In the 1970s, an innovative device was being developed by small team of engineers led by Paul Breedlove, an engineer, with Texas Instruments that ended up being introduced to the public at the 1978 Summer Consumer Electronic Show as The Speak and Spell. It was a handheld electronic device and educational toy that consisted of a speech synthesizer, a fluorescent display, a keyboard, and a receptor slot for a collection of game cartridges. Additionally, its main function was a tool for helping young children to learn to spell and pronounce over 200 commonly misspelled words. As a result, this can be consider the first PC many people own because it had all those parts, including a TMS1000 for the CPU. When Paul Breedlove first had the idea for…