This was the hottest tech 30 years ago... in 1987
From home robots to calculator watches, this was the hottest tech of the Ronnie Reagan era.

The coolest gadgets and toys of the Reagan Era
Plenty of advances arrived in the '80s, but 1987 in particular was an amazing year for technology. Here are our favorite and best-remembered gadgets and toys from that banner year.
To start, there's no way we can talk about '80s tech without paying homage to the ultimate urban status symbol of the age, the boombox. The trendiest versions were rectangular and enormous, allowing for heavier bass.
Here's what Bill Gates was up to in 1987
Released on December 9, 1987, the Microsoft Windows 2.0 operating system introduced a number of popular computing concepts: It was the first version of Windows to allow for overlapping application windows, desktop icons and VGA (16 color) graphics.
Apple unsuccessfully sued Microsoft over the operating system, saying it was too similar to that of the Macintosh.
Apple IIGS
Though technically released in late 1986, there's no denying that Apple's hottest personal computer of 1987 was the 16-bit Apple IIGS. It was Apple's first computer with a color graphical user interface and a wavetable synthesis chip for sound.
The computer was introduced at $999, as compared to the Apple Macintosh's $2,495 price tag a few years prior.
What a laptop computer looked like in 1987
PC fans, meanwhile, drooled over IBM's first laptop, the IBM PC Convertible (model 5140). The 13-pound model featured an Intel 8088 CPU (4.77 MHz), 256KB of RAM, dual 3.5-inch floppy-drive storage, a 2,400mAh NiCd battery, a detachable, 640 x 200 monochrome screen and... no hard drive.
It was a poor seller, due in part to its $2,000 price tag.
Lazer Tag
First appearing on store shelves in 1986, World of Wonder's Lazer Tag game turned pursuit and combat into a kids' game using infrared guns and body-mounted sensors.
The game was popular through April 1987, when a 19-year-old player was shot to death by a sheriff's deputy who mistook the toy for a real gun. Negative publicity hurt sales, and World of Wonder went out of business the following year.
Storytelling Alf
Storytelling Alf, an animatronic version of the popular TV alien, was one of the hottest gifts of the 1987 holiday season. It was a Teddy Ruxpin clone: Alf's ears and mouth would move when you inserted a cassette tape into his back and pressed the play button.
Tyco's Turbo Hopper
Radio-controlled cars were also wildly popular holiday gifts in 1987. The Tyco Turbo Hopper, seen here, was one of the best and most popular of the bunch. It boasted a twin joy stick, a telescoping antenna and -- most importantly to '80s kids -- a turbo power band that offered a quick burst of speed.
Zelda II: The top video game of 1987
The best-selling video game of 1987 was Zelda II: The Adventure of Link for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Though the sequel was popular at the time, Zelda II is now considered one of the worst Zelda games ever made.
The age of the home robot
Far from the famed R2-D2 and Johnny Five, most home robots of the 1980s were little more than programmable toys. The cassette-tape-powered Tomy Omnibot 2000 here lacked AI, but it did have a remote control, alarm clock, music playback and motorized arms that could carry a tray of drinks.
General Motors' first solar-powered car
The year 1987 marked the debut of the World Solar Challenge, the first solar-powered car race. The winner, General Motors' Sunraycer, used a total of 8,800 solar cells to generate a maximum of 1,500 watts, giving the vehicle a top speed of 68 miles per hour.
Now considered the grandfather of modern electric cars, the Sunraycer cost more than $2 million (in 1987 dollars) to build.
As heard on 'Flight of the Conchords'...
Everything went digital in the 1980s, even guitars. The Casio DG20 Digital Guitar, seen here, doubled as a MIDI controller, offering 20 preset sounds, adjustable tempos and a built-in speaker. Hear it here, as featured in an episode of "Flight of the Conchords."
The first alphanumeric pager
Though pagers had been around since 1949, the tech made a big leap forward in 1987 with the introduction of the Motorola PMR 2000. The "Personal Message Receiver" was capable of transmitting alphanumeric messages via the SkyTel service of up to 1,950 characters, with 32 characters appearing on the screen at once.
Previously, high-end pagers were only able to display call-back numbers.
This is a $3,750 cellphone
The groundbreaking M2 Pocket Phone by Excell Communications was a much more expensive option to stay in touch on the go. But the first cellphone small enough to fit in a pocket didn't come cheap: It launched in Britain with a price tag of £2,500, or about $3,750.
An ownership stake in Excell Communications was sold to Nokia in 1991.
A Reagan-era digital camera
In 1987, USA Today became the first US newspaper to publish a digital photograph on its front page. Though that photo came from an older, RC-701 model, most of the paper's photojournalists that year were armed with this, the 600,000-pixel Canon RC-760. With it, photos taken on the West Coast could be transmitted to the East Coast in just minutes.
The camera retailed for $5,500, pricing it well out of hobbyists' hands.
How to turn your toddler into Spielberg, 1987-style
The Fisher-Price PXL-2000 camcorder was one of the coolest toys of 1987. The device recorded short, grainy, black-and-white videos onto standard 90-minute audio cassette tapes.
Adobe Illustrator 1.0
The year 1987 was huge for Adobe: It's when the software company released version 1.0 of Adobe Illustrator for the Apple Macintosh.
Adobe Photoshop, meanwhile, wouldn't come along until February 1990.
Airbus A320: The first digital airplane
The year 1987 saw a major innovation in the airline industry: digital controls. Shown here during a February 22, 1987 test flight, this Airbus A320 airliner was the first to fly using computer-driven, fly-by-wire controls.
The new digital control system offered huge safety benefits, preventing pilots from making maneuvers that would harm the plane's structural integrity.
The VCR age
Video rental stores drove huge industry growth in the latter half of the 1980s. According to the World Almanac, only 14 percent of TV households owned VCRs in 1985. By the end of the decade, that number had jumped to 66 percent.
Much of the market would eventually be captured by Blockbuster Video, founded in late 1985.
'A kind of Star Wars-type panic'
On October 19, 1987, a bad day at the New York Stock Exchange turned into one of the worst crashes in market history when Wall Street's new computerized trading algorithms blindly and aggressively accelerated selling in the face of an already sharp decline. With computers in control, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) dropped 508.32 points in a single day, a whopping loss of 22.6 percent.
Regulators responded to the crash by creating stock market "circuit breakers" that temporarily stop all trading when the DJIA suffers a similarly large drop over a short time period.
Erasable-recordable laser video discs
Pioneer had big hopes for its erasable-recordable laser video disc, seen here, which claimed to offer the digital quality of compact discs with the ability to record and erase. Though rewritable CDs and DVDs would take off a decade later, Pioneer's laser video disc tech was too expensive (and likely too large) to gain favor with consumers.
The hottest weight-loss tech of 1987?
The 1980s featured some very odd innovations in weight loss. This pink Vibrosaun machine claimed it could help users lose weight through the combination of dry sauna heat and full-body vibrations.