stores, selling its own eponymous brand computers exclusively. Financial troubles let to it declaring bankruptcy and going out of business in 1993, so it wasn’t the most venerable of 90s computer brands. But you may remember seeing their stores early in the 1990s, or reading about it if you dig into the Miniscribe Brick scandal.

Compudyne

Compudyne is one of the more obscure 90s computer brands
In the 1990s, CompUSA thrived selling its house brand Compudyne PCs like this one.

Compudyne was CompUSA’s house brand of computers, made by Acer. They were more open architecture than many retail computers of the day, although that was about the only thing distinctive about them.

Dell: a popular brand of the 90s and today

One of the few 90s survivors, Dell started in a college dorm room in the 1980s selling cheap PC clones. By the 90s it was a powerhouse, specializing in direct-order, but for part of the decade it sold computers at retail too. Dell had some struggles in recent years that led to it taking itself private to avoid investor pressure and scrutiny. But it remains one of the largest brands of computers for both home and business. Their longevity makes them one of the more sought after 90s computer brands. Love them or hate them today, Dell was a very popular computer brand throughout the 1990s.

Digital (DEC)

DEC was an old-line computer company, producing several very successful lines of minicomputers, and its own CPU architectures, including the Alpha, which could run Windows NT. DEC was into PCs in the 1990s because it had to. This put it in the unique position of having to compete with Intel while buying chips from Intel. Competing with Intel cytook its toll, and DEC sold out to Compaq in 1998.

Emachines

Emachines was a budget brand that came onto the scene in the fall of 1998, specializing in Korean-made computers at price points of $399, $499, and $599. Its aggressive pricing drove other companies to either lower prices as well, or leave the market. Emachines sometimes used AMD or Cyrix CPUs to hit the price point it wanted, and this led to other brands using them as well. Previously, it had been fairly rare for brand-name PCs to use AMD and especially Cyrix CPUs. Emachines came along too late to help Cyrix much, but it did help mainstream AMD. They sold a lot of units, but whether that meant they were popular depends on who you ask.

Gateway purchased Emachines in 2004, mostly to get its management team. Both Gateway and its successor, Acer, continued to use the name until 2013. But its controversial never obsolete stickers remain infamous more than a decade after the brand name disappeared.

Fujitsu

Fujitsu wasn’t a huge player in the 1990s but they did sell some machines, primarily laptops.

Gateway 2000: Hugely popular computers in the 1990s

Gateway: popular computers in the 1990s
Gateway 2000 made popular computers in the 1990s, rivaling any other 90s brand but faded fast in the next decade.

Gateway 2000 was another direct order brand that offered good prices, good reliability and outstanding customer service. For a time, it was Dell’s biggest competitor in the direct-order model. It cut quality to save costs and got away with it due to its outstanding customer service.

It faded late in the decade and especially in the 2000s as it cut customer service to save costs. For a few years in the 1990s it operated a retail chain called Gateway Country. It merged with Emachines in 2004 to get its leadership team but the turnaround it hoped for never happened. Acer acquired it in 2007. Gateway is one of the more prominent 90s computer brands, and you either loved them or hated them.

But until they cut their customer service, Gateway’s popularity and customer loyalty rivaled Apple.

HP: popular computers in the 1990s, love or hate them today

Better known as a printer manufacturer, HP nevertheless had two very successful PC lines in the 90s, the Vectra (for business) and Pavilion (for home). HP is another one of those rare 90s computer brands still around today. Like many others, HP had problems in recent years and that eventually led to splitting into two companies, one focusing on consumers and one focusing on business.

Love them or hate them today, HP made very popular computers in the 1990s.

IBM: Popular but fading in the 1990s

IBM is one of the more famous and popular 1990s computer brands
This second generation IBM PS/1 was standard in every way, but the IBM stigma made it a hard sell. They were popular computers but nowhere near as popular as the original IBM PC.

IBM didn’t dominate the 90s the way they did the 1980s, but they still had a presence, both in the business and retail space. Business offerings included the PS/2, PS/Valuepoint, and IBM PC series (not to be confused with 1980s IBM PCs). Home offerings included the IBM PS/1 and Aptiva. Post-PS/2 IBMs of the 1990s followed industry standards for the most part.

IBM survived the 90s but withdrew from the PC marketplace in 2005, for complex reasons. IBM still exists today but has very little to do with the market it helped create. They had some degree of popularity in the 1990s, especially with its Thinkpad laptops, but never recaptured the market share they had in the 1980s.

Laser

Laser was a brand name of V-Tech, the maker of cordless phones and children’s electronics. V-Tech sold XT-class PC clones and Apple II clones under this brand name. The Laser brand name was more active in the 1980s but stayed around into the early 90s.

Leading Edge

Leading Edge is another brand more famous for what they did in the 80s, but they did survive into the 90s as a subsidiary of Daewoo, selling 386-based machines. However, this pioneering PC value brand wasn’t able to keep up with its larger competitors once they adopted the practice of manufacturing overseas and it never recovered from a 1992 price war with Compaq. A Swiss company bought the brand in 1995 but it quickly went out of business.

Leading Technology

In the 386/486 era, V-Tech sold computers under the Leading Technology brand at mass market resellers like Best Buy. The brand wasn’t very long lived and seems to have disappeared from the market by about 1992. When I worked at Best Buy in 1994 and 1995, this brand was gone, but I do remember customers coming in looking for upgrades for them.

Magnavox

In the early 1990s, consumer electronics giant Philips built 286, 386, and 486 computers as part of a joint venture with Vendex, selling them under the Magnavox and/or Headstart brands in mass-market retail stores. Philips was much more successful selling monitors and peripherals than PCs, so the Magnavox Headstart computers were quietly withdrawn from the market sometime in 1992.

Micron: Popular computers for a fleeting moment

Memory maker Micron made PCs for most of the 1990s, generally pairing up Intel motherboards and CPUs with Micron memory and other top-tier components. They were good machines, but eventually Micron found the profits weren’t to their liking so they spun off the division. Micron sold the line in 2001, and the separate company, MPC computers, went out of business in 2008.

NCR

NCR, the cash register company, sold business PCs for much of the 1990s. For part of the decade, AT&T owned them.

NEC

More famous for premium quality monitors and CD-ROM drives, NEC made PCs for much of the 90s. Its PCs weren’t as good as its monitors and outside of its laptops, it never captured tremendous market share in the United States. It phased out its PC operations in the early 2000s.

Northgate

Better known for its hugely popular mechanical keyboards, Minneapolis-based Northgate also sold PCs until it went bankrupt in 1994. Northgate had a bit of a rivalry with Zeos, which was also based in Minneapolis.

Packard Bell: Popular computers for all the wrong reasons

Packard Bell was one of the more common 90s computer brands
This Packard Bell D160 dates to the mid 90s. The gray panel accents were innovative for the time. The computers were popular in the 1990s terms of sales but not repeat sales.

Packard Bell made popular computers on a budget in the 1990s before quality issues and accusations of passing off used parts as new caught up with them. Mass market retailers like Best Buy and Circuit City sold millions of these machines. If you bought one, I hope you got the extended warranty. Acer owns the Packard Bell brand name now, but never reintroduced it in the United States.

Today, some people remember Packard Bell mostly for its bold design, especially its unconventional corner computer. But the bold design was an effort to compensate for its reputation for quality issues, and once other PC makers lowered prices, it ended up not being enough.

Packard Bell was the best-selling computer brand in the United States for much of the decade. But they rarely had repeat buyers. Many consumers bought a Packard Bell as a first PC or a first computer entirely, but had enough problems with it that they bought something else when the time came to upgrade.

Quantex

Quantex was a smaller direct build-to-order outfit that never came close to the kind of volumes Dell and Gateway enjoyed. But they built high-quality machines using brand-name components and won awards in large numbers from the big computer magazines of the time because of their build quality and impressive performance. They advertised heavily in Computer Shopper. If you wanted an enthusiast-caliber PC without spending hours reading Tom’s Hardware Guide, buying a Quantex was probably your best bet. Quantex filed bankruptcy in the summer of 2000.

Samsung

Samsung made PCs in the 90s but never had the kind of success selling PCs as it had other consumer goods. It had more success making PCs for other companies that they resold under their own brands than it had selling them itself.

Sharp

Like Samsung, Sharp made a bigger name for itself selling TVs and other consumer electronics than PCs. But it quietly survived the decade, buying Toshiba’s computer line in 2020.

Sony

Sony was a rare consumer electronics company to have success selling PCs. It entered the market in 1996 and spun off its computers in 2014 after an 18-year run. Their computers were rather popular but we think of them more as a 2000s brand than a 90s brand since they entered the decade fairly late.

Tandy: Popular computers very early in the 1990s

Tandy is another 1980s brand that barely made it into the 90s. Tandy was the parent company of Radio Shack, and they dominated the 1980s but the line was losing money by 1989. Their turnaround efforts were lackluster until 1992, when they came up with a formula that would be competitive, but years of selling Tandy 1000 derivatives had taken their toll. In 1993, Tandy sold its computer production to AST and started selling AST computers at Radio Shack before switching to IBM.

The Tandy 1000 remained a popular computer into 1990 and 1991 but faded fast as Microsoft Windows caught on.

Texas Instruments

TI sold a successful line of laptops in the 1990s after struggling in the retail market with its own home computer in the early 1980s. But heightening competition in the late 90s led to TI selling its laptop line to Acer in January 1997.

Toshiba

Toshiba laptops were popular in the 1990s and remained so into the 21st century, making it one of the rare 1990s survivors. The Toshiba Satellite series was reasonably well built and Toshiba also made hard drives, giving them a vertical integration advantage not all of their competitors had. Problems with the parent company led to it selling the computer business to Sharp in 2020, however.

Winbook

Winbook was one of the first PC laptop manufacturers to sell in volume. The name changed hands a few times and it still exists as a budget brand. Technically this means you can call it a 90s survivor, I guess.

Zenith

The TV maker sold business-oriented PCs in the 90s, though it’s not what people remember them for today.

Zeos

Zeos was another Minneapolis-based PC maker better known for its mechanical keyboards that it included with its computers than the computers themselves. It outlived its rival Northgate by a couple of years, ultimately merging into Micron in 1996. I was always bitter that Micron didn’t keep the keyboards.

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7 thoughts on “90s computer brands

    • July 29, 2017 at 9:52 pm
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      Wow, you’re right, and that’s a big name to miss. I’ll get that added in later this weekend. Thanks!

  • August 2, 2017 at 11:21 am
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    When I was a PC tech at BestBuy (Store 32, ’97-99) I was there when the eMachine’s hit the market. That was an interesting product, people would buy the Low or Mid-teir model max out the RAM and add a Voodoo 3DFx cards and the best Sound Blaster cards available and have a decent gaming machine at under what you could buy a pre-made similarly spec’d machine for off the shelf. But boy were those eMachines cheap, we DEVO’d a lot of them.

    • August 2, 2017 at 5:02 pm
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      I saw an Emachine in a rack in a data center at Scott Air Force Base for a while. I still have no idea what it was doing there.

      I knew a few people who had them in the 90s but they ran them pretty much stock. I don’t recall them having much in the way of issues. I wonder if the power supply was too wimpy to handle the high-end graphics and sound cards and maxed out memory? I seem to recall some outfits advertising souped-up power supplies for them. And I’m sure they cut some corners on those motherboards early on to hit those price points. That $399 price was revolutionary. I couldn’t buy the parts to build a similar PC for that price in 1997. I tried.

  • April 2, 2019 at 4:28 am
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    What about Positive Computer? They were a brand sold by the Price Club in California in 1990.

    • April 2, 2019 at 8:02 pm
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      I wasn’t familiar with that brand, so thanks for bringing them up.

  • April 6, 2019 at 6:22 am
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    hi all. I’d like to add that NEC was one of the major PC wendors and designers in the world during the wholeout history of PCs and the Fujitsu was and is the biggest Supercomputer designer in the world alongside with IBM.NEC’s PC 98 is one of the two bestsellers alongside with Commodore c-64.All of the information in this site is wonderful except of those about Japanese PC industry.The Japanese whole Computer industry was dominated by NEC, Fujitsu and Hitachimas Toshiba leading in laptops and notebooks, Sony in notebooks and gaming, Panasonic as a leader in rigid laptops.Fujitsu is the seond oldesomputer company in the world after IBM, while all of the Japanese POPC industry mainly standartised by NEC. Thanks again I hope this my comment is some informative too.

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