Until now kitchen computers have all had one thing in common… they have failed miserably. Starting in 1969 with the Honeywell H316 Kitchen Computer, available for the low price of $10,600 (or $62,772.90 in 2009 dollars), this computer built into a table with attached chair and cutting board was able to do one thing, store recipes. Evidently even the included recipe book (huh?) and kitchen apron couldn’t save the H316 from it’s two week learning curve to program, lack of text based display (you had to learn to read binary) and Clockwork Orange good looks, not a single unit was sold. Here to try once again is the Demy digital recipe reader brought to us by Key Ingredient Corporation, hey it does three things. Hit the link for the run down.
Continue reading Demy – The Digital Recipe Reader… That can’t read…






