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Founded in 1984, the Irvine, Calif,company specialized in high-performance PC-class machines, especially servers.
The firm, started by Waitt, 34, in 1985 in a farmhouse, has kept its folksy image as it has grown to more than $5 billion in sales and 10,000 employees worldwide.
In 1985, the Singapore-based holding company Wearnes Brothers Ltd. invested $500,000 in ALR and agreed to market the company's computers in Singapore, as well as provide overseas manufacturing services, in exchange for 40 percent of ownership.
In 1986, ALR announced the first i386-based personal computer, the Access 386, in July.
The company's i386-based FlexCache 25386 earned the company a PC Magazine Award for Technical Excellence for desktop computers in 1988.
ALR was one of the first companies to license the Micro Channel architecture from IBM in 1988.
The MicroFlex 7000, released in January 1989 and configured with a 25-MHz i386 and 16 MB of SIMM random-access memory, was billed as outpacing IBM's MCA-based PS/2 Model 70 due to the inclusion of a proprietary cache prefetching system in its chipset.
The company was the victim of an attempted armed robbery of its Irvine headquarters in April 1989.
ALR later ditched Micro Channel for the directly competing Extended Industry Standard Architecture in October 1989, releasing the PowerCache/4e later that year.
In March 1994, the company was awarded a patent for a microprocessor upgrade path that piggybacked off an existing processor while disabling it—a technology that ALR claimed was copied by Intel and several other PC manufacturers.
The company released the Optima SLR, the first sub-$1000 PC with a Pentium, in July 1995.
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