Those that seem not to think that the difference between $25 and $250 for a CPU would be significant back then (yeah, whatever
), if they exclude the home computers (which would be hard to ignore in the 80s) for which $250 would be a very, very big chunk of the total cost, they still need to consider that many big manufacturers at this time just did NOT believe in a market for personal computers whatsoever. IBM was very hard to convince at the time. The IBM PC was pursued almost out of sheer luck back then, against a lot of internal resistance. Also see what Commodore was saying, they just wanted to make calculators. And the list goes on.
So it would take really, really cheap components to manage to even create a *market* for personal computing. And the rest is history. Once the cheap CPUs were out, everybody, even the big ones, followed and prices plummeted.