MAI Basic Four

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MAI Basic Four (sometimes written as BasicFour or Basic 4) refers to a variety of business Basic, the computers that ran it, and the company that sold them (its name given variously as MAI Basic Four Inc., MAI Basic Four Information Systems, and MAI Systems Corporation).

MAI Basic Four Business Basic was one of the first commercially available business BASIC interpreters. MAI Basic Four (the company) originally sold minicomputers but later offered microcomputers. The computers ran a proprietary operating system, with the BASIC interpreter integrated.

In 1988, Wall Street financier Bennett LeBow, who had acquired a controlling interest in the company, used it as a platform for an unsuccessful attempted hostile takeover of much larger Prime Computer.[1]

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